How will you be accessing the web
next year? Hint: it may not be from a fixed location.
CALDER monumental sclupture at
STORMKING
"you froggin ashmole..."
-- words used to hide expletives in the tv rebroadcast of Theres Something About Mary
Our friend Chuck Nanney has a show,
happydeathangersexdreammachine, opening next Thursday, 5/24, at Debs & Co., another gallery with a domain but no site. They seem to have let their
artnet page go, too.
Marvel drops the
comics code.
There's been a proposal for a new page here that only people with accounts can see (or: that only people who want to can see.) The idea would be to off load some of the more insider-ish posts from this page (like Thursday night plans) to some place a bit more private. I guess this assumes someone other than "us" might read this page, which is not exactly proven - still I think this is probably a good idea. Any thoughts? Names?
Sqrat-not :
Frank Stella's 20,000 lb. piece of
space-junk for The National Gallery.
Any ideas for tomorrow? I'm game. MB's out. I think I need to save my rivington street party coupons for 6/2. Bars are good on the early side, but these days they get unbearably crowded fast. Especially on Ludlow street. But if a bar it must be (not that I'd be complaining,) maybe we could try lolita, which I'll gamble is very empty until much much later. It's a new place on Broome, between Allen and Orchard.
would be nice if there was a post option in the left hand column so it isnt necessary to scroll to the bottom. or else a header option. also, the spaces between post are smaller than the spaces between paragraphs inside of a post. the space between posts should be larger or at least as large.
the future is now --
extreme gaming. seems like theres a movie concept in there somewhere or maybe just a subculture. i was also thinking a dialogue between the unabomber and mcveigh would make an interesting scene. apparently they were on the same cell block and had the opportunity to talk to each other. i wouldnt imagine that those two had much freedom in prison to congregate. maybe they had group therapy together. can someone on death row get psychiatric care?
The convert line breaks to html is a nice feature I must say.
What about
this computer chair setup? Strange times we live in.
My good friend Stephen has been lurking a bit on the site. He's the guy with the amazing place in Sayville that I sometimes mention on my page. Some of you have been there, although he and Virginia were not there at the time. She's the one who made all the cool plates that we have at Rivington St. Anyway, he might be around these parts, and while not wanting to demand he write anything, I thought I'd see if we could get a little introduction going...
How's our garden doing Stephen? I get part ownership because of those
20 minutes of work, right?
We have a plan to make a page with a webcam so anyone can check in on the weather out there (and the garden) even if you're stuck in the city working.
Wow! Thanks, Jim, for the new page. I've already moved in and shuffled the furniture around. I'm very pleased with the expanded archive feature (listing posts by subject in a clean, easy-to-use format) and the various ways to modify and create pages. Great work!
Well, this isn't going as smoothly as I would like, but no major problems. Of course there is no documentation for the new system, so I'm not sure how I expect people to know what's going on....
Anyway, here's a couple things to get everyone started:
You can log into the system at http://www.digitalmediatree.com/login
If you have forgotten or lost your new password (sorry they are not so easy to remember this time, but I think we need the added security) just type your name as it appears on the site (like "posted by: ") into the bottom field and the system will email you your password.
People who are not signed in will see the standard list of pages on the front page. If you are signed in, then you control what goes on the front page. For most people I've put the regular pages up there by default, but the idea is that you are supposed to choose what goes there.
For every page on the site that you can see, you have a "subscription" to that page. To look at your subscription just go to the page in question and click on [subscriptions]. You will see a box with all your subscription info. This tells you whether or not you can post to the page and whether or not you can create new pages underneath that page. There is then a pull down menu that controls how the system keeps track of new stuff (either just new posts, just new comments, both new posts and new comments, or nothing.) Next to that is a field where you could put in an email address. If you do, then an email will be sent to that address every time something new is posted to the page (this is dependent on how you have set tracking for that page.) And then next to that is a filed labeled "homepage". If the page in question is not part of your homepage (http://www.digitalmediatree.com) then this will be a checkbox. Checking the box will add the page to your homepage. If the page is already on your homepage, then you will see a number which represents the order that page falls in the list of pages on your homepage. Change this number to change the ordering of pages. Just change it to whatever you want and the system will reorder the other pages.
For a complete list of pages everywhere on the site, go to /index. This is the same as the [site index] link at the bottom of most pages. This page displays a list of files. After each file is an abbreviated version of your subscription info so you can see everything at once. This is the information inside []'s after each file name. The maximum information would be [P C TB/TP/TC E P] where P = posting powers, C = create new page powers, TP = track new posts OR TC = track new comments OR TB = track both, E = email updates, and P = a private page. A private page that you do not have permission for would not be listed. The /index page also lists [new posts] and [new comments] just like the homepage (and regardless of whether the page appears on your homepage.) Notice that /index can be used at any level in the filesystem, so http://www.digitalmediatree.com/jim/index will get you the directory listing at just that level.
Posting is basically the same. You don't have to put <p> or <br> tags if you keep the "convert line breaks to html" checked. Just use the return and the system will put in the html for you. I'll talk about the "summary headline" field later, but it's basically just what shows up in the "summary" area in the /archive for each page. Any page that has expired content automatically has an archive located at .../archive (like /treehouse/archive.)
You can make a preview post (instead of "post now") in which case it will appear on the destination page, but only you can see it. [edit]ing the post will allow you to change it to a live ("post now") post. Next to that is another pull down for "substitution". If substitution is on then you can include, inside of double quotes, the description of any uploaded picture, and the system will put in the html for you.
Much more to come.