October 29, 2007

Halloween 2007

An improvised Super Mario costume, a friend willing to improvise being Luigi, a parade, a party, some beer, and a dog dressed like Darth Vader are all you need to have a fantastic halloween.

October 24, 2007

Fighting for standards

Ok, as an inaugural first “real” post to the vinernet I figure I’ll contribute something from my area of expertise.

I’m a web designer / front end coder by trade. I work mainly in XHTML / CSS for front end coding because … well, no one should use tables anymore when coding a website. They’re outdated, bulky, and make for very unfriendly to look at HTML. This isn’t entirely the point of my post today, rather, I’d like to talk about standards for CSS.

A long time ago, a man named Jeffery Zeldman fought for a universal standard to be met between all browsers and how they render HTML and CSS. He’s still fighting that fight today, and his army has grown. The problem? Certain browser-making companies just flat out refuse to adopt these standards. Why? WHO KNOWS. A microsoft engineer has even been quoted as saying “standards compliance is not a high priority” for them in developing their browsers. Unacceptable.

One of my greatest woes is building out a site, and then loading up that PC to check it in IE 6. Nine times out of 10, I missed something when applying a generous amount of IE hacks in my css, and something is not rendering properly, thus forcing me to go through my code and figure out what I didn’t include that I should have. There’s a fun word, should, because honestly I shouldn’t have to put in hacks at all. They may make my page display properly in IE, but they then cause my code to become invalid. Why do I keep doing it? Because about 30-40% of the internet population still browse using IE 6, despite it’s flaws. Most of these people are doing it simply because of lack of knowledge, they don’t know that their browser is a steaming pile because most people adjust their sites accordingly. It’s a big shame spiral, really. IE 7 is a step up, indeed, but even it is still not completely standards compliant, showing thatMicrosoft couldn’t care less about standards, they would rather people make things work for them.

So what is the solution? Many are calling for developers to stop hacking their code to work in IE, especially IE 6. I like this solution a lot. It brings the issue out into the open, forcing people to see what valid code looks like displayed in this inferior browser. Most people will eventually wise up and switch to a better browser…ANY better browser. Unfortunately, the likelihood of this actually happening is slim. While a few people stick to their guns and refuse to hack their CSS to display in IE 6, most of us do not have this luxury. People like me, who work for design firms, have to do it because most clients won’t accept “it’s not going to work in IE 6″ as an answer.

So how else can we spread awareness? Seriously…I’m asking…

October 23, 2007

Sharing is Caring

So, I’ve joined forces with the likes of “the vinernet” to add my two cents on discussions, as well as try to post about interesting topics from my perspective.

Be forewarned, I can be quite long-winded at times.   I also am prone to bouts of complete random insanity.

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October 16, 2007

Blog Action Day

Bloggers Unite - Blog Action Day

So, apparently, yesterday was blog action day. I was pretty busy during work when I found out, but had every intention of posting something about it when I got home. Needless to say, that didn’t happen either. Better late than never, right?

So we’re supposed to share a personal experience dealing with nature or the environment, but I live in the downtown of a major city…so I don’t see much of nature. One thing we do have, though, is an abundance of mini-parks or green-spaces peppered throughout the city. One thing I noticed about them is that a few don’t allow walking on the grass, or are separated by some kind of barrier, so you wouldn’t be able to walk on them anyway. I find this completely ridiculous. I can understand it from the standpoint of “landscaping costs money, don’t mess up my landscaping” but I feel like it defeats the purpose of these places. Living in a city it’s often very easy to forget about environmental issues, or even how good it feels to get out and walk around in the woods, or in a field. I think they help a lot of people reconnect with the environment, at least on a very subconscious level. By only letting people observe and not experience, I feel like it separates that 1-1 relationship of man and nature. It makes it seem like this thing that is “someone else’s job” to maintain. Which I think, on a very basic level, can spread to other areas of environmental protection, and ignoring environmental issues is something that the world is constantly struggling against.

Now, I’m not saying that letting people walk or sit on the grass everywhere is going to magically open people’s eyes to the need to help the environment, but maybe it can remind some people how special it is to be able to just law down in the grass for a little while.

October 14, 2007

Updates made to homepage

So I’ve been struggling on what I wanted the homepage to contain, and I think I finally settled on something I like.  Every time I finish a project, drawing, website, etc. I will update the homepage with a snapshot of the recently completed thing.  This way, it will allow anyone visiting to see the two most recent things I’ve worked on.  This is a good solution, I think.

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