Archive for the ‘Entry’ Category

Trip Out West

Thursday, June 17th, 2010

A few weeks ago I made a cross-county trip with my wife and in-laws over to Arizona. Our main purpose of our trip was to gather at the Mesa, Arizona temple of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints as a family to perform saving ordinances in behalf of Colleen’s grandparents. It was a wonderful occasion to see most of her family in the temple sealing room, bringing to happy closure a journey that began decades ago with the conversion of Colleen’s parents and her two uncles.

Of course, we were able to see some of God’s greatest natural wonders along the way. We travelled through Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, and Oklahoma, all states I’ve never been to before. We saw the white sands of New Mexico and the massive Grand Canyon. I posted several pictures on Flickr, but here are a few of my better ones.

Grand Canyon
Yours Truly
Grand Canyon
White Sands, New Mexico

If you like Gowalla, you can see my journey.

Christmas Break

Sunday, December 20th, 2009

This past Wednesday officially began my Christmas break. I took four classes this semester: Literature of the South, Elements of Spanish 1, PC Software/Hardware Maintenance, and WWW Programming. I got As in all four (which was no surprise). The most difficult classes was Southern Lit, in which we had to read seven novels and one play. I didn’t finish complete all of them (and I “read” one as an audiobook). But that’s my challenge to myself, to finish those that I didn’t: Faulkner’s Absalom, Absalom!, Lee’s To Kill A Mockingbird (which I’ve already read before, but I love it that much), and Warren’s All The King’s Men. Yeah, I was a horrible student.

I’ve also become addicted to buying books on Amazon thanks to their free 30-day Prime trial. Since I signed up, I’ve ordered several books, all of which I’m exited about, but there’s three in particular:

From the Transfiguration Through the Triumphant Entry

The first I actually bought on Amazon some time ago, but haven’t been able to devote the necessary time to it. It’s The Life and Teachings of Jesus Christ: From the Transfiguration to the Triumphant Entry, edited by Richard Neitzel Holzapfel and Thomas A. Wayment. It’s volume two of a three-volume series, a collection of essays written about the different events in Christ’s life. Holzapfel and Wayment are, like myself, members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and the seventeen essays in this volume are by LDS scholars who provide insight into the Savior’s mortal ministry. These essays touch upon subjects like the apostles and the seventy, the Transfiguration, the parables of Matthew 13, more details on the Apostles, the death of the Baptist, the Olivet Discourse, and the family of Jesus. The first volume was great, and I’m excited to read this one.

From the Last Supper Through the Resurrection

The second book I recently ordered, and it’s the continuation of the The Life and Teachings of Jesus Christ, and this volume is entitled From the Last Supper Through the Resurrection: The Savior’s Final Hours. Again, very excited. This volume contains fourteen essays and is, rightfully so, the largest of the volumes. The essays discuss the historical setting of Christ’s prophecies and His life, then the story of the Last Supper, broken into the accounts of Matthew, Mark, and Luke, with a separate essay regarding John’s testimony; Gethsemane; the arrest; the Jewish authorities; the Romans; the Crucifixion; the Burial; and the Resurrection, and more. On a side night, this volume has one of my favorite paintings of the Savior, composed wonderfully by the LDS painter Simon Dewey.

The third book is for the design geek in me. It’s Robert Bringhurst’s design “bible,” The Elements of Typographical Style. I’m hoping to gain a lot of understanding from this book, considered to be one of the best on the subject of typography. My design education opportunities in my neck of the woods are rather limited, with UAM offering rather basic art classes. So I’m undertaking a lot of the education myself through the web. In the end, I found books—those tangible, paper wonders—to be the best teacher, though the web is, of course, awesome in its own right.

Needless to say, I’ve got a lot of reading ahead of me, with these books and others I hope to read in the following weeks.

HTML5 & the quasi-death of XHTML

Monday, July 6th, 2009

In the past several weeks there’s been a bit of a stirring in the web design world. This stirring culminated in the announcement that the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) would not re-new the XHTML Working Group’s charter at the end of 2009. The W3C will pool its efforts and focus on the HTML5 specification.

This appears to be good news. No longer will the schism that separated HTML4 and XHTML1 (that formed in 2000) divide web designers and, more importantly, web browsers. The Internet will depend on one specification to markup websites.

I speak from a utopia though. There are still many issues at hand. The biggest drawback is HTML’s past tendency to be sloppy. With certain tags like < img >, XHTML used the wonderful / > closing bracket to signify the end. Every element had to be closed, from your < p > < /p >s to your < br /> and the afore-mentioned < img/>. Another bit of sloppiness is that fact that some web developers type their tags in all caps ( < IMG > or < a HREF > and the like. I grew up learning HTML when the web was making the transition to 3.2, then 4.0. In 2002 I took a web design and development course, teaching the 2001-drafted XHTML 1.0 specification.

XHTML was supposed to be the beginning of the transformation of the Internet, giving us XML parsed documents, more semantic code, and tighter and better developed web sites. Well, that hasn’t exactly happened. Many major websites still don’t adhere to web standards—take a look at Best Buy’s website; it’s nothing but table nested in table nested in table. We’ve still got years to go, and years before HTML5 is finalized and put into popular use on the Internet.

I’ve begun adding elements new in HTML5 to my website. Semantic markup like < div id="header" > has been replaced with the new tag < header >. This semantic markup lets humans and machines know exactly which section is supposed to be and how to interact with it. < footer> is also a new one I’ve updated. The rest will be done over time. If you’re into validating websites, the little CSS and HTML icons in the right sidebar will point you to several errors on my site—all blamed on my looking ahead to CSS3 and HTML5, plus a few third-party code snippets (like PayPal and Facebook Connect) that are really beyond my control in editing.

If you enjoy making websites like myself, I recommend reading up on the changes to come via HTML5. It’s an exciting time. If you can’t see the changes, most notably the usage of @font-face, a CSS rule to use any font the designer wishes, download Firefox 3.5, Safari 4, or Opera 10.

Safari Microformats Plugin

Friday, June 19th, 2009

Microformats are a great idea for embedding contact and event information into a website. With the SafariMicroformats plugin, you can easily extract this information and add it to your address book or calendar.

The latest version of Kasper Nauwelaerts’ SMF plugin works with Safari 4 on OS X Leopard, but I’ve tweaked the plugin to work on Safari 4 under OS X Snow Leopard. It requires some simple tweaking and running Safari 4 in 32-bit as opposed to 64-bit, but it works great.

Here’s how.
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Work begins on MonticelloLive.com

Saturday, June 13th, 2009

A few weeks ago, a friend and fellow member of Twitter Geeks of Monticello, Jeff Noble, asked me what I thought about taking over the technical side of Monticello Live (ML), a WordPress blog reporting on local news around Monticello, Ark. and Drew County. After a few weeks of doubting and pondering and vacation, I decided to take him up on the offer. It seems like God had his hand in this endeavor, as Jeff and his family are moving to Virginia next month.

History of Monticello Live

Jeff started the blog in September 2006 as an online source of news and community information. Since then, the site has expanded to a center for the community to communicate online. Jeff became absorbed with Journey Church, and Joe Burgess took over operations of ML, with Jeff helping out with the technical aspects.

The site receives an average of nearly 1,000 daily visitors—an accomplishment, considering Monticello has a population of under 10,000—and has seen peaks of up to 16,000 visitors in a single day.

The Challenge Ahead

I don’t take the task at hand lightly. ML has grown tremendously over the years, and I only hope I can help it continue. Taking over Jeff’s responsibilities will be a challenge I look forward to. My first project at hand will be an overhaul of the layout of the site. ML’s content causes it to burst at the seams from time to time—the severe storms that rolled through the area on May 6, 2009 stressed ML’s server and the site was taken offline for several hours. That situation has been remedied and we now recede on our own dedicated server, allowing us stretching room for the growth spurts.

Over the next few weeks, I will be working on re-designing the layout to be more user-friendly and accessible. If anyone wants to be in-the-know, comment and I will let you see the progress from time to time. It won’t be a drastic overhaul—a new masthead, a different perspective on the three-column layout, more refined typography, integration with Facebook Connect (to allow you to tie your ML activity with Facebook), and a few other things.