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  • MT 3.1 Subcategories

    Movable Type 3.1 lets you now have subcategories, something that I’d kind of been wanting for a while. I’m currently using them and you can see some of the groupings of categories I have to the right. The code is after the ‘more’ link.

  • Movable Type 3.1 Released

    The fine folks at Six Apart have officially released Movable Type 3.1. I’ve been beta testing this for a bit over a week and it’s pretty nice. They also released a pack of plugins for it that includes MT-Blacklist.

  • More Anime Coming Soon to the Big Screen

    Wired has a nice article about three anime films making their way to the US in the coming months: Ghost in the Shell: Innocence, Steamboy, and Howl’s Moving Castle. I’m pretty psyched about all of them. The trailers for Steamboy and Innocence look stunning, and i am hoping to find a copy of one for Howl’s soon.

    The Giants of Anime are Coming

    In coming months, anime’s three most prominent directors will release major films in the US. Oshii’s Innocence will hit theaters in September. Soon afterward, Katsuhiro Otomo will debut Steamboy, an Indiana Jones-style adventure that takes place in an alternative Victorian age where turbo unicycles and pressure-powered jetpacks battle for supremacy. Then Hayao Miyazaki will deliver Howl’s Moving Castle, about a teenage girl who flees a curse by hiding in a gigantic mechanical castle that prowls about on insectlike legs. In addition, Disney will issue three older Miyazaki films on DVD early next year, two of which have never before been released in the US.

    The confluence of these films could finally put anime at center stage in a venue where success so far has been elusive: the box office. Even though Miyazaki’s Spirited Away won the Oscar for best animated film in 2003, it didn’t pack theaters. But unlike most previous US anime releases, these films have the backing of major studios. DreamWorks is distributing Innocence, Sony is handling Steamboy, and Disney is in line for Howl’s Moving Castle. Anime enthusiasts have argued for years that the genre’s fractured visions represent the most important cinematic movement since sex, lies, and videotape ushered in a new era of American independent film in 1986. Now multiplexers will have a chance to see what these fans have been talking about. [Wired News]

    Of course Innocence doesn’t even have viewing dates in CT yet. I hate this state at times, I’ll be sure to be watching it up in Boston.

  • More Anime Coming Soon to the Big Screen

    Wired has a nice article about three anime films making their way to the US in the coming months: Ghost in the Shell: Innocence, Steamboy, and Howl’s Moving Castle. I’m pretty psyched about all of them. The trailers for Steamboy and Innocence look stunning, and i am hoping to find a copy of one for Howl’s soon.

    The Giants of Anime are Coming

    In coming months, anime’s three most prominent directors will release major films in the US. Oshii’s Innocence will hit theaters in September. Soon afterward, Katsuhiro Otomo will debut Steamboy, an Indiana Jones-style adventure that takes place in an alternative Victorian age where turbo unicycles and pressure-powered jetpacks battle for supremacy. Then Hayao Miyazaki will deliver Howl’s Moving Castle, about a teenage girl who flees a curse by hiding in a gigantic mechanical castle that prowls about on insectlike legs. In addition, Disney will issue three older Miyazaki films on DVD early next year, two of which have never before been released in the US.

    The confluence of these films could finally put anime at center stage in a venue where success so far has been elusive: the box office. Even though Miyazaki’s Spirited Away won the Oscar for best animated film in 2003, it didn’t pack theaters. But unlike most previous US anime releases, these films have the backing of major studios. DreamWorks is distributing Innocence, Sony is handling Steamboy, and Disney is in line for Howl’s Moving Castle. Anime enthusiasts have argued for years that the genre’s fractured visions represent the most important cinematic movement since sex, lies, and videotape ushered in a new era of American independent film in 1986. Now multiplexers will have a chance to see what these fans have been talking about. [Wired News]

    Of course Innocence doesn’t even have viewing dates in CT yet. I hate this state at times, I’ll be sure to be watching it up in Boston.

  • I wonder if the is the Infocom one

    Radio 4 is re-releasing an old Hitchhikers game.

    Radio 4 revives Hitchhiker’s game

    A Douglas Adams game is revived to mark a new Hitchhiker’s Guide To The Galaxy radio series.
    [BBC News | TECHNOLOGY]

    I really do wonder if this is the old Infocom game. I’ll need to find some of that not tea I guess.

  • Movable Type 3.1: Dynamic Templates

    One of the cool new things in Movable Type 3.1 (which should be out pretty damn soon now) is the dynamic PHP publishing. Why is this a big thing? Because up till now if you’d changed a something like your individual archive page template you’d have to go back and rebuild your whole site. If you’ve got a large number of posts this tends to take a while. Now, it can just render the page when requested, which means doing a pushlish all will go much faster.

    After a few rough starts, I got the whole thing running on this blog. The index page and the feeds are all static, but any archive page is built up on the fly. And you can even turn on a caching if you so desire. When you do this, a copy of the dynamic page is kept around for an hour so that if someone else visits that page again within the hour it doesn’t have to rebuild it again from the database.

    Setup for this feature was actually much easier than I thought, once you know a few things. One, it doesn’t work if you are using Berkeley DB as your database. Which required me to convert to using mySQL. Which worked out okay overall, but I had to do a bit of tweaking since I seemed to have some odd corruption in my database. Once that was done I just had to turn on the dynamic publishing for the templates I wanted and create a templates_c directory in my blog’s home directory. One republish later and everything was working just fine. It’s pretty much transparent to the person browsing the site (which means your existing permalinks won’t change at all.

    It also lets you do caching of the dynamicly generated pages via the Smarty template engine. If you turn it on, dynamicly generated pages are cached for an hour by default (though you can tweak that if you need to). Pretty slick. While my site doesn’t generate a ton of traffic, this is the kind of thing that could really be useful for a site that gets tons of hits a day.

    One or two other gotchas. If you are using PHP you can’t use opening tags in the format <?, you need to have them in the format <?php. As long as you do that you shouldn’t have any issues. Also, this is supposedly not compatible with any other plugins (not an issue for me as I don’t use any other plugins).

    Another issue is how dynamic pages are built. I tend to do my template editing locally using cyberduck+subethaedit and I have my templates linked to a local file on my web server. I find it is much easier to edit them that way. The problem with this is that if you make a change to the local file, you need to go back into MT and save it there also for it to take affect. I personally think it should make a check to see if the file version has changed and load that one in if so.

    Next thing to try: doing more with categories and sub-categories (You can see a bit of a preview to the right).

  • Skype for OS X

    Skype is now available for OS X (It’s been out for Windows for a while). Anyone I know using it? Drop me a line and let me know so I can add you. [via Joi Ito]

  • (Sex Bomb Sex Bomb…) Quiz of the Moment

    Just about everyone I know on LJ has been taking this damn quiz, so I thought I’d look and see how I did.

    20 Questions to a Better Relationship

    eXpressive: 6/10
    Practical: 4/10
    Physical: 5/10
    Giver: 8/10

    You are a XSYG–Expressive Sentimental Physical Giver. This makes you a Sex Bomb.

    You are sexy sex sex sex! The sexness! You are the sexiest, hottest and most charismatic of all types. You are a captivating speaker and a great dinner date — relaxed, self-effacing, charming and generous. Your type probably has origins in something sad — trying to keep the peace in a tough family situation, or an early heartbreak — and you’ll probably want to address and resolve that at some point, but in your relationships that heartache is pure gold!

    You lie effortlessly — not necessarily a bad thing. You can have problems with fidelity. You need frequent praise and validation, and in seeking it you can make decisions that aren’t consistent with your general good judgment. In other words, don’t cheat on your significant other just because someone is paying attention to you.

    You strongly dislike conflict, and will avoid it. Like an XPYG, you give so much of yourself to your partner that you feel dismissed and unappreciated if you don’t get the same in return. But you internalize your feelings more and have a hard time getting over them. You don’t *want* to cheat — you just keep finding yourself in vulnerable situations. But you’ll stay with your partner in the long run from guilt and a desire to please.

    Your sex life will always be hot. You are one of the rare people who can keep the fires of passion going forever — if you find a good match. Find another XSYG and you will never need (or want) anyone else again.

    Of the 33007 people who have taken this quiz, 9 % are this type.

    Hrm, I’m not sure what I think of that quiz. I certainly would never use the term ‘Sex Bomb’ to describe myself. Though the parts about disliking conflict are very true. I think I might be an XSYG with RSYG tendencies.

  • Safari CSS Bug?

    safari-clearAnyone else seen a bug with clear: both; on Safari? It seems like it is being a bit overzealous in what it is clearing. As you can see in the image here, it seems to be clearing the space from the <div> on the left, which I would think is out of the scope of that clear: both. It looks fine in Mozilla (and I believe IE).

    Update: If you are looking at this at Safari you’ll most probably see the behavior right now.

  • QOTD 08/31/2004

    Wilson Mizner
    “A good listener is not only popular everywhere, but after a while he gets to know something.”
    [Quotes of the Day]