Wordpress themes
Bah! Changed from the “blackout” theme to a nice bright one, and it doesn’t handle images in posts well at all. Will fix tonight…
Bah! Changed from the “blackout” theme to a nice bright one, and it doesn’t handle images in posts well at all. Will fix tonight…
From imafoodblog.com, a great (and simple!) recipe for a plain bread loaf that doesn’t need kneading.
Mmmmmm. Now I need a good heavy dutch oven!
Just for fun I took a quick straw poll around the office — what are the most attractive and ugliest web sites you know of in New Zealand? From this totally unscientific survey, I can report that http://www.specialsurprise.co.nz/ is the most beautiful, and http://www.cal-wilson.co.nz/ is the ugliest web site in New Zealand.
I’ll post all the entries Real Soon Now™
Here’s a couple of gotchas that took a minute or two to sort out when I did my first ever Wordpress install last night. Essentially file permissions weren’t quite what I expected.
find . -type d|xargs chmod +rx
sorted that out.
touch .htaccess chmod 666 .htaccess
(Yes, I probably should have done something a little more restrictive with the .htaccess file.)
It’s marvellous having a hosting provider who provides shell access.
I’m terribly terribly happy that I’m now causing significantly more damage to the planet than I was last week. It’s not the damage I’m happy about, it’s the reason.
My Landrover is back.
It’s been sitting up the driveway for nigh on a year, waiting for the mysterious electrical issues to resolve themselves. Finally a friend got herself an auto electrician for a fiancée, and one quick rewiring later she’s starting first time. The Landrover of course, not the friend.
All that was left was to take it to a good mechanic where they undid the damage done to the transmission and brakes by the cowboys who had worked on it previously.
I’m not sure that SWMBO is terribly happy it’s still around, but me and the kids are pleased as punch.
So, even people with little interest in digital media or copyright issues are becoming aware of the fuss over Section 92 of the Copyright Amendment Act.
The mainstream media began taking notice when concern spread beyond the technical community in New Zealand — ISPs and professional organisations such as the New Zealand Computer Society had roundly criticised the legislation as unfair and unworkable. British comedian Stephen Fry blacked out his Twitter account in sympathy with the many others in New Zealand who have blacked out their Twitter and Facebook avatars (pictures) in protest at the Act. This was picked up by a number of commentators.
Yesterday a petition of over 10000 signatures was presented to parliament by a protest group of between 120 and 300 people, depending who you believe. There is coverage of the protest in overseas media and on New Zealand television.
In brief, the amended law requires your ISP (which could also be your employer or the local public library) to disconnect you from the internet if they receive three complaints about you breaching copyright laws. That’s three allegations — no proof is required.
There’s more detail at the Creative Freedom blackout site.