Just something different to look at while I play with my new theme in the background. Who knows when it will get finished.
I like this theme. Clean. Elegant. Snappy.
Enjoy, or something.
Just something different to look at while I play with my new theme in the background. Who knows when it will get finished.
I like this theme. Clean. Elegant. Snappy.
Enjoy, or something.
Thinking about building a new custom theme for the ‘blog, using jQuery and a cool jQuery plugin I found. I will have to start playing and scheming… but first, I must get my development server working…
UPDATE 8/22/09 00:09: Building and setting up a new development server with newest software packages to design a totally new inanis.net. WOOT.
Inanis Glass 1.3 has been released. You can download it right from Inanis.net this time, barring a billion downloads kill the server.
If you have been using a previous version of Inanis Glass, it is HIGHLY suggested to upgrade to this newest version, due to a Cross Site Scripting vulnerability in versions 1.2 and earlier. The vulnerability is mostly annoying, but the potential is there for shenanigans, so upgrade. Do it. Like, now. Please. Thanks!
There are lots of new things going on in this version, most notably the ability to translate the theme. It’s compatible with the way WordPress translates things, so if you are interested in translating Inanis Glass, either Contact Me, or take a look at the WordPress Codex.
If you do translate Inanis Glass, I’ll put your translation up on my site so others can find it!
Thanks folks. It’s been a fun ride!
Sorry to everyone who emailed me or commented over the past week with issues/comments/praise/rants about Inanis Glass. Holidays and overtime at work have made getting back to you difficult. Everyone should be up to date at this point…
Here’s some hardware fun:
Had some extra hardware come into my possession, so I upgraded the Inanis.net server today. Upgraded the Athlon XP 1700+ to a 2800+, bumped it up to 1GB RAM, doubled the Hard Drive to 80GB and replaced the motherboard (or mobo, to the geeks). I had planned on putting the new CPU and RAM in the original mobo, but I found out the old mobo had a couple of capacitors that were starting to puff up, so I went full tilt. This upgrade was much easier than the last one I did. I used CloneZilla to copy the Hard Drive, and brought the new machine up beside the old one, to reduce downtime. I got the X Server configured correctly and made sure the network card worked properly (which, this time, was not an issue, not like last time), then switched the box over. Total downtime: about 10 minutes.
Life goes on.