These Are a Few of My Favorite Things

July 27th, 2010 by Aaron
Field Notes + HTML5 For Web Designers

Field Notes + HTML5 For Web Designers

I have had an addiction to Field Notes – the awesome pocket-sized notebooks – for about a year now.  Couple that with Jeremy Keith’s “HTML5 For Web Designers,” which is available from A Book Apart, and you have a lovely composition.  All of this is to say that with the advent of WordPress 3, it’s time for a refresh of my WordPress theme (because it’s awful more than anything else).  So I’ll be putting these items to good use over the coming weeks.

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    Feed Me

    May 4th, 2008 by Aaron

    The RSS feed is undoubtedly one of the best innovations in the relatively short history of the web. By boiling down all or part of a site’s content into a simple, portable format that readers can subscribe to, a site’s updates come to the reader, rather than the reader having to make a consistent stream of visits to keep up with the site.

    Throughout the past few years, I have used or tried out Firefox, Thunderbird, Opera, NetVibes, NewsHutch (defunct), and FeedLounge (defunct) before finally settling on Google Reader as my feed reader of choice. Google’s product started off as an awful mess that I wouldn’t recommend to anyone, but has progressed into probably the best web-based feed reader available. I say that because of it’s easy-to-use interface, Firefox integration, and the integration with the Google suite of products that make it easy to access.

    My own feed reading activities have progressed to the point where I’m somewhat of a feed junkie – although probably nowhere near the level of the truly tech-obsessed. In a typical week, I cover a few thousand entries across my feed subscriptions. A fairly low percentage are actually interesting to me (as you can see, I’ve only read about 600 entries in a month).

    Over the past few months, I’ve become a disciple of the “read feeds in batches” school of thought. Feed reading can waste a lot of productive time if it’s done frequently, but if I can wake up early on the weekend and plow through a thousand feeds while I drink coffee, I think that’s a productive use of my time. Granted, some items are fairly old (in web time) by then, but there are few things in feeds that need to be known or acted upon the same day.

    If you’re a Google Reader user, check out the “Trends” link in the left sidebar. The statistics are interesting, and in the case of the “Inactive” Subscriptions trends tab, useful. I monitor this tab to see when it’s time to unsubscribe from a feed because it’s no longer producing any useful updates within a 3- to 6-month timeframe. You can also use the “% Read” statistic to see if there are feeds that are no longer of interest and just eat up time. Anything below 10-33% is probably not worth continuing to read – depending on the number of site updates.

    I hope to see a few more of you subscribing to my feeds!

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    Of Interest: 4/26-5/2

    May 4th, 2008 by Aaron

    It was a very slow news week this week – at least as far as anything I found interesting. So here you have my “link of the week”:

    Zeldman on the Vanishing Personal Site

    Bloggers are now outsourcing. Photos go to Flickr, short bits to Twitter, links to Del.icio.us or other services, and it affects how centralized our experience is for our readers. I’m a fan of the all-in-one site, but I don’t post a lot of non-text content at this point, so we’ll see if I can put up with the “pain” of developing my own services when I get to that point!

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    Of Interest: 4/19-4/25

    April 26th, 2008 by Aaron

    The Last Pinball Machine Factory

    I couldn’t tell you the last time I played pinball – not because I don’t enjoy it, but because I don’t see it anywhere (as the article states). I’m sure this is a fun place to work, however!

    Haggling Tips from a Pro

    Good negotiating skills are critical in business. Start getting your feet wet in retail situations.

    Related Article from NY Times

    Farm Economy Going the Way of Housing?

    Rising land and commodities prices are prompting many farmers to over-extend themselves. We’ve seen how well that worked out with home buyers in (previously) hot markets. How will it play out in the farming industry?

    San Francisco Not So Ideal for Tech Start-Ups

    I’ve often wondered how being in the incredibly-expensive San Francisco metroplex was beneficial to a tech start-up. High initial costs are not known to be a good thing for any under-capitalized business. As David Heinemeier Hansson explains, it probably isn’t beneficial if you’re looking to build a lasting business with real value.

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    Of Interest: 4/12 – 4/18

    April 18th, 2008 by Aaron

    Mark Cuban on CEO Pay

    I can’t say that there are any real surprises here. Basically, the structure of CEO equity packages tend to put them at odds with long-term investors because they only need a (relatively) short-term jump in the stock price to be set for life.

    Veerle on Adobe Kuler’s New Feature

    Adobe Kuler – a web-based color palette tool – introduces the ability to upload a picture and have a color palette extracted from it. Very helpful for designers of all colors ;-)

    Tips for Locking Down Your Mac

    It’s fun for us Mac users to laugh at lowly Windows users (particularly those stuck with Vista), but we still need to remain vigilant.

    Weak Rivets May Have Sped Titanic’s Sinking

    Apparently, quality control in iron rivets wasn’t what it used to be.

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    Of Interest: 4/5 – 4/11

    April 11th, 2008 by Aaron

    A few of my favorite items from the past week:

    Fire and Motion

    Forcing your enemy or competitors to adapt to you is one key to winning.  From Inc.com via Joel on Software.

    Ball Skills

    A demonstration by Tim Nolan, a professional juggler and basketball entertainer.

    Solving the Enigma

    The fascinating history of cracking the German encryption mechanism.

    Webby Award Nominees

    See who’s better than you on the web ;-)

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    Added: The Google Suite of Products

    April 7th, 2008 by Aaron

    Wow, two days in a row with a post. This may be a new record!

    Anyway, I added pretty much the full range of Google products to the site tonight:

    • Google Analytics (GA) – I have used this product on other sites and some of my clients actually use GA. It’s a nifty tool and quick to implement. I just slapped the appropriate JavaScript in my theme’s footer file.
    • Google AdSense – Even mentioning this product is probably against their Terms of Serivce, but I’ll do it anyway. Things got off to a hairy start because I couldn’t log into my account (for whatever reason), but a quick email to Google resolved the problem. I set up ad units to match my site’s theme (using OS X’s handy “Digital Color Meter.app” to quickly grab the colors off of my screen, rather than have to look them up in my stylesheet).
    • Google Webmaster Tools – This is a very handy web application to get information about your site from the Google search engine, as well as to submit a site map to aid Google in indexing your site. Submitting the RSS feed is about the easiest way to handle a blog’s site map.

    The overall process took about an hour, even accounting for some technical difficulties. Not bad at all!

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    New WordPress Theme

    April 6th, 2008 by Aaron

    I finally got around to putting my new WordPress theme into action today.  No, it shouldn’t have taken 5 months to do it, but that’s about the speed I operate at when it comes to my blog.  Those (few) of you that have followed my site over the years would most-assuredly agree.

    For those of you that are interested in WordPress, here’s a short synopsis of the steps I took in this process:

    • Downloaded WordPress 2.5.  It was time to upgrade and WordPress 2.5 is a fantastic blogging tool.
    • Purchased Coda from Panic.  I had taken advantage of the 15-day trial version of the software when I last updated the blog, and it made development a breeze (if nothing else, than for the embedded Transmit engine!).  If you’re a Mac-based web developer, there’s almost no way you should be without either Coda or TextMate.
    • Mocked up a site page in XHTML and CSS until I got about 90% of the look-and-feel the way I wanted it.  Being totally unfamiliar with WordPress, I was prepared to crash and burn once I actually tried to turn the design into a theme.
    • I copied the Kubrick default theme files into a new theme directory and started dissecting each file to adjust the mark-up to match my mocked-up page.  I overwrote the style.css file with my custom CSS.
    • After about 2-3 hours of playing around with various elements of the site, I’m satisfied that I’ve covered enough to let the site run for a few days untouched now.  Once I get more content and comments on the site, there will undoubtedly be more changes to make.
    In the coming days, weeks, or months, you’ll see some more changes to the theme and some additional content on the site.  Pray I stay motivated! ;-)
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