Re: "Do one thing well..." (Flash)

2011-06-07 Thread Michael ODonnell


"One Year Later: Adobe Abandons 64-bit Linux Again":

  http://broadcast.oreilly.com/2011/06/one-year-later-adobe-abandons.html
 
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Re: "Do one thing well..."

2011-06-07 Thread Benjamin Scott
On Tue, Jun 7, 2011 at 12:57 PM, Jeffry Smith  wrote:
>> Since Flash sucked & still does
> No need to specify the system or the timeframe ...

  Indeed.  Flash is basically a browser crash that also plays videos.

> ... most Flash sites I've found could be programmed with HTML
> only and be just as good.

  If not better.

  I also love sites that use
JavaScript instead of A HREF= tags for links.

-- Ben
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Re: Mailing list addresses (was: Linux reference on subs)

2011-06-07 Thread Jeffry Smith
Thanks.  I'll have to wipe that from my contacts list.

jeff

On Sun, Jun 5, 2011 at 3:14 PM, Benjamin Scott  wrote:
> On Sun, Jun 5, 2011 at 7:24 AM, Jeffry Smith  wrote:
>> bounced for some reason -
>
>  It appears you first tried posting to , before
> trying .
>
>  The canonical mailing list address is .
>
>   works because the same server hosts mail
> for both  and , and it hasn't been
> configured to make a distinction.  This could probably be construed as
> a feature.
>
>  gnh...@gnhlug.org was an explicit alias many moons ago.  It was
> removed for some reason -- deliberately, IIRC.  I have forgotten why.
>
> -- Ben
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Re: "Do one thing well..."

2011-06-07 Thread Jeffry Smith
> Since Flash sucked & still does
No need to specify the system or the timeframe - most Flash sites I've
found could be programmed with HTML only and be just as good.  With
HTML5, no need for Flash (IMHO).

jeff
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Re: Blogging for kids

2011-06-07 Thread Joshua Judson Rosen
Mark Komarinski  writes:
>
> It's happened.
> 
> My geek of a daughter (all of 8, with her own digital camera and my old 
> laptop) asked to have her own website, which I assume means she wants to 
> post pictures and write a blog.
> 
> Now, now, stop what you're thinking.  I have no intention of this going 
> to the outside world, and that means I need to set it up on my Debian 
> server in the basement so she can do whatever she wants.  I need to have 
> it local so I can monitor the content and who gets access to it, but I 
> don't know what blogging software is out there that kids can easily 
> understand and use.
> 
> I imagine some of you have run into this in the past.  What did you do?

My child isn't quite old enough for any of this (despite what pictures
of him with my NanoNote would seem to indicate...), so this is largely
conjectural, but(t) my first inclination would be to try PyBlosxom w/ Markdown,
which is what I gave to my non-tech wife to use for blogging: it's basically
a smooth transition from `writing text in files' to `writing a weblog'--
the only real difference between the two is that she synchs her `weblog files'
up the the server with unison-gtk.

Of course, the other reason (maybe the real reason...) that I gave her
PyBlosxom to work with is the `Suzuki method of blog education':
I use it myself, so I'm well-equipped to address whatever questions
she has--even ones to which I don't yet know the answer, because
there's a basis for an honest investigative dialogue.

-- 
"Don't be afraid to ask (λf.((λx.xx) (λr.f(rr."

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Re: Blogging for kids

2011-06-07 Thread Mark Komarinski
On 06/07/2011 08:27 AM, David Rysdam wrote:
> I'm not sure what not going to the "outside world" means if you are
> restricting access. You and she can read it but not the rest of your
> family? The dog? I think if you are both monitoring and restricting,
> accessing over the Internet shouldn't be a problem. In fact, EITHER
> monitoring OR restricting would probably be sufficient.
At this age, I'd rather do both.  I don't want any of the content she 
puts up to wind up on Fark, or (worse) 4chan.  I don't want it on a 
cloud (be it Google or anyone else) so I can independently monitor the 
content.

Sound controlling?  Sure, but she's 8.

> In any case, you can do both things without serving the pages
> yourself. I've got a host (webhostingbuzz, but any will work) and I'm
> running WordPress on it. WP is pretty simple to use, especially if you
> set it up and show her how to do the basics.
>
>   I set up the domain so that if/when my kids want to have a site they
> can do it under their own names as "http://firstname.lastname.org";. They
> already have firstn...@lastname.org email addresses.
The domain and e-mails aren't the problem as I already have all those.  
I'll take another look at Wordpress.  Maybe I should update my Gallery 
install while I'm at it...

-Mark
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Re: Blogging for kids

2011-06-07 Thread David Rysdam
On Tue, 07 Jun 2011 08:05:15 -0400, Mark Komarinski  
wrote:
> Now, now, stop what you're thinking.  I have no intention of this going 
> to the outside world, and that means I need to set it up on my Debian 
> server in the basement so she can do whatever she wants.  I need to have 
> it local so I can monitor the content and who gets access to it, but I 
> don't know what blogging software is out there that kids can easily 
> understand and use.

I'm not sure what not going to the "outside world" means if you are
restricting access. You and she can read it but not the rest of your
family? The dog? I think if you are both monitoring and restricting,
accessing over the Internet shouldn't be a problem. In fact, EITHER
monitoring OR restricting would probably be sufficient.

In any case, you can do both things without serving the pages
yourself. I've got a host (webhostingbuzz, but any will work) and I'm
running WordPress on it. WP is pretty simple to use, especially if you
set it up and show her how to do the basics.

 I set up the domain so that if/when my kids want to have a site they
can do it under their own names as "http://firstname.lastname.org";. They
already have firstn...@lastname.org email addresses.
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Blogging for kids

2011-06-07 Thread Mark Komarinski
It's happened.

My geek of a daughter (all of 8, with her own digital camera and my old 
laptop) asked to have her own website, which I assume means she wants to 
post pictures and write a blog.

Now, now, stop what you're thinking.  I have no intention of this going 
to the outside world, and that means I need to set it up on my Debian 
server in the basement so she can do whatever she wants.  I need to have 
it local so I can monitor the content and who gets access to it, but I 
don't know what blogging software is out there that kids can easily 
understand and use.

I imagine some of you have run into this in the past.  What did you do?

-Mark
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