Here’s a funny link for tonight: the Random Law and Order Plot Generator. Enjoy!
Month: March 2004
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Google Image Search
Playing around with Google‘s image search, I’ve thought of some advanced search features they need to implement. Hopefully someone at Google is reading this and will get right on it
;)
You need to be able to search by specific image dimensions (in pixels); for example, I’d like to be able to type “
width:80 height:15
” or maybe “dimensions:80x15
” and have Google return all the images that are 80 by 15 pixels (yes, this idea is directly related to my last post on the 80×15 images). This can’t be hard; Google’s already caching the size of the image and displaying that on the search results pages, so why not be able to search them? -
Those small web buttons…
I’ve been noticing recently the proliferation (mostly on blog sites) of those small image files that are 80 pixels wide by 15 pixels high, are generally two-tone in color and use a simple old-school-looking font. Like these:
And I’m wondering, what’s the story? What are they called, exactly? (I’m thinking either “buttons” or “badges.”) Who’s making them? I think they’re pretty cool, actually; clever, simple, and elegant, and a damn good graphical meme that’s working it’s way around my brain. I just haven’t been able to find out anything about them online, and I’m getting really curious.
So I’ve started “collecting” them, saving any news ones I come across into a “badges” directory on my computer. I’ve got 42 already in two days. (Hmmm, 42. Coincidence?)
So, what’s the scoop? Anyone know?
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Old Farm District
So I was driving home from work today and as I crossed Third Street onto Brosterhous I noticed a new sign proclaiming the area I was entering the “Old Farm District.” What was interesting about this is that the sign is in the same style as those of The Old Mill District, so I thought perhaps the city of Bend was giving the area a facelift in the same way the Old Mill District had been done. Which would be kind of cool; it’s a neat area where the old farmland acreages and farmhouses are side-by-side with the more modern housing and commercial developments. Historically, this district used to be the outer frontier of Bend, which is hard to believe these days when it’s a ten-minute drive from downtown.
I do a quick search and find the Bend Neighborhood Associations Web site, which contains details about the Old Farm District and the other official neighborhood associations. No Old Mill-style plans for the area, simply prettying up the place by planting these gilded signs everywhere. The Bend Neighborhood Map is interesting, presenting a territorial view of Bend that I hadn’t seen before. Although I’d be inclined to point out that the real old farm district of Bend should really be extended to include the big white area between the “official” area and the Orchard and Mountain View neighborhoods. As it stands, I wonder what that neighborhood will end up being called?
Amusingly, it didn’t take me long to notice that the site was developed by my old employer, Alpine Internet Solutions. One thing they need to do is make that map a clickable image map, where the user can click on the neighborhood and be taken to the appropriate page.
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Free? Palm Reader software
Is it just me, or did Palm Digital Media make it a whole lot harder to get the free version of their Palm Reader software? From their front page, there’s no mention of the free version anywhere, and I finally found it when clicking through the ad for the Pro version.
…Oh. I just found this on the free download page:
The free and Pro versions of Palm Reader are now one application. You can try out the Pro features for up to 15 days. After the 15 day trial period, the Pro features will be disabled, but you can continue to use Palm Reader freely.
Well, that seems rather dumb. I mean, it’s still good that it’s free, but not advertising that there’s a free version available is definitely going to turn away a good number of users.
So remember this link: Free Palm Reader download page.
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Computer Languages History Timeline
From the Computer Languages History site comes an impressive computer languages timeline chart. It’s as much a language family tree as it is a timeline. Very nice, though a little hard to read.
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Violent Pong
Here’s a link I found from Scoble, which was too good not to post: violent pong. No, it’s not a game (how many of you even remember pong?), which is what I thought at first; it’s a Flash movie. Watch it. It’s crazy and philosophical!
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Everything Old is New Again
I’ve started tinkering with the design of my site here, changing things around, making the blog pages more blog-centric, and in doing so I realize that this “redesign” is basically the same design I was using up through July of last year. How quickly we forget.
As to what I’m changing, I’m simplifying the table layout and applying more style sheet rules to clean up the underlying HTML, and I’m moving back to a two-column format, with the blog content in the left column (wider) and all the rest in the right column (narrower). After staring at the three column layout for over half a year, I’ve finally decided it’s just too busy, and going with a more readable format is better. Hey, the two column layout with content on the left is almost a blog standard, if there is such a thing. Damn Movable Type for destroying the curve
:)
I’m also restructuring the overall site architecture a bit, moving some clutter off the front page to inside pages, consolidating some stuff, adding some new pages to (hopefully) enhance overall usability. Maybe someday I’ll even tinker around with an all-stylesheet layout approach; I know HTML table-based layouts are anathema to some folks out there. But right now my general philosophy is, if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it—but simplifying it is okay.
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At least one new ebook
Lovecraft notwithstanding, I did finally get around to adding a new ebook, Anne’s House of Dreams (240KB .PDB file). It had been sitting in the queue for quite awhile now. The conversion went quick; I’d forgotten how quick, so that’s encouraging.