Category: Blogging

Moving Back to Omaha!

Well, I guess now is as good a time as any to let everyone know that I (we) will be moving back to Omaha this Fall! :-)

We’ve been away for over 8 years now, and it’s time to come back home. This big move is partially why I haven’t posted in a while… Busy, busy, busy… Overwhelmed with the preparations, really. Of course, this also means that I have had to set aside things like writing music in the interim… I had been writing a lot of stuff, so this might actually be a good time to take a step back and gain some perspective. Then, I can start fresh and go in some new directions.

Anyway, it will be great to be able to see a lot of the people we have known over the years again and to hang out at all the old places we used to visit. Sure, I’ll miss the mountain views and the crisp, clean mountain air… But, I have always been a big fan of Omaha, and family and friends are much more important than the view out of my window. Besides, the Omaha Symphony is way better than the orchestras I’ve heard around here (sorry, Colorado, but it’s true).

Posted via email from Music Tech Talk on Posterous

Bandcamp, How I Love Thee

Sometimes I get carried away and I can’t seem to stop myself from posting. Other times it seems there are big gaps… And, of course, if I was patient enough to post this tomorrow, it would spread things out a little… But since I’m not, I just want to take this moment to point out a feature or two on Bandcamp that I like.

1. I like the way one can be directed to a customized, tiled list of your music instead of just the most recent upload. The old way made you have to click and scroll too much and that can only lead to carpal tunnel.

http://dmgardnermusic.bandcamp.com (new version)

Assigning an upload to each tile can be annoying (and somewhat time-consuming), but it does let you present your music in whatever way you think is most beneficial. You do, however, have to click the back button to get back to the tiles.

2. I’ve mentioned this before, but I love the customization features available in Bandcamp. I am able to really make it look like an extension of my website by changing backgrounds and so forth.

http://dmgardnermusic.com (example of main site)

3. I love how Bandcamp lets you embed your music across several platforms. Not only that, but you can customize font and background colors, again helping you exactly match it to your site’s theme. I also like the visualizations, which can add a little flare to your example, particularly if it is a midi sample. NOTE: I am only going to use the email version of the link for this next example to see how it posts across platforms. I’ll fix it later, if necessary.

http://dmgardnermusic.bandcamp.com/track/fanfare-alleluia-ssaa?permalink

4. I like how Bandcamp lets you offer your tracks in various ways (free, set your own price, fixed price). For me, this is a little less of a concern, as I am not a band… And most of my music on Bandcamp exists for the purpose of example. To a band, however, these features are invaluable. Bandcamp allows you to download in various higher-res formats too. No low-quality MP3s here (unless you’ve tricked the system and up-converted them).

5. It doesn’t stop there. You can offer bonus downloads such as PDFs, offer physical goods and merchandise, and even provide the UPC code for your new album. Bandcamp can even use your UPC info to relay sales statistics to Nielsen SoundScan,” the company behind the Billboard charts.” You have to admit, that’s pretty cool. ;)

6. OK, now this one is a little weird, but it’s still cool none-the-less. Ever feel the need to play Defender, but don’t own an antique Atari system? Well, you’re in luck! Bandcamp will let you play a cheesy little version of Defender with your statistics! Huh? That’s right. …With your statistics. Just click on “stats,” then on “defender” when logged into your account and let the fun begin! Well, it’s a kinda fun for a few minutes anyway…

7. Given the awesome treasure trove that Bandcamp already offers, I’m sure it does other cool things too… But now I’ve spent too much time writing about them to discover any more of them just yet.

Posted via email from Music Tech Talk on Posterous

Below is a comment posted on one of the other platforms I post to:

“Hold the fire key down when turning on Defender if you think it starts out too easy. Thanks for the props.”
Comment by  Joe of bandcamp.com
2010/04/11 at 11:21am

Feedburner Email Subscriptions – Where Are My Photos?

I don’t exactly have the answer to that question yet…  At least definitively.  But I am going to test a few things out with this post.  Yep, more live testing, but it’s the best way to see results…  Good or bad.  So I will try to accomplish two things:

1.  Embed my Logo into the post via Feedburner’s Feed Image Burner and Flickr.

2.  Make the photos you see in the actual post appear in the email.  For this, I have installed a plugin that changes the image URLs to “absolute URLs.”  Appropriately enough, it’s called URL Absolutifier.  Since I am limited on time right now, I’m just going to shoot from the hip and see if it works.  If not, I’ll move on to stage 2:  Actual Research :(

If this works, there will be a logo in the email subscription email and an image of the MTT Blog Banner.


Feel free to report results…  Also, if you have any suggestions on the best time to have email subscriptions delivered in general, please let me know.  Thanks for reading!

Posted via email from Music Tech Talk on Posterous

Feedburner RSS Feed Changes – File Too Big

(Oops…  The server didn’t like my graphic attachment the first time I tried to post this, so I’ll just post without it and delete the previous one later.  Sorry!!!)

While in the process of updating my subscription options, I realized that some of my feeds were not updating properly.  The problem appears to have been related to a setting in WordPress.  It was set to display 999 of my most recent posts and Feedburner evidently did not like this.  As soon as I changed it to only 10, Feedburner was happy again.  If you have already subscribed to the RSS feed, the address stayed the same and you shouldn’t miss any updates.

But remember, subscribing by email is the way to go.  So, go ahead, it’s easy!

Also, please let me know if you have any email subscription issues or just any feedback in general.  I’m always looking to improve MTT, and the best way to do that is to find out what you would like to read about.

Posted via email from Music Tech Talk on Posterous

Subscribe by Email – An Easier Way to Follow

I used to use RSS feeds to follow other blogs, and that was working out OK until I realized that I hate using RSS feeds. There were just too many, and I was really only checking a few of them regularly anyway. …Not to mention, life generally provides constant distractions, so before you know it, you’ve missed a lot of stuff that’s been posted.

So now’s your chance! Instead of just waiting around until you happen to remember to look through your RSS feeds, simply enter your email address in the sidebar on the right and click “Subscribe.” Now you can be as lazy as I am and just wait for the information to just flow your way!


Trust me it really is the best way to follow…

Besides, I know you wouldn’t want to miss out on any of the fascinating posts on Music Tech Talk. ;-)

Posted via email from Music Tech Talk on Posterous

POSTEROUS Post-By-Email Formatting FINAL UPDATE

FINAL UPDATE:  Clearly, pasting from word improved things like text formatting.  Text colors, for example seem to be working now.  There seems to be something in particular about this post that is making Posterous insist on placing the “inline” pics at the end…  If you look at previous posts, you will note that they are properly placed.  I forgot to add the YouTube link for the last iteration of this post, so that was obviously not what caused the problem.  If the pics place properly this time, I tried separating them with text…  Other than that, there are a few challenges to overcome when posting via email, but generally it’s not too problematic.  Figuring out the little quirks is half the fun.


UPDATE TO POST ATTEMPT: It was inevitable that something would not post correctly since this was a live test… In this case, the text colors did not work. Also, while the inline photos did not post as a gallery, they also did not post in the correct position within the post… That is usually not an issue. Not sure what caused that problem, but it may have been that I typed this post entirely in Thunderbird, rather than pasting from Word. Finally, adding tags within the Posterous email was NOT successful… My guess is that they only work when using the post by email feature provided by WordPress. Oh well. I guess I’ll just have to add tags manually for now. I have re-posted the same thing, but started in Word this time and pasted into Thunderbird to see if there is any difference. Below is the original content.

Unfortunately, every now and then the only way to really test a feature is to use it live.  At the bottom of every post you will note that it says the post was posted by Posterous, a handy post-by-email blog utility.  So far, I have been very happy with the results.  It is amazingly simple, posts across multiple platforms and does so relatively consistently and intuitively.  Posterous, is however, not my actual blog.  Sure, I formatted it to kind of mirror my actual blog (self-hosted WordPress), but really I use it because of its email posting capabilities.  It interfaces nicely with Facebook too, as a separate tab.  Ironically, exponentially more people seem to read my blog via Posterous than my actual blog, but since I like the way WordPress looks and acts, I prefer WP to be my blog’s home.

Here’s an example of some generally successful formatting.  This should be green, bold, italic, and centered.

Next, just by posting the LINK (much easier this way, because Posterous decides which platforms need which format), not the embedded HTML, you should see a YouTube video about some kid getting his finger bitten by his little brother with over 175 million views (why?).  By link, I mean just the web address at the top of your browser.  Yeah, it’s that easy.

Next, you should see some inline pics.  In other words, they are just inserted into the body of the post.  Some services will put multiple pics into a gallery, and just one pic inline.  Posterous does this as a matter of fact.  I don’t like it.  Don’t worry though, if you use WordPress, the pics will still post inline, even if Posterous doesn’t.

Here are those two Pics.  I’ll try to have them centered and will resize one of them by dragging.  Some services will let you click on the images to see the full-size version.  Others will not.  Facebook will generally use them as thumbnails, which is nice.



THIS PARAGRAPH FOR FACEBOOK USER INFO ONLY:  Facebook is a terribly buggy platform and will handle pics differently depending on how many there are in your post.  Just one pic is great.  You’ll get a thumbnail followed by a snippet of your post.  More than that, and it has been posting just thumbnails with nothing else.  I have to put a link in the comments below them.  Strangely, those comments repeat themselves every time I post this way.  I think it’s actually another Facebook bug, but in this one instance it at least saves me from having to re-type the comment.  Even more strange is the fact that a fan page will post it correctly, but the regular interface will not… At least they are consistent… Follow these links to see a fan page example: Fan Page ).


TIP:  When posting by email using Mozilla Thunderbird, make sure you remember to select “Rich Text” (HTML) only under “Options” before you hit send.  If you forget and send the message with mixed plain and rich text, your post formatting gets all squirrelly.

Some things like emoticons (if you are into that sort of thing) are more hit-and-miss.  :)   :(   ;) (typed in) :-) :-( ;-) :-P :-D :-[ (pre-formatted by email client).  It usually works best for me to write the post in Microsoft Word, images and all, then paste into Thunderbird (Pics, YouTube links, regular links and visual formatting).

However, there is one particularly annoying quirk that I would like to overcome.

Unfortunately, the way Posterous handles tags only works with Posterous.  Everything else may post perfectly on other platforms, but none of them will have tags or categories other whatever your defaults are set to.  This problem makes search engines useless unless you go back and add them in…  Which, of course, wastes time and defeats the purpose of posting across multiple platforms.  So, when formatting the title, the email subject is the title.  This is how you format the tags in PosterousTitle of Your Post ((tag:  tag, post, blog, tips, wordpress, post+by+email))

Whatever you do, DON’T FORGET THE OPENING OR CLOSING PARENTHESIS which look like this:   ((     ))  If you do forget, your post title will include a long list of tags.  Very unsightly.  The thing is, if you are posting across multiple platforms, as I do, mistakes can be VERY time consuming to fix.  Overall, I don’t have too many issues…  This problem can be easily prevented, if you just remember to give it a quick glance before hitting send.

Making tags post on other platforms, however, is a different story…  So this post will itself be a test of a work around.  You can tell Posterous not to post anything beyond a pound sign followed by the word end (look for an explanation under “What Else Can Posterous Do?”  I would show you of course, but then nothing else would post afterward…  Annoyingly enough, I think you will see the shortcut at the bottom of this post…  BEFORE that shortcut, I will put in just a couple shortcuts that WordPress recognizes to see what happens.  Normally, I suppose I would put these just before the end of the post, so as not to make them too distracting, but for example I’ll put them here.  Also, I’ll put a duplicate set using asterisks instead of brackets for the WordPress sites so you can still see them:

NON WORDPRESS SITES SHOULD STILL BE ABLE TO SEE THESE UNLESS CONFUSED WITH SOME OTHER KIND OF SHORTCUT, I SUPPOSE
[category Blogging, internet, posted by email, reviews, websites, technology, online utilities, tips, wordpress]
[tags test post, formatting, post+by+email, posterous, wordpress, tips]

DUPLICATE SET FOR WORDPRESS SITES:
*category Blogging, internet, posted by email, reviews, websites, technology, online utilities, tips, wordpress*
*tags test post, formatting, post+by+email, posterous, wordpress, tips*These are specifically WordPress.com shortcuts.  I don’t know how the self-hosted version of WP will handle them.  As I said, this is a live experiment.  If you want to see if this worked, here are the appropriate links:  Main Blog (self-hosted WordPress); WordPress.com Version

In case you are wondering, I post simultaneously to over 15 platforms including several blog and social networking services.  Why, you ask?  Because I can…  And because, it’s an interesting way to try out multiple features and services at the same time.  Some of them are better at getting search engine placement, others have better templates or better interfaces.  Other than that, it’s just good, clean fun.

Posted via email from Music Tech Talk on Posterous

POSTEROUS Post-By-Email Formatting UPDATE

UPDATE TO POST ATTEMPT: It was inevitable that something would not post correctly since this was a live test… In this case, the text colors did not work. Also, while the inline photos did not post as a gallery, they also did not post in the correct position within the post… That is usually not an issue. Not sure what caused that problem, but it may have been that I typed this post entirely in Thunderbird, rather than pasting from Word. Finally, adding tags within the Posterous email was NOT successful… My guess is that they only work when using the post by email feature provided by WordPress. Oh well. I guess I’ll just have to add tags manually for now. I have re-posted the same thing, but started in Word this time and pasted into Thunderbird to see if there is any difference. Below is the original content.

Unfortunately, every now and then the only way to really test a feature is to use it live.  At the bottom of every post you will note that it says the post was posted by Posterous, a handy post-by-email blog utility.  So far, I have been very happy with the results.  It is amazingly simple, posts across multiple platforms and does so relatively consistently and intuitively.  Posterous, is however, not my actual blog.  Sure, I formatted it to kind of mirror my actual blog (self-hosted WordPress), but really I use it because of its email posting capabilities.  It interfaces nicely with Facebook too, as a separate tab.  Ironically, exponentially more people seem to read my blog via Posterous than my actual blog, but since I like the way WordPress looks and acts, I prefer WP to be my blog’s home.

Here’s an example of some generally successful formatting.  This should be green, bold, italic, and centered.

Next, just by posting the LINK (much easier this way, because Posterous decides which platforms need which format), not the embedded HTML, you should see a YouTube video about some kid getting his finger bitten by his little brother with over 175 million views (why?).  By link, I mean just the web address at the top of your browser.  Yeah, it’s that easy.

Next, you should see some inline pics.  In other words, they are just inserted into the body of the post.  Some services will put multiple pics into a gallery, and just one pic inline.  Posterous does this as a matter of fact.  I don’t like it.  Don’t worry though, if you use WordPress, the pics will still post inline, even if Posterous doesn’t.

Here are those two Pics.  I’ll try to have them centered and will resize one of them by dragging.  Some services will let you click on the images to see the full-size version.  Others will not.  Facebook will generally use them as thumbnails, which is nice.


THIS PARAGRAPH FOR FACEBOOK USER INFO ONLY:  Facebook is a terribly buggy platform and will handle pics differently depending on how many there are in your post.  Just one pic is great.  You’ll get a thumbnail followed by a snippet of your post.  More than that, and it has been posting just thumbnails with nothing else.  I have to put a link in the comments below them.  Strangely, those comments repeat themselves every time I post this way.  I think it’s actually another Facebook bug, but in this one instance it at least saves me from having to re-type the comment.  Even more strange is the fact that a fan page will post it correctly, but the regular interface will not… At least they are consistent… Follow these links to see a fan page example:
Fan Page ).


TIP:  When posting by email using Mozilla Thunderbird, make sure you remember to select “Rich Text” (HTML) only under “Options” before you hit send.  If you forget and send the message with mixed plain and rich text, your post formatting gets all squirrelly.

Some things like emoticons (if you are into that sort of thing) are more hit-and-miss.  :)   :(   ;)   (typed in) :-) :-( ;-) :-P :-D :-[ :-\ :-* 8-) (pre-formatted by email client).  It usually works best for me to write the post in Microsoft Word, images and all, then paste into Thunderbird (Pics, YouTube links, regular links and visual formatting).

However, there is one particularly annoying quirk that I would like to overcome.

Unfortunately, the way Posterous handles tags only works with Posterous.  Everything else may post perfectly on other platforms, but none of them will have tags or categories other whatever your defaults are set to.  This problem makes search engines useless unless you go back and add them in…  Which, of course, wastes time and defeats the purpose of posting across multiple platforms.  So, when formatting the title, the email subject is the title.  This is how you format the tags in PosterousTitle of Your Post ((tag:  tag, post, blog, tips, wordpress, post+by+email))

Whatever you do, DON’T FORGET THE OPENING OR CLOSING PARENTHESIS which look like this:   ((     ))  If you do forget, your post title will include a long list of tags.  Very unsightly.  The thing is, if you are posting across multiple platforms, as I do, mistakes can be VERY time consuming to fix.  Overall, I don’t have too many issues…  This problem can be easily prevented, if you just remember to give it a quick glance before hitting send.

Making tags post on other platforms, however, is a different story…  So this post will itself be a test of a work around.  You can tell Posterous not to post anything beyond a pound sign followed by the word end (look for an explanation under “What Else Can Posterous Do?”  I would show you of course, but then nothing else would post afterward…  Annoyingly enough, I think you will see the shortcut at the bottom of this post…  BEFORE that shortcut, I will put in just a couple shortcuts that WordPress recognizes to see what happens.  Normally, I suppose I would put these just before the end of the post, so as not to make them too distracting, but for example I’ll put them here.  Also, I’ll put a duplicate set using asterisks instead of brackets for the WordPress sites so you can still see them:

NON WORDPRESS SITES SHOULD STILL BE ABLE TO SEE THESE UNLESS CONFUSED WITH SOME OTHER KIND OF SHORTCUT, I SUPPOSE
[category Blogging, internet, posted by email, reviews, websites, technology, online utilities, tips, wordpress]
[tags test post, formatting, post+by+email, posterous, wordpress, tips]

DUPLICATE SET FOR WORDPRESS SITES:
*category Blogging, internet, posted by email, reviews, websites, technology, online utilities, tips, wordpress*
*tags test post, formatting, post+by+email, posterous, wordpress, tips*These are specifically WordPress.com shortcuts.  I don’t know how the self-hosted version of WP will handle them.  As I said, this is a live experiment.  If you want to see if this worked, here are the appropriate links:  Main Blog (self-hosted WordPress); WordPress.com Version

In case you are wondering, I post simultaneously to over 15 platforms including several blog and social networking services.  Why, you ask?  Because I can…  And because, it’s an interesting way to try out multiple features and services at the same time.  Some of them are better at getting search engine placement, others have better templates or better interfaces.  Other than that, it’s just good, clean fun.

Posted via email from Music Tech Talk on Posterous

POSTEROUS Post-By-Email Formatting

Unfortunately, every now and then the only way to really test a feature is to use it live.  At the bottom of every post you will note that it says the post was posted by Posterous, a handy post-by-email blog utility.  So far, I have been very happy with the results.  It is amazingly simple, posts across multiple platforms and does so relatively consistently and intuitively.  Posterous, is however, not my actual blog.  Sure, I formatted it to kind of mirror my actual blog (self-hosted WordPress), but really I use it because of its email posting capabilities.  It interfaces nicely with Facebook too, as a separate tab.  Ironically, exponentially more people seem to read my blog via Posterous than my actual blog, but since I like the way WordPress looks and acts, I prefer WP to be my blog’s home.

Here’s an example of some generally successful formatting.  This should be green, bold, italic, and centered.

Next, just by posting the LINK (much easier this way, because Posterous decides which platforms need which format), not the embedded HTML, you should see a YouTube video about some kid getting his finger bitten by his little brother with over 175 million views (why?).  By link, I mean just the web address at the top of your browser.  Yeah, it’s that easy.


Next, you should see some inline pics.  In other words, they are just inserted into the body of the post.  Some services will put multiple pics into a gallery, and just one pic inline.  Posterous does this as a matter of fact.  I don’t like it.  Don’t worry though, if you use WordPress, the pics will still post inline, even if Posterous doesn’t.
Here are those two Pics.  I’ll try to have them centered and will resize one of them by dragging.  Some services will let you click on the images to see the full-size version.  Others will not.  Facebook will generally use them as thumbnails, which is nice.

THIS PARAGRAPH FOR FACEBOOK USER INFO ONLY:  Facebook is a terribly buggy platform and will handle pics differently depending on how many there are in your post.  Just one pic is great.  You’ll get a thumbnail followed by a snippet of your post.  More than that, and it has been posting just thumbnails with nothing else.  I have to put a link in the comments below them.  Strangely, those comments repeat themselves every time I post this way.  I think it’s actually another Facebook bug, but in this one instance it at least saves me from having to re-type the comment.  Even more strange is the fact that a fan page will post it correctly, but the regular interface will not… At least they are consistent… Follow these links to see a fan page example:
Fan Page ).


TIP:  When posting by email using Mozilla Thunderbird, make sure you remember to select “Rich Text” (HTML) only under “Options” before you hit send.  If you forget and send the message with mixed plain and rich text, your post formatting gets all squirrelly.

Some things like emoticons (if you are into that sort of thing) are more hit-and-miss.  :)   :(   ;)   (typed in) :-) ;-) :-P :-( 8-) :-$ (pre-formatted by email client).  It usually works best for me to write the post in Microsoft Word, images and all, then paste into Thunderbird (Pics, YouTube links, regular links and visual formatting).
However, there is one particularly annoying quirk that I would like to overcome.

Unfortunately, the way Posterous handles tags only works with Posterous.  Everything else may post perfectly on other platforms, but none of them will have tags or categories other whatever your defaults are set to.  This problem makes search engines useless unless you go back and add them in…  Which, of course, wastes time and defeats the purpose of posting across multiple platforms.  So, when formatting the title, the email subject is the title.  This is how you format the tags in PosterousTitle of Your Post ((tag:  tag, post, blog, tips, wordpress, post+by+email))
Whatever you do, DON’T FORGET THE OPENING OR CLOSING PARENTHESIS which look like this:   ((     ))  If you do forget, your post title will include a long list of tags.  Very unsightly.  The thing is, if you are posting across multiple platforms, as I do, mistakes can be VERY time consuming to fix.  Overall, I don’t have too many issues…  This problem can be easily prevented, if you just remember to give it a quick glance before hitting send.

Making tags post on other platforms, however, is a different story…  So this post will itself be a test of a work around.  You can tell Posterous not to post anything beyond a pound sign followed by the word end (look for an explanation under “What Else Can Posterous Do?”  I would show you of course, but then nothing else would post afterward…  Annoyingly enough, I think you will see the shortcut at the bottom of this post…  BEFORE that shortcut, I will put in just a couple shortcuts that WordPress recognizes to see what happens.  Normally, I suppose I would put these just before the end of the post, so as not to make them too distracting, but for example I’ll put them here.  Also, I’ll put a duplicate set using asterisks instead of brackets for the WordPress sites so you can still see them:

NON WORDPRESS SITES SHOULD STILL BE ABLE TO SEE THESE UNLESS CONFUSED WITH SOME OTHER KIND OF SHORTCUT, I SUPPOSE
[category Blogging, internet, posted by email, reviews, websites, technology, online utilities, tips, wordpress]
[tags test post, formatting, post+by+email, posterous, wordpress, tips]

DUPLICATE SET FOR WORDPRESS SITES:
*category Blogging, internet, posted by email, reviews, websites, technology, online utilities, tips, wordpress*
*tags test post, formatting, post+by+email, posterous, wordpress, tips*

These are specifically WordPress.com shortcuts.  I don’t know how the self-hosted version of WP will handle them.  As I said, this is a live experiment.  If you want to see if this worked, here are the appropriate links:  Main Blog (self-hosted WordPress); WordPress.com Version

In case you are wondering, I post simultaneously to over 15 platforms including several blog and social networking services.  Why, you ask?  Because I can…  And because, it’s an interesting way to try out multiple features and services at the same time.  Some of them are better at getting search engine placement, others have better templates or better interfaces.  Other than that, it’s just good, clean fun.

Posted via email from Music Tech Talk on Posterous

A Couple of Things

It seems like my schedule will sometimes implode on itself, and I am forced to compartmentalize my various activities.  As an experiment, I tried to see how hard it would be to blog every day.  I have come to the conclusion that, while it is doable, I tend to want to write fairly substantive posts.  …Which could probably be spread out a little more.  Now I am trying to decide exactly what interval would be best to keep a regular posting schedule and keep readers interested.  That is of course, assuming that I have readers and that those readers are actually interested in what they are reading.  …And you know what they say about assuming…With that said, this will be a mini-post, followed by another post of yet undetermined length…  …Eventually followed by a follow-up on some trumpet stuff.  That way, tags, titles and so-forth won’t get too confusing …  Unlike maybe this last sentence… ;)

Posted via email from Music Tech Talk on Posterous

REVISED-Switching from Wordpress.com to Self-hosted Wordpress Part III – Import/Export

This post has been revised to reflect a better way to ensure formatting translates via Posterous. Notes on how this was accomplished are at the bottom of this post (previous version of this post demonstrates what happens if you don’t send it the way described below)… Read more »

Preposterous Posterous Posting

OK, Here are the various headers that worked and didn’t work. I’m not sure if it was the length of the tags or the plus signs, but it wasn’t the parenthesis b/c the one I messed up posted with them (third posted example). I’ll try to avoid this issue in the future. Read more »

Switching from WordPress.com to Self-Hosted Wordpress Part III – Import/Export

*The export/import process from Wordpress.com to the Self-Hosted Version of WordPress is rather simple.*

…But it doesn’t do everything for you. It actually worked a lot better to transfer from Blogger to Wordpress.com, but that’s another post. Here’s /my take/ on what you have to do (general summary): Read more »

Posterous and Lazyfeed Reviews

Successful Tags… But ONLY in Posterous

So, here’s the deal. The tags actually worked using this format in the subject line: ((tag: tags, blogging, posterous))

However, they only worked for Posterous itself. For now, I’ll just have to go back and manually put them in via WordPress later. Oh, well. Everything else seems to work amazingly well! ;-)

Posted via email from Music Tech Talk

Switching from WordPress.com to Self-Hosted Wordpress (part IIa – Lorelle on Corrections)

Have you ever had that “feeling” when you turn in your big essay and it comes back all covered in red ink?  Well, that’s how I feel after having read a couple of comments from Lorelle on WordPress.  I wasn’t’ sure exactly how to take it at first, but realized a few things after looking over her comments carefully: Read more »

Switching from Wordpress.com to Wordpress 2.9 (part II – Unexpected Future Costs)

There’s a catch with everything these days, right?  Well, the “free” version of Wordpress (.com) isn’t exactly free if you want to make any upgrades in the future.  They don’t exactly have banners up mentioning stuff you might have to pay for down the road.  I first discovered this by trying to register a domain name…  It didn’t say anything about paying until the end of the process.  I discovered later, however, that you can go to the “upgrades” tab to see what each product costs.  Here’s a list of stuff you might not of thought about, but might end up paying for later: Read more »

Switching from Wordpress.com to Wordpress 2.9

Well, I decided to go ahead with the transition.  I waffled for a while, but came to the conclusion that I would really enjoy learning how to work with the PHP and CSS scripts.  There are some definite differences (and similarities) between the two platforms, so I’ll try to break down some of the details for you. Read more »

CSS: Upgrade or Headache?

I decided that I wanted to give the CSS upgrade feature on Wordpress a try, because I didn’t like the size of the tiny default font…  And I am interested in changing a few other things on the site in general.  I managed to change the font to a reasonable size and reduce the size of the “posted by:” and date stamp text to make room for the larger titles.

I am completely experimenting with the process, so my first action was to download and save the a template of the original CSS for the theme I am currently using.  I saved it to a text editor and used it for reference.  When I located a line of code that I wanted to change, I pasted ONLY that line into the CSS editor in Wordpress.  That way, I could always tell what I was editing, and I was fairly certain that I wouldn’t mess up anything else.

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Blogger Import to Wordpress Clean-Up

I just couldn’t stand some of the import issues I found after transferring my blog from Blogger to Wordpress, so I am in the process of fixing them. Initially, I thought I could ignore them. I discovered a few new types of problems and made my best effort to begin fixing all of them. Here are a couple issues addressed:

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Formatting Issues

FYI, Wordpress has an awesome import feature that allowed me to import all of my previous posts from Blogger… All-in-all, it’s a great feature, but there are a few formatting issues that are troublesome. For example, it kept a lot of the fonts and colors and pics, but it messed up some of the spacing. I haven’t decided whether it is even worth fixing yet. Anyway, please don’t let it distract you too much.

One other thing, the layout in general is experimental… So, that might look different from time-to-time.

WordPress Themes