kellegous.com

 

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no april fool, it’s a real design.

April 1st 2004 painfully early

Usually at this time every year, I am scrambling trying to put together something for April Fool’s Day. Putting together spoof pages is a lot of fun and hacking the company printer is even more fun, but time overtook me this year. Instead, I decided to push ahead on the new design that has been growing very slowly in a sub-folder since February. I still have quite a few things left unfinished, so consider it an alpha version. Now that it is up, though, I will be more likely to take care of those remaining issues. Interesting things about the new design include: web standards obedience, XSLT based publishing templates, a new cleaner and more advanced commenting system, and dynamic comment counts on static pages. John will be pleased to know that the new commenting system supports some limited markup and a pretty extensive set of character entities. Of course, it has not been thoroughly tested, so I should say in theory it supports those things.

Things will continue to change over the next few days, but I need to get some sleep so I can be fresh for my interview at the Copernicus Center tomorrow.

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comments

#1
Juan
¡Entidades!
#2
John
The crashing sound you just heard was within Kelly's code. Please ignore it.
#3
kellegous
¡works for me!
ok, ok, so I can't even copy the latin1 entities properly. I added iexcl; I will double check the rest later.
#4
Juan
¡Él miente!
#5
John
…or not.

Post a Comment: To leave a new comment, simply type your message below. Markup is also allowed as long as it conforms to XHTML Strict. A list of allowable tags is available in the Comment Guidelines. Obviously, if the words “XHTML Strict” mean nothing to you, you should stick with just typing your message below.

about kellegous.com

kellegous.com is the personal site of kelly norton, a designer and engineer living in Atlanta, Georgia. Kelly used to be a graduate student at the MIT Media Lab but graduated in the summer of 2006. Before that, he was the Senior VP of Technology Development for Connexxia, a small technology company in Atlanta. He now works as a Software Engineer for Google. (more…)

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