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Blogging Within Firefox With ScribeFire

Chris
Posted by Chris September 10, 2008
Categories: Blogging, Featured, Software

ScribeFire logo

I must stress that this is a test for the Firefox blogging plugin ScribeFire and therefore some formatting may be unusual. I take that back — formatting was perfect!

ScribeFire is a plugin for Firefox which will turn the popular web browser into an editor for boggers. ScribeFire supports many blogging services including; LiveJournal, Tumblr, Xanga and MySpace. Many blogging platforms such as WordPress, Moveable Type and Drupal, are supported too.

ScribeFire, an extension of Firefox ®, enables users to easily drag and drop formatted text from the Web into their blog(s), post entries, take notes, and optimize their ad inventory, directly through the Firefox browser.

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Digital Artist Toolbox: An Inspiration For Designers And Illustrators

Chris
Posted by Chris August 18, 2008
Categories: Art, Design

Digital Artist Toolbox is an inspirational blog for anyone who is involved in illustration or design. In fact inspiration is one of the categories, along with freebies, Illustrator, Photoshop, tutorials and news, all of which are filled with useful and relevant posts.

Digital Artist Toolbox logotype

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Some Amusing Spam Comments Caught By Akismet

Chris
Posted by Chris August 17, 2008
Categories: Blogging, Featured, WordPress

Blog24 Submit Comment

Like everyone else, I hate spam, whether it be email, via SMS or through the post — but most of all I hate comment spam on blogs. Luckily there is help with filtering out most of the spam when blogging, as a WordPress user I make use of the Akismet plugin.

Since using Akismet it has caught all the spam on this blog and only one legit comment (ham).

Once a fortnight, sometimes weekly, I quickly look through the comments that have been filtered out at spam by Akismet. Using the spacebar I can scroll and scan the list of junk-filled comments with ease. I do this just to make sure that there are no worthwhile, legitimate comments that have been filtered as spam. Comments that contain lots of URLs soon whizz past, whereas the shorter ones may actually be permissible, so those are read.

Very occasionally there are those that amuse:

  • Interesting web page is, i’ll see you later one more timed
  • Your guestbook is example of middle-class guestbooks. Congratulation!
  • Just serfed in. Great site, guys!

Personally I like the way that there is a single ‘congratulation’ in the second comment.

Strangely the following religiously themed comments have been posted on Blog24 recently.

  • These prayers help me to keep God in my life, especially with the many distractions I encounter.
  • I have always wanted a compendium of novena prayers. Thank you for sharing all these prayers with us. It brings joy and happiness to everyone. I know, I do feel that way.
  • I can find the prayer I want. I thank God for this website.

Please do not thank God — thank me, via the comments perhaps.

To conclude, I highly recommend using the Akismet plugin for WordPress, and other blogging platforms. Alternatively use a service such as Disqus to manage and publish comments on your blog. Disqus also uses Akismet to filter spam from comments.

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Twitter Boycott Not The First

Chris
Posted by Chris July 04, 2008
Categories: Featured, Twitter

smoke abounds during independence day fireworks on the mall, viewed from adams morgan

Today, apart from being Independence Day, is the day that Twittercott is set to make Twitter founders Biz and Evan sit up and listen to the 1,700,000 or so community members who are disgruntled about the frequent Twitter outages.

However this is not the first time that Twitter has been ‘boycotted’.

Keen bloggers Andrew Dobrow and Bwana McCall promoted Twit-Out after reading the following post on FriendFeed [click to enlarge]:

Shey's post about Twitter on friendfeed.com

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Boycotting Twitter Could Lighten The Load

Chris
Posted by Chris July 03, 2008
Categories: Featured, Social Networks, Twitter

As I begin to write this the Fail Whale is indicating Twitter’s ongoing problem — ‘Twitter is over capacity’. It is the frequent outages that Twitter suffers that has prompted Paul Chaney, Internet Marketing Director at Bizzuka, to arrange a 24 hour boycott of Twitter on July 4th.

Paul Chaney explains his idea:

twittercottIt’s time fans of Twitter express some tough love by joining in a 24-hour boycott - a “twittercott” - starting at 12:00 a.m., July 4th. Let’s declare our independence from Twitter by not using it the entire day. We send a message by NOT sending messages. Get it? If enough of us were to participate it would be a shot heard round the world wide web!

 

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