And I’m not ashamed to admit it.
For example, this post can be reached by the nicely-short URL http://s.crooks.net/v. Cool!
But I was too cheap to look for a shorter domain name to buy. (I’m kind of glad there’s no .ks
top-level domain.)
And I’m not ashamed to admit it.
For example, this post can be reached by the nicely-short URL http://s.crooks.net/v. Cool!
But I was too cheap to look for a shorter domain name to buy. (I’m kind of glad there’s no .ks
top-level domain.)
When I write code to do a search it looks something like this:
When computer guys on TV do a search it looks something like this:
Andy Ihnatko writes in Heavy Hangs The Bandwidth That Torrents The Crown:
If you avoid purchasing the media in some form, however…you’re just one of those people who prefer to steal things if they think they can get away with it. Simple as that. Get off your high horse.
I particularly love the commenters who follow-up by doing just as Andy says, claiming that they are entitled to whatever they want.
If you can’t get it in the form you want at the price you want, don’t get it.
For the longest time I’ve been using Drupal at our main family site, Crooks.net. That installation of Drupal is getting a bit creaky, being two full versions behind. Crooks.net doesn’t really get many visitors and is primarily used simply to host my personal blog. (It handles one other important feature, providing a secure location for some family information. I’ll cover that in a different blog post when I get Crooks.net updated.)
Over the years I’ve gone through several different iterations of figuring out how I wanted to do my meager blogging. For the most part that meant posting the occasional picture. My tool of choice for a while has been Posterous, a blogging site that made it really easy to email in a blog post that would then get routed to any other social sites (Twitter, Facebook) plus my blog at crooks.net and nicely format everything.
I decided recently that it was silly to use Posterous. I have long paid for my own web server with Dreamhost and I can install darn near anything I want on it. So I’ve now gone through the motions and I believe I can pretty easily post directly on this blog and have things sent to Twitter or Facebook if I so choose. Easy is the key. I wanted this to be at least close to as easy as it was to use Posterous. The good part now is that I own everything: the shorturl service, the blog software, where pictures are stored, etc. Now I’m only in danger if Dreamhost goes out of business and I haven’t made a recent backup.
This is all brand new so I’m sure I’ll be tweaking things over the next month or two. And I still have to go put a replacement in for Crooks.net also. This seems to be a good start.