Technology Tales

Adventures in consumer and enterprise technology

TOPIC: THE THING

A wider view

12th July 2010

After playing with the idea for a while, I finally have succumbed to the charms of buying a new and bigger screen. While I questioned the wisdom of replacing a 17" screen that worked without fail, what is sitting in front of me as I write these words is a 24" Iiyama ProLite B2409HDS and very nice it is too. This is my third Iiyama and I stayed local when it came to acquiring the thing. Mind you, bringing back a 7.7 kg box by public transport takes its toll when trying to carry it using the handle on its top.

Once the thing was home, its installation was a straightforward matter of attaching the base, releasing the pin from the back to raise the screen higher and attaching it to a PC. The screen can be raised to a good height that stops slouching and should promote decent posture. Though there is a DVI socket on the back of the monitor, I am using the D-SUB connection because that is what is on the back of my main home PC, even if adding a graphics card would allow the use of the DVI option; that's something that will have to wait for now. What will continue to await use are the speakers that are included because I never used those on the old panel either, mostly because I have a set of standalone speakers for that job.

Out of curiosity, I attached the new screen to a running PC. However, I soon found that any adjustments to the resolution produced disturbing flickering on the screen, but these were banished by a system reboot. Then, I upped the resolution to the maximum of 1920x1080 and the result is more than workable with no discomfort. So far, I have put the extra display real estate to use for perusing digital maps and processing of digital photos. Limitations on the length of a line of on-screen text should be, for the sake of readability, mean that a larger screen is not so advantageous for web browsing. Considering those width restrictions, it might be time to move away from my habit of maximising application windows to fill the screen to have more of them open on the same desktop at once. While that's another option for exploring later, it's good to have them too.

Now, I have to think up a use for the old Iiyama ProLite E431S that has served so well over the last few years. Various thoughts like spreading a display over more than one screen or using it when I have two PC's going at once have come to into my head, but I'm not rushing anything. One thing that I don't intend to do is retiring the thing just yet. Things have moved on from CRT monitors that start to ail after a few years of use, with their LCD successors showing more resilience and cutting down on the cost of computing in the process. Seeing piles of CRT's awaiting dumping is a distressing sight that both can and should be consigned to history in these more environmentally aware days. Thoughts like that have the effect of curtailing any spending on gadgets for me and I have no intention of building up a collection of LCD panels, so what I have will need to do me for a good few years. On the evidence of the screens that I have been using, there's good reason to expect plenty of longevity and good service to follow.

A radical new look on the way for WordPress' administration area

31st August 2008

New Post Creation Screen

One thing that you can never say about Automattic is that it stands still for very long. That may generate adverse commentary from some, yet it's bad to leave things stagnate, too. In fact, resting on laurels also generates flak, so you can't please everyone all the time.

Earlier on this year, the WordPress administration screens went through something of an overall for version 2.5. In hindsight, it wasn't terribly dramatic, but the prospect had me checking out what was happening with the development version and contributing to the project in my own small way. Now, it appears that a bigger upheaval is in prospect with wireframes and what not being brought into play on the design side.

The first change that anyone will notice is that the navigation has moved from the top to the side, and that some things have been moved around and renamed. Another thing that you'll see soon enough is that there is a QuickPress section added to the dashboard screen for those quick and short postings. Sticking with the subject of content creation, alterations to post and page editing screens and the link creation screen are obvious too. The thing that really comes to mind here is the level of customisation on offer, so you can make yourself feel right at home: some of the screen furniture can be moved about, and you can remove what you feel is nothing but useless clutter. Content generates comments, so the addition of keyboard shortcuts for comment moderation should be a boon for those with very active readers.

Some functionality currently added by plugins is getting incorporated in the main application. An example is automatic upgrades of WordPress itself. In the development version, it installs the latest nightly build, but I am certain that it can be made to point to the latest stable release. That makes it more convenient for keeping a backseat eye on things rather than getting stuck into the hurly-burly of checking on what's in Subversion.

There are some pieces that remain incompletely functional at present, such as the Inbox and Media added to this post pieces, but I have seen nothing that used to work to be broken. So, while the development version of WordPress is more of a work in progress than I have seen for a while, it will do what you need it to do. Since you always need to be cautious, I'd advise you to keep away until it's ready for the big time, unless you have the knowledge to put things back should the undesirable befall your blog. I had an automatic WordPress update kick in maintenance mode without turning it off again. Nothing happened to the database, so a manual re-installation was all that was required to restore order. Otherwise, the development installation remains relatively stable, though there are display problems in IE6 that do not afflict either Firefox, Opera or even IE8 Beta2.

All in all, these changes will make the next major WordPress release a substantial one, and I have little doubt that the new administration interface will make for many comments. While I must admit that I wasn't too taken with it when I first glimpsed it in the crazyhorse branch, it now seems to be growing on me. The most significant change on the aesthetic front is that there's a lot less whitespace, about which may or may not float your boat. In any event, you can always change the colours like I have to make things more amenable.

Even so, I reckon that WordPress 2.7 will be a major step forward when it comes, one that I might like. Saying that, I reckon that the release date is a good while away for now, and the fact that 2.6.2 is being readied for release is telling in itself. Leaving plenty of time to remove any roughness is never a bad thing, especially so when you see the changes that are being made. Meanwhile, I am certain that most people can wait.

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