Expanding width
August 30, 2008
The “Big Picture” feature of the the Boston Globe web site convinces me that it’s time to expand the width of this blog to 1024 pixels.

August 30, 2008
The “Big Picture” feature of the the Boston Globe web site convinces me that it’s time to expand the width of this blog to 1024 pixels.

August 24, 2008
I just stumbled across Google Forms, which lets you create forms and record the results in a Google Docs spreadsheet.
See my test form here.
I am slightly agog at this functionality, having spent 2-3 hours setting up a similar form at www.altarserverappreciation.org that just records info in a database. Took about 15 minutes to set up a test on Google Forms.
This is a good night to play around with technology – seeing what’s out there on the web. I am constantly amazed at the amount of free, reliable tools out there waiting to be used.

August 23, 2008
The Washington Post published an article discussing the rise of Graphic Novels:
I’ve wandered into an alternative universe, and I’m trying to decide if I want to stay. The setting is the lovely, old-fashioned library of the General Society of Mechanics and Tradesmen, in midtown Manhattan. The event is a gathering called “SPLAT! A Graphic Novel Symposium.” I’m here because the organizers have promised to lay out, in the course of a single day, “Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About Graphic Novels.”
What I want to know is: How did this formerly ghettoized medium became one of the rare publishing categories that’s actually expanding these days?
More at: Drawing Power
Found at: Metafilter.

August 21, 2008
This blog is due for an upgrade, to the latest version of Wordpress and to a new design.
Hopefully I’ll be able to upgrade the back end today, and work on the design later.
El Jardin de la Nina Maria and Serra Boston are due for upgrades too.
Upgrades upgrades everywhere…
UPDATE 8/23: Upgraded the blog; thanks again to Bluehost the upgrade went smoothly and is now running on SimpleScripts.

August 14, 2008
I got an e-mail from Schmap that my photo of the St. Louis Arch (shown below) has been included on their web site.

Schmap is an online travel guide, and they apparently use Flickr photos tagged with Creative Commons rights to create photo galleries.
See the St. Louis Schmap here.
It’s a pretty ingenious way to grab photos off the web for free. I feel like a published photographer.
