Thursday, December 14, 2006

CSS wisdom

I noted this Will Jessup post entitled Creating a Style-Guide for your site in my Google Notebook some time ago and then — organizationally challenged twit that I am — I couldn't find it again until now, and that was by accident.

Now I'm not only posting here to recommend it to all CSS devotees, noob and vet alike, but I'll also tag it at del.icio.us so I should always be able to find it again!

Hey, you! Working on your CSS! Have you read that post? Seriously, take a look!

Wednesday, December 06, 2006

And the final list is . . .

Here's the finalized list for this project:

  • Lord of the Flies

  • Orn

  • Vile Village, The

  • Ender's Game


  • Animal Farm

  • Lord of the Rings

  • Lord Foul's Bane


  • Bloody Mary

  • One False Move

  • On A Pale Horse

  • K Is for Killer

  • Stand on Zanzibar



Now that I have a list made up of books that I own I can get busy photographing them!

Saturday, December 02, 2006

A better possibility for S

How could I, in my previous post, suggest Slaughterhouse-Five when it is obvious to anyone reading my Love All Books blog that the correct book should be Stand on Zanzibar.

Photoshop Project

For my final project in the Photoshop class I'm taking, I have to create an animated gif file.

After a bit of deliberation, I've decided that I might want to create a banner for my Love All Books blog.

My plan (at the moment) is:
  • to come up with books (preferably books that I have read) with titles that begin with the letters L-O-V-E A-L-L B-O-O-K-S

  • these initial letters would appear, one at a time, and as each appears

  • the cover of a book that begins with that letter would then float onto, then off of, the banner

So far, I've come up with the following potential list of books to use (obviously some letters are going to be harder than others):
UPDATE:I've picked the following extra titles already (one more to go!):

Wednesday, November 15, 2006

I thought I was going to be a Web Developer!

Okay, it turns out what I'm doing for my friend Rob is more graphic artist and video post production than I thought I'd be doing, and less web development, but I'm still going to use this blog to discuss what's going on in my professional life. That will include what's going on with the above endeavors, plus my own journey to become a better web developer (self-study, classes, projects personal & professional, etc).

So, who is this Rob guy and what are you doing for him then, you ask? Well, for starters, Rob is a personal trainer. Rob also loves helping people, especially where it comes to personal fitness. As such, he has under development a number of projects (videos, ebooks, a membership site, et cetera) that I will be linking to when it goes live later this year. I've been doing some web work for him, but mostly lately I've been doing video production (using Adobe Premiere Pro, Adobe Encore DVD, and Adobe Photoshop), and have been working with him on the companion ebook for this product.

Since this product has to do with improving your posture (a problem that most people that sit in front of a computer for any length of time have — whether they're aware of it or not — that can cause a number of other problems for them), but is still under wraps, I'll refer to it for now as Project Quasimodo.

So, what are am I doing for myself then?

Well, I am still very interested in becoming a full-fledged web developer.

I did this kind of work for a brief time for my former employer but, as was typical at this company — in a very Dilbert kind of way — I was given training, put to work on a project, and then once that project was over (long before I could really master the skills) I was put to work on something completely unrelated to web development. Shortly after that project ended, I was laid off and have done very little with my own website since (being busy with "stay-at-home dad-hood" will do that to you!)

If I could master the skills I"d like to master, I'd be a wiz in the following areas:
  • web graphics (I'm taking a Photoshop Class at Dakota County Technical College (DCTC) to work on that)

  • Client side & server side web programming (which I will probably obtain while pursuing a Web Developer Certificate from Saint Paul College)

  • PHP5/MySQL (also part of the above named certificate program)

  • XHTML/CSS (actually part of client side programming, but I'd really like to know these areas well)

  • AJAX (something I'll have to find a class for sometime, or teach myself)



Right now, I'm reading Head First HTML with CSS & XHTML because, as I said, I'm really rusty at web stuff, and I've never done all that much with either css or xhtml, and I'd like to (one look at my blogs and you'll see why!)

Oh, and I'm about one third of the way through this book in what is — for me — record time, and I'm remembering a good deal (it does help though that almost none of this part of the book is new to me, just rusty!) Still, if you're new to this stuff, these "Head First" books are the way to go.

Thursday, October 19, 2006

Hunhhh?

Just when you think you've seen every variation of "webmaster" on the planet, including such lovelies as "webmaestro" and "webguru", along comes moi with this puzzler of seemingly random capitalization: "Web MaJoR". What's up with that?

It does make one pause, doesn't it?

"What is wrong with the term 'webmaster'?", you may ask. To which I reply, "Nothing, in the proper context. The term truly does apply—by my very uneducated guesstimation—to probably a good 0.00003728 per cent of the web creators out there.

(Oooh, raise your hand if you correctly deduced that the number I cited above is meaningless, that I totally came up with it off the top of my head. I do stuff like that; most of the time you won't even be told about it—I'll give you credit for the smarts to figure it out on your own. That's part of my charm. If that bothers you, get over it.)

My problem—if you wish to view it that way—with the word stems from the fact that I cannot apply the term master to myself as it is being used (follow the link above to the definition at the Free Online Dictionary). In this context it is supposed to mean "an expert", which I, most certainly, am not, even though I do most of the web site management and modification for a certain company in the Twin Cities area.

"So why 'MaJoR', then?" you ask.

Well, the number one definition for major at the Free Online Dictionary is "Greater than others in importantance or rank"; while I'd say I'm certainly not greater than everyone when it comes to web development—there are, as I said, actual masters out there—I'm better than many and have performed the task professionally. More appropriate is definition number six ("Of or relating to the field of academic study in which a student specializes"): I am, and of necessity must continue to be, an ongoing student of internet technologies. (This is one of the reasons I'm currently working on the take-home portion of my Introduction to Photoshop mid-term!)

"Okaaaaayyy . . ." I hear you wonder, "so what's up with the funky capitalization?"

Well, my first name is Michael, my wife's is Julie (there are some projects—web and otherwise—for which her help is indispensable), and my kindergartener is Riley (anyone with a kindergartener will understand that he'd want to be involved and express his opinion on our projects).

And so—to make a long story short ("Too late!")—MaJoR stands for "Michael and Julie or Riley.

Under Construction

This blog is currently under construction. I'll get back to by the end of the week with actual content and finalize the look & feel.

In the meantime, here's a quick rundown of what it is all about: this is a blog about my web mastering activities in all their forms.

I have another post coming today sometime wherein I will discuss my usage of the phrases I'm using here: "Web Master" and "Web Major".