Give the readers what they want

OJR has an excellent article by Vin Crosbie that talks about an issue near and dear to my heart: customization… or give the readers what they want. (thanks, Nathan)

If newspapers, online and dead-tree alike, are going to move forward we have to start treating our readers as individuals. The one-paper/site-fits-all mentality has got to go away.

The auto industry moved away from the “any color you want as long as it’s black” and most, if not all, manufacturing industries are moving toward mass customization.

The newspaper industry has forgotten that it’s not a manufacturing industry (well one part of it is, but I’d hardly call online publishing manufacturing…).

I see this at work all the time… “topic x doesn’t get many clicks, so we don’t do much with it”, which is the online equivalent of “topic x doesn’t test well with the focus group so we don’t cover it that much.”

Well, does it not do well because no one’s interested, or does it not do well because you do nothing with it?

Simply put, there’s an audience for every topic you can imagine… network television is learning that lesson the hard way as their numbers flee to specialty cable stations.

In the newspaper industry all of our content is captured digitally, whether it’s coming from the wire or local sources… it’s just a matter of making our inventory available, instead of keeping most of it in the storeroom — or worse, our competitor’s stores.

It’s time the news industry wake up and work to provide every user with the content they want, the way the want it and when they want it.

The technology is there… the only thing missing is the will to do it.

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CSS spring cleaning?

Barry Parr brings up a very good idea, revisiting and cleaning up your style sheets.

I’ve been working on a big project, and as it grew during the development cycle I took a week to clean up and refactor the sheets so that, say, stats pages weren’t burdening the user by loading up blogs styles.

Now that the project is nearing launch I could do well to go back and clean up the sheets.

I also need to go through my templates for inline styles, which are a quick and dirty way to try out a style, but it takes discipline (which I’m lacking) to actually remember to remove the inline style and transform it into a rule or class in a linked sheet.

I need to find a good reference for sed, as I understand it’d be a quick way to scan my files for the presence of inline styles.

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Praises for the Mac

ZD Net has a good article about PC’s proclivity to crash, and a Mac’s proclivity to not crash.

It’s another shot in the ongoing Mac vs. Windows debate.

Here’s one of the better nuggests:

In my computing life, there’s one constant: The Macs don’t crash and the Windows machines do.

Having run and administered both PCs and Macs (OS7-X), I can say that Macs are far more reliable. Thanks to OS X‘s Unix underpinnings it now has enough geek-itude to keep my interest while still boasting one of the best interfaces to date (though not as good as OS 9’s, Gruber and I agree).

If you’re considering buying a new machine, take it from me, the extra money you spend (and it’s not that much) on a Mac will more than pay itself back in spades in terms of fewer crashes, fewer support calls, and better service and support when you do need it.

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Woe, woe is me

I haven’t been charmed by the snake for long, but oh how it’s charmed me.

Right now, I’d really, really, really like to have Python’s slice operators in PHP.

Once you’ve started using Python, you’ll never want to go back. I’ve learned C, moved on to PHP, and am now using/learning Python for some projects, but I occasionally have to dip back into PHP.

It’s like being torn away from a warm, comfortable, productive world and being yanked into a cold, harsh, world where }’s and )’s watch over a programmer chain-gang.

I’ve been debating whether to learn Java or Perl next, but I don’t want to leave the world of Python… what’s a coder to do?

Posted in Technology, Web design | 7 Comments

Countin’ down your favorites

Just when you thought it couldn’t get any better…

I’m not sure when they rolled it out, but Apple added Billboard’s Hot 100 and Top R&B charts from 1946 to present to the iTunes Music Store.

This is a really nice way to go back through the one hit wonders from days-gone-by (especially for folks like me who can’t seem to find much new music they like…).

Bravo, Apple!

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