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Real Estate Services by Jon Griffith

Marcel the Shell with Shoes On

December 7, 2010 by admin

Simply perfect.  I fell for Marcel.  I hope you do too.

MARCEL THE SHELL WITH SHOES ON from Dean Fleischer-Camp on Vimeo.

Directed by Dean Fleischer-Camp
Marcel is voiced (untreated & unenhanced) by a genius named Jenny Slate
Written by Jenny Slate + Dean Fleischer-Camp
www.deanfleischercamp.com

Filed Under: Videos

How to Adjust the Margins on Disqus Commenting

December 7, 2010 by admin

I run a myriad of WordPress blogs.  On most of them, I utilize a commenting system called Disqus.  It’s just cool.  There’s one thing that I was troubled by when I first implemented it.  When enabled, the comment section seemed to be aligned flush with the width of my content, leaving no aesthetic margin to delineate a separation in design.  Thankfully, using Firebug, I was able to inspect the Disqus comment area to find the class identifier so I could modify the design slightly to fit my site.

Notice the following image.  The dark gray background and the Disqus comment area butt up against each other.  Not cool.  The right side of the comment form (not shown) also squished against the right hand side-bar.  Not attractive at all.

Simple Fix

There’s a very easy CSS style that you can apply to your Disqus settings for a given website and you do it from the Disqus website:

  1. Simply login, choose the site profile that you need to address.
  2. Click the settings tab, then click Appearance on the left.
  3. Scroll to the bottom of the page and paste the following into the Custom CSS box:#disqus_thread { margin: 0px 20px 0px 20px; }

Save your settings, and re-load your blog.  The setting above essentially squeezes the entire Disqus comment section by 20 pixels on the left and the right sides.  You can modify this to suit your needs, but it should help you line up your comment box with the other content on your site.

Here’s how it looks now:

Hope that helps.

Filed Under: Tips and Tricks Tagged With: address, CSS, find, Simple Fix, Wordpress

Please Reply with Remove in the Subject Line IS INEFFECTIVE

December 6, 2010 by admin

Spam is a serious problem.  If you send bulk e-mail to people who have never heard of you, nor expressed an interest in your products or services, then you’re simply being a pest, and you’re breaking the law.

I’ve seen on more than one occasion someone implement the old “reply with remove in the subject line” method.  The problem with this is that the e-mail address that your “remove” system is going to verify against is the one that I’m sending my reply from.  In many cases, it’s not the e-mail address that you used to send the message in the first place, because I’ve chosen to forward mail from multiple addresses to one location.

The “remove” method is ancient in digital years.  It’s also impossible to know if you’re actually using an automated script to remove addresses, or if you’re manually removing them when you get a message that says “remove” in the subject line.  The latter method is a joke.

The Right Way

Whatever you’re using to send bulk e-mail should provide a link at the bottom of your messages that allows for single click un-subscription.  When you send me something I don’t want, I should not be expected to do any work to eliminate future mailings.  I shouldn’t have to be inconvenienced by your system’s antiquity by forcing me to write YOU an e-mail to ASK you to stop sending mail that you weren’t supposed to send me in the first place.

If I can’t one-click unsubscribe from your message, I can guarantee I’ll never use your services.


Filed Under: Changing Times Tagged With: ASK, interest, services, The Right Way, YOU

Shredded

December 5, 2010 by admin

At the age of 8, my uncle, Steve Griffith, purchased the one gift that my parents had me believing I would not be getting for Christmas that year.  Quite honestly, I don’t remember wanting it so much as I do the blisters that I would soon have on my left thumb.  It was roughly 1979.  My family had moved a few times by then, and I remember that we were living in Moon Valley, a subdivision in North Central Phoenix, Arizona.  Actually, it was north of Shaw Butte, near the current site of the Point Tapatio, which had not yet been built.  Only two short years prior, my grandparents had graciously bestowed upon us the ever-so-popular Atari Pong.

The Atari 2600 Home Gaming Console

Atari 2600 had invaded…along with one game, Space Invaders.  Needless to say, this began my real gaming fascination.  As someone afflicted with A.D.H.D., and someone with good hand-eye coordination, video games were the perfect fit.  And fit, they did.  Over, and over, and over again.

When ColecoVision was released, it propelled the home console industry in a new direction…

Fast forward through years of arcade credits and Pizza D’Amore, through Nintendo (never owned), Super Nintendo (also never owned), and all other gaming consoles (also never owned), and you’ll find a trail of PC gaming experience.  When I was 14, I was given a new Apple IIc,

and my gaming days on the console were over.  Infocom text games, Ultima, Lode Runner, Pinball, Super Pinball…you name it, I was playing it.

I was never upgraded from the Apple IIc to another computer system until I was given an IBM 8086 with a 5MB hard drive.  No games.  Now it was about sequencing music.  The gaming was on hold through high school, for the most part, because of skateboarding, girls, and homework.  Oh, and I didn’t have a gaming console.

When the push towards “Multi-Media” came out, I was thrust through the new interactive Zork and Myst games, also on the PC.  From there, Castle Wolfenstein, and others like that.

The real gaming began in 1997 when I discovered Quake and local network connectivity.  My free time was gone.   Rounding out my favorite games were the first person games like Quake, Quake II, Quake Arena, Ultimate Tournament 2004, and other such games.  Somewhere in there I dabbled with the first Starcraft, but I don’t remember it as much as I do Total Annihilation, which dominated my home network.  I had 4 computers at the time, and had people over frequently to waste time on them.

I was turned on to Call of Duty by Carson Joyner when he was my roommate (as well as UT2K4.)  I got really good at both of them.  It was at this point that I quit playing.  That was 4 years ago.  I thought I would never play again.

I was wrong.  Last July, when I discovered that Starcraft II had been released 13 or so years after the original, I couldn’t resist.  I had to see it…I needed to see what had changed.

Shredded

Last night, on December 4th, 2010, I deleted Starcraft II from my computer, then I shredded the CD (I had deleted it 5 times prior…but kept re-installing it as I learned new strategies.)  I found myself spending my free time playing.  Then I found myself getting better at it.  When I learned that the best players are paid very well, just like any pro circuit tour sport, I also learned that those players play 10 hours/day, and they’re mostly South Korean.

I’m never going to be that good, and the game just makes me lose time and become frustrated.  Even though it exercises some key areas of my brain, it’s not worth the compromise.  So, I’m done with it.  And that’s why I’m writing this post.  After all, I have more time to do more creative things now :).

Filed Under: Changing Times Tagged With: Apple IIc, Lode Runner, Multi Media, PC, Space Invaders, Super Pinball, time

Outsourcing

December 3, 2010 by admin

In 1994 I traveled the nation with a company called Camfel Productions. It was a fantastic experience. During that time I journaled every night. Every once in a while I type up a page and add it to the blog here, and that’s why you’ll see some posts dated pre-blog era. The problem I’ve faced is the amount of time it takes to re-type them. Even at 80+ wpm on a good day, it just doesn’t make sense for me to re-type the entire 80 pages, single spaced, when I already spent 10 months night after night typing it once.

So, I decided I’d dive into my first elance.com experience. I’ve outsourced the work to someone in Canada, as here profile seemed to be the most impressive. I thought at first I could just scan the documents and have OCR convert the scan to text, then just copy and paste the results into my posts. Unfortunately OCR doesn’t do very well with faded dot-matrix print.

The total cost? $50.00. I figure it represents about 10 hours worth of my time, and that’s not what I want to be doing, so, why not? I’ll let you all know how it goes…and in fact, you’ll see more posts with 1994 dates on them soon :).

Filed Under: Lifestyle Design Tagged With: Camfel Productions, cost, OCR, time

Arizona Ironman 2010

December 2, 2010 by admin

The morning of the race wasn’t nearly as cold as last year, and the day would unfold with an amazing wind, and beautiful skies, along with some heavy showers for brief moments.  It’s not a perfect chronicle of the day’s events, but a fun video to make, nonetheless.  Enjoy.

Arizona Ironman 2010 from Jon Griffith on Vimeo.

Filed Under: Videos Tagged With: Arizona, Arizona Ironman, Jon Griffith, race

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