Rottweilers Ate My Laptop

Rottweilers. Computers. Cameras. World Domination. Not necessarily in that order.

Rottweilers.
Computers. Cameras.
World Domination.
Not necessarily in that order.

  • Tumblr
  • Twitter

Powered by Genesis

  • Home
  • About
  • Rottweilers
  • NaBloPoMo
  • Contact

VPS move: done, finally!

June 5, 2009 by kathi

I am happy to report that while moving this blog gave me a few bad moments, WordPress did not actually kick my ass. The blog now even has its very own Rottweiler-themed subdomain!

The old URL links and forwards to this one, and I’ve updated the RSS feed and (hopefully) all of the directories and networking sites where we have listings.

Since the old servers were still running PHP 4 and one was still running Apache 1.3, and this one is running PHP 5 and Apache 2.2, I expect there are still a few things out there that will need fixing once we find them.

But for now, everything seems like it is going pretty well. Yay, me! Yay, WiredTree!

(NaBloPoMo | June ‘09: 5 of 30 | 75% Challenge: 132 of 274)

Filed Under: Computers and Technology Tagged With: NaBloPoMo, VPS, WiredTree, WordPress

VPS move: almost done, finally!

June 4, 2009 by kathi

Yes, I know, it’s taking me long enough considering I started back on Memorial Day weekend.

There was a flurry of activity at work which took up much of my time during the week following the holiday. Plus I was almost paralyzed into inaction by reading about some of the bad experiences that some people had while migrating their sites to new servers, mostly involving PHP scripts and MySQL databases: various guestbook programs (three sites featuring guestbooks, two of which feature rather large guestbooks going back quite some time, whose owners would want to die, or want me to die, should they be lost to time), various gallery programs (two of these, one MySQL-based and one with a flat-file database), and of course, WordPress.

I have come to believe that at least a few of the unhappy people did not read any instructions or tutorials, or else read the bad tutorials (my God, are there a lot of crappy tutorials out there or what), as everything I had responsibility for is now happily residing on the new server. The old Gallery 1 gave me a bad hour of fixing paths and links to graphics programs on the server, but Gallery 2 and the guestbooks went over willingly and required only some extremely simple edits of the various config files.

I’m still singing the praises of WiredTree technical support. I didn’t have too many questions that fell into their area, because I do not think technical support is supposed to take care of my personal panic attack after reading all those bad experience stories. The one big question I had (activating PHP 4 for just one or two domains) was very important and was answered practically before I could blink.

Tomorrow I move this wonderful WordPress blog. I have a feeling that WordPress is about to kick my ass, so think good thoughts for me!

(NaBloPoMo | June ‘09: 4 of 30 | 75% Challenge: 131 of 274)

Filed Under: Computers and Technology Tagged With: Gallery, MySQL, NaBloPoMo, VPS, WiredTree, WordPress

So tell me, web sorta-designer person…

May 28, 2009 by kathi

Why exactly do you use a free Flash intro on your website?

Maybe you think that I shouldn’t be asking this, since I’ve already admitted in earlier blog posts that I am a crappy web designer despite being responsible for the care and feeding of a few websites, and that Flash has kicked my ass hard on quite a few occasions.

I still want to hear your answer, though, Mr. or Ms. Web Sorta-Wanna-Be-A-Designer Person. I want to know why you think it is good to have some other company’s or designer’s name plastered all over the first thing that viewers to your site will see. Unless you took it off, which makes you the big giant scumbag in most cases when it comes to “free” stuff.

What exactly does a free Flash intro add to your website? The customization options on almost all of them are very minimal. Dozens of other people are using the same one, because it is free. How does it make you unique? No one thinks you did it yourself, either. Plus some of us are simply annoyed by it. I really want to know how it adds value to your website.

I actually like good Flash navigation, movies, games and occasionally even gratuitous eye candy, when it’s original and executed well. Emphasis on “good” and “original.” But I truly am clueless about the free and unoriginal stuff that’s just slapped on for no good reason I can see.

(NaBloPoMo | May ‘09: 28 of 31 | 75% Challenge: 124 of 274)

Filed Under: Computers and Technology, Rants or Raves Tagged With: Flash, NaBloPoMo, web design

Trying to stay connected

May 25, 2009 by kathi

No, not in a human building-bridges mending-fences rediscovering-relationships kind of way. Not really wanting to do any of that at the moment, or for that matter, on most days. I’m just wanting my internet connection to remain stable for longer than an hour at a time.

I have had nearly perfect service from Comcast High-Speed Cable Internet since I switched from Earthlink DSL a few months ago. Until the last couple of weeks, which have not been quite so perfect. My husband mentioned some outages during the day, but didn’t give me too many details as to when or how many or how long. I hadn’t experienced any at all during the early morning and evening hours. I asked him to keep track, and kind of forgot about it until yesterday, when periodic outages started. Today, things were fine until early afternoon, and then the connection would go out approximately once an hour.

The customer service reps I spoke to were friendly and really did try to be helpful, but I didn’t get a sense of great knowledge either. The second one said he would need to send out a tech to the house. Oh, joy. My whole goal in doing the self-install was to prevent any Comcast tech from ever touching my network. I figured if it did not work, I’d move on to try another provider. And if it did work, it would keep working. Looks like I might have been wrong about the “keep working” part. So sad, because it was really looking good there for a while.

I’m checking around online to see if there are any known issues and fixes that don’t require me to allow a Comcast tech into my house. That is, if my connection will stay up long enough to allow me to do so!

And there is always the chance this is happening somewhere between my home and the mothership (for DSL that would be the central office but I have no idea what they would call it for cable, or if they even have the equivalent of a central office) and will go away by the time I get a chance to complain again. I would be good with that, so let’s hope maybe that is the case.

(NaBloPoMo | May ‘09: 25 of 31 | 75% Challenge: 121 of 274)

Filed Under: Computers and Technology Tagged With: Comcast high-speed internet, internet down, NaBloPoMo

The Della debacle

May 24, 2009 by kathi

Since I replaced my own aging Dell laptop with a Sony VAIO VGN290-CSJER back at the end of February and I’m not quite ready to replace my also-aging (hmmm, guess that should be “aged,” huh?) Apple Macintosh G4 iBook, I have not been regularly checking out the latest laptop offerings.

I guess that is both a good and bad thing, because I completely missed Dell’s ill-conceived attempt at marketing their Inspiron Mini 10 netbooks specifically to women. I did not see the original incarnation of the site, no longer called “Della” (and wow, isn’t that a terrible idea from the get-go), but from the screenshots and blog posts I did see after the fact, it just reinforces in my mind what a bad idea it is to attempt gender-specific marketing of something that should be a gender-neutral product.

The stereotyping of assuming that women would mainly be computer novices and interested only in shopping, calorie counting, and finding new recipes is just laughable. Oddly enough, though, one other major criticism of the latest Dell effort is one that I didn’t personally find all that objectionable.

That would be using style as a selling point. I thought Dell had done a decent job of it up until now, too. For several of their laptop lines, cases were offered in a selection of colors, laptop skins were available, and their current Design Studio case offerings include some very stylish artwork.

Sony and Apple have always done a great job of selling style and design along with technology, and not by using insulting gender-specific verbiage either. I didn’t choose my laptops solely because of their look, but honestly. If the technical specs are similar and either one will do the jobs you need them to do, do you want the ugly one or the sharp-looking one? Be honest.

Dell lost my business entirely due to concerns that are not gender-specific at all: outsourced customer service and tech support, uneven quality control on the low- and mid-end laptops, and issues regarding timely fulfillment on some purchases made for my business. Perhaps they should concentrate more on improving areas that are of concern to everyone, rather than a poorly-planned gender-specific marketing push.

(NaBloPoMo | May ‘09: 24 of 31 | 75% Challenge: 120 of 274)

Filed Under: Computers and Technology Tagged With: Apple, Dell, Della, NaBloPoMo, Sony

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 10
  • 11
  • 12
  • 13
  • 14
  • …
  • 19
  • Next Page »