I’ve never liked these things, and I think this is a great idea. Anyone want to trade? 🙂
Gallery: 8-1-2002
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Centrist?
According to the world’s smallest political quiz I’m right on the board of libertarian, conservative, and centrist. It’s comfortable here.
Chilling EFFects
Monitoring the legal climate for Internet activity. This is a “joint project of the Electronic Frontier Foundation and Harvard, Stanford, Berkeley, University of San Francisco, and University of Maine law school clinics,” and it looks like it is going to be a great source of information in the future.
User Interface on Mac and Windows
I just came across an interesting article that examines the flaws and advantages of several different user interface designs across platforms. This is the kind of things I’ve started to think a lot more about when I’m working on web pages.
Gallery: 7-31-2002
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Bath Tissue?
Since when did they start calling toilet paper ‘bath tissue’ in the grocery store? Not to mention they moved everything around in the Randall’s I’ve been going to my entire life. It was strange, and unfamiliar. I’m starting to have second thoughts about staying in the dorms next year.
2500 Baby
The Photolog has reached over 2500 photos! I would like to thank the Academy, and my Mom . . .
RIAA Web site disabled by attack – Tech News – CNET.com
RIAA Web site disabled by attack – Ha! Sounds like “an innovative approach” to me :).
“Don’t they have something better to do during the summer than hack our site?” asked the RIAA representative, who asked not to be identified. “Perhaps it at least took 10 minutes away from stealing music.”
Court orders ICANN to open books!
Court orders ICANN to open books – I had the privledge of hearing Karl Auerbach speak at the Senate hearing on the issue of ICANN and he was both eloquent and well–informed. This is a big step for him and an important first one for fixing the organization. This is an issue which touches every single site on the net.
Script Update
If you use mod_rewrite on any of your pages (like we do here) you should replace PHP_SELF with REQUEST_URI in the below code. I should have thought of that.
Breadcrumb Script
I just hacked out this bit of PHP to make nice titles and header URLs throughout the site. It needs some customization specific to this site, but before I do that I wanted to post it just in case anyone wants to use it on their site:
Sorry, this code has been depreceated because it has a few known bugs and I don’t have time right now to go back and fix it up. Sorry!
Alternate History
I just read a chilling outline for a story based around computers and the net assuming Hilter had won WWII. Makes you think about CBDTPA and other proposed legislation in a different light.
Good Vibrations
Inspired by Textism, I have decided to personally abandon all–capital acronyms and words. It really breaks up the flow of the line to have a word that stands above everything else and hinders readability, so through the beauty of CSS I have approximated SMALL CAPS, an underused typographical tool. I’m also taking this oppurtunity to make better use of the <acronym> tag, which I use occasionally but not nearly enough, this time inspired by Mark Pilgrim’s excellent series on accesibility. An acronym will look like this, HSPVA, and when you hold your mouse over it should tell you what the acronym stands for. Tonight I’ll go through client sites I’ve designed and apply these concepts there as well. I hope you appreciate it, and now you know what it is so you won’t be like Julie and think it’s “tiny shouting.” 🙂
In other meta–news a new toy review (first draft) is up, and an FAQ
Anchor Tag Demystified
I’m writing this mainly for my sister Charleen, who wanted to know this for something on Mullenweg.com, but hopefully it will be helpful to anyone wanting to learn a little HTML.
Most Basic
The purpose of the anchor, or <A>
tag, is to reference someplace. Links are the very essence of the web, the hyper in hypertext. Let’s talk about the most most important attribute, href
. A very basic link might look something like this:
<a href="http://www.photomatt.net">PhotoMatt</a>
To break it down, the <a
at the front indicates the beginning of the anchor tag. After that we have the href
attribute, which basically tells the browser where to go when you click on that link. You can have a fully qualified address or a relative address there, which we’ll discuss more in a minute. The place we want to send the browser to is equal to “http://www.photomatt.net”. The two biggest mistakes people make when making an anchor tag are forgetting the equal sign and forgetting to quote the attribute value, in this case “http://www.photomatt.net”. (Note: you can quote it either with double or single quotes, which can be useful when echoing out statements in PHP.) Then we close the first part of the A tag (don’t forget the endquote!) with >. Now we write the text which we want to appear linked, which in this case is PhotoMatt, then we close the anchor tag with </a>
to indicate that the link is over. You can enclose multiple words or even an entire sentence. That’s it! You now have a link. Note that all the code should be lowercase, like in the example above. This is a good practice in every version of HTML, and is required in XHTML.
Getting Fancy
Now I know you’re thinking, what more could there be? Well to be honest, there isn’t that much else. One common technique, and one I like to use on this site, it to use the title
attribute to give a little more information about the link. The title
attribute works functionally just like href
, but instead the content displays as a tooltip or popup in most browsers, and can be useful for telling additional information about the link. Here’s an example:
<a href="http://www.photomatt.net" title="Photos and thoughts from Matthew Mullenweg">PhotoMatt</a>
The end result is this: PhotoMatt. In the title
attribute you can put a description of the link, warn that it’s a PDF or Word document, warn that it’s opening in a new window, whatever you want. Zeldman.com makes great use of the title
attribute on almost all his links.
Another commonly used attribute is target
, which tells the browser where to open the link. You should use it when you want to open a link someplace other than the current window or frame. In XHTML the target tag is depreciated (illegal, gone) unless you’re using frames and the corresponding DOCTYPE. The goal of this attribute is to facilitate linking in frames. A common use of the target
attribute is to open a link in a new window, and to do that you set the attribute equal to “_blank”. If you’re using frames you can set it to “_top”,”_self”, or “_parent”, which will replace either the entire window, the same window/frame, or the parent framesetting document. If you’re not using frames you should’t have to mess with much other than “_blank”, so don’t worry about this too much. There is one neat trick you might use though: if you want to open new windows on certain links, but you don’t want to be too intrusive, you can have all your links open in one separate window. The target
attribute can refer to windows by name, very useful in a framed setting. However if no window/frame with that frame exists, it will open a new one. So if you gave all your link targets the same name, say “dalink”, the first time someone clicks a link with that target it will open a new window. If they leave that window open, go back to your page, and click on another link with an identical target
, instead of opening a brand new window it will reuse the window you’ve already opened. A good example of this (again) is Zeldman.com. Here’s a tricked out example of what we have so far:
<a href="http://www.photomatt.net" title="Photos and thoughts from Matthew Mullenweg" target="_blank">PhotoMatt</a>
Coming soon: Accessibility, It’s All Relative, and Style Notes! Keep your dials locked.
Parens Bows to DMCA
Well it looks like Bruce Parens decided not to break the law at his Friday presentation. Apparently it was not of his own concern, but chiefly that of his employer. In his position I believe I would have done the same thing, as a whole he can contribute more to open–source through his work at HP than in jail, even if it does prove a point. You can read more about the DMCA here.
The Dark Side of Hacking Bill
Wired — The Dark Side of Hacking Bill
“Contrary to widespread, if uninformed speculation, our legislation is narrowly crafted, with strict bounds on acceptable behavior by the copyright owner,” Berman said in a statement. “It gives copyright creators a very limited safe harbor from liability when they use technological tools for the narrow purpose of thwarting P2P piracy. It does not allow copyright owners to send viruses through P2P networks, destroy files, hack into the personal files of P2P users, or indiscriminately block lawful file-trading.”
. . .“Will having a firewall — or implementing strong system security practices or being a good system administrator — become illegal and prosecuted as circumventing copyright controls under the existing Digital Millennium Copyright Act?”
Getting Better
Well it’s looking like all the trouble with the desktop is related to some funky memory, and now that I’ve taken it out things are rock solid again. Espescially now that the new motherboard came in the other day and it has been working out great. It has a ton of cool features that I know I’ll never use, like a voice that tells you what goes wrong (if anything) during POST. Some other things though, such as the DDR333 RAM, USB 2.0, and ATA133 I hope to utilize sooner rather than later.
Gallery: 7-27-2002
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Interesting Observation
Okay, anyone else think it’s funny that SysAdmin appreciation day is on winter solstice? 🙂 Update: I meant summer solstice. But when I checked it turns out that was last month. Bummer.
In other news the first revision of the GRX570 review is up. Let me know what you think.