By now most everyone’s heard of the FIR technique for replacing plain text with images using CSS. Stuart Langridge has come up with a (better?) solution that doesn’t require extra tags, which I presume from the URL is to be referred to as LIR. It doesn’t seem to have garnered much attention to date, so I’m going to do my small part to make it better-known. I’m in the midst of my Sirens website redesign and didn’t relish the thought of having to go back to add <span/>s everywhere, so Stuart’s idea appeared at just the right time.
Year: 2003
Weblog lifespans
Jenny, aka The Shifted Librarian, wonders …does the 13-month anniversary of a blog mark the hurdle for achieving long-term blogging?
This one will be a year old on August 9, coincidentally also my parents’ wedding anniversary. (Yes, entry #1 was posted in April 2002, but I’ve only been going in earnest since the latter date.)
I’m going to have to read through the 250+ entries sometime soon to see how many I actually remember. Hey, someone’s got to do it sometime, and it might as well be me.
Will Petroglyphs make the leap to a long-term weblog? It’s hard to say… I’ve only made 6 entries in July (counting this one, which was written in July even if it’s finally posted in August… silly Sympatico DSL service has been up and down since 9:30 this evening). Then again, I did buy a shiny new domain and virtual server space so I’d have someplace to host it more permanently. As they say in the world of technology, one should never start a demo–or in this case, finish a retrospective entry–with any statement more predictive than Watch this!
Janes Addiction
Heh heh, that title will mess up a search engine or two….
In the last five days I’ve experienced and enjoyed the music of Lenni Jabour and The Third Floor, Claire Jenkins, Sirens, Penny Lang, Bob Snider, Darlene, Tanglefoot, Cartwheels and Kristin Sweetland, plus one or two more whose names I’ve forgotten. I bought five CDs from those individuals and groups–none on RIAA member labels, thankyewverymuch–and would have picked up twenty more if I hadn’t stopped myself.
If I were to go into detail about each performance I’d be typing here for a month, so I’ll just give short blurbs:
- Lenni Jabour and The Third Floor
- Incredible, fantastic, charming, brilliant… need I say more?
- Claire Jenkins
- Claire opened for Lenni at the Rivoli, and made a huge impression on those gathered. She must come to the Ugly Mug Café, soon and often.
- Sirens
- Sirens were the reason I went to the Home County Folk Festival, professionally and personally. I saw them perform in five separate workshops (with others from the list above) and on the main stage, and couldn’t have had a better time.
- Darlene
- Darlene was my biggest discovery of the festival. She’s eclectic, and funny, and principled, and nutty… and she’s convinced me, at least, that Marilyn Monroe should have married Henry Miller! The CD is also the longest single-artist non-compilation disc I’ve ever bought–it runs 72 minutes.
- Kristin Sweetland
- Kristin is a free spirit, a neo-flower-child.
I can see how it’s hard to visit Planet Kristin for more than a short period at a time–I had to turn off her CD on the trip to Toronto to see Lenni–butI think I’ll stop by once in a while. Update: I’m not sure what my problem was with Kristin’s CD Root, Heart & Crown, because I’ve gone back to it and found it quite enjoyable… in fact, I’d go so far as to compare some of the music with Loreena McKennitt‘s. Often first impressions are accurate, but in this case I’m pleased to say mine was wrong–sorry Kristin! - Bob Snider
- Bob Snider’s been a favourite for several years, but this is only the second time I’ve seen him in person. I actually know most of his songs through tribute versions. He’s a cross between Leonard Cohen, Bob Dylan and Arlo Guthrie–great songwriters with unique voices and presentation–but he’s also got a skewed outlook on life that’s unmatched in my experience.
- Tanglefoot, Penny Lang and Cartwheels
- It’s odd to group these three together, because they’re so different, but I don’t have anything to say about any of them that you can’t hear in their music.
One last geeky note to make: Claire Jenkins’ website is one of the nicest official artist sites I’ve seen–and it’s just a single page laid out with CSS. (It doesn’t validate, but I can live with that because it’s not full of Flash animations and popups. I’m sure Justin Morrison could fix it up in a jiffy.)
I feel your pain
I was thinking of writing a lot more here, but I don’t really know what to say…. I certainly don’t want to analyse it any more.
SCTV is on the air!
If you can see this, you’ll have discovered (but probably not noticed) that the URL has changed. I finally broke down and paid for the peterjanes.ca domain. What’s more, I went all out and bought hosting space… no more personal-PC-as-webserver for me (though I’m still running Linux as my desktop and have no plans to change). Most of the content from the old site is here–the important stuff, anyway, like my fan site for Lenni Jabour and The Third Floor–and anything that isn’t probably won’t be unless it’s actually requested (ha! like anyone ever looked at my old site). There may be some broken links that I haven’t caught up to yet, so if you find one please leave a comment below and I’ll deal with it.
RSS folks, you’ll want to update to the new feed ASAP. (Geek RSS folks, note that an Atom feed is coming soon!)
I almost forgot to mention: Lenni and friends will be performing at the Rivoli on Tuesday, July 22, with select material from the upcoming musical Songs From The Third Floor. Huzzah!
Unpleasant
I’ve just experienced the most unpleasant exchange of e-mail I’ve ever had. The details are of no interest to anyone other than myself and the other party, and I’d say nothing about them or that person even if they were. It shall suffice to say that I was physically shaking with anger by the end of my last message; anyone who’s had any dealings with me knows it takes a lot to make me lose my cool. I can only remember being upset to that extent twice, or perhaps three times, in my 31 years, and it’s not an experience I relish.
I’m proud, at least, that I was able to keep my response professional and polite while conveying the depth of my displeasure in no uncertain terms.
Off vacation
Normally, when I take a trip, I can’t wait to get home. After just a few days, I long for the familiarity of my own bedroom and house…. This time… I felt sad that our road trip… was over. I felt sad that we had to return to all the frustrations and injustices of our regular, everyday life. I wish our trip could have lasted all summer.
If you’ve got someone in your life who you adore, you simply must spend 2000 miles with them. You’ll be glad you did.
Wil Wheaton, [wil@roadtrip]$ cd /home/wil
Force of habit
I recently took over as webmaster for the Sirens. (New design and content are coming RSN.) For some reason, though, even though I’m the only one with update access on the site, I still check my bookmark every day or so to see if anything new has been posted.
No blinkin’ blinking text
Uh-uh, dude
Just got hit by a poorly-behaved bot, apparently something to do with this, which I’ve banned outright. Let’s look at what it did wrong to deserve this:
- It doesn’t have a User-Agent string.
- It doesn’t send a valid Accepts header (it was trying to retrieve an RSS file and got HTML).
- It doesn’t recognize <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC “-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.1//EN” “http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml11/DTD/xhtml11.dtd”>, instead attempting to parse it like a link.
- It doesn’t attempt to throttle its requests or recognize duplicates or errors, making over 30 requests in 8 seconds to 6 URLs, only two of which are valid at all or referred to in links from the files it did retrieve.