Twitter Updates for 2009-03-24

  • Updating a client’s website links in a queasy, post-TMJ outbreak haze. :/ #
  • Got a great deal yesterday on a 4×6 Wacom Bamboo at local Office Depot that’s closing. $24!! Keeping this one at school. =) #
  • RT Great Twitter movie: http://tinyurl.com/d32yf8 … I think the brown-haired skeptic’s name must be Kevin. ;) #
  • Just added myself to the http://wefollow.com twitter directory under: #teaching #literature #writing #

Post to Twitter

Twitter Updates for 2009-03-23

  • @gailhd Thanks for the http://wefollow.com link. #
  • Watching: “Interesting discussion on teachers’ late work policies at huffenglish.com. ” (http://twitthis.com/jvm8vo) #
  • Looking forward to: http://twitthis.com/tlgz7c #
  • Going to work! #
  • @dbrowell I found you looking for your Fallen Apple project after hearing WVTF’s coverage on it this a.m. Love the concept!! Any pics or … #
  • Let’s try this again. :/ @dbrowell Any pics or a site for your intriguing Fallen Apple project? I heard about it on WVTF this morning. #
  • is wondering why her messages are appearing doubled on her screen. Strange thing indeed. #
  • @dbrowell Ha. Sorry. Thanks for the double response and the link. I think our server went wonky this a.m. #

Post to Twitter

A Perpetual State of Behind

When I typed that title up there, I chuckled a little. Well, I don’t know if I’d really call it a chuckle. Maybe it was a giggle. It wasn’t a huge guffaw or anything, but it was a little laugh of sorts that brought a twinkle to my eye.

Weird. Weird because I don’t usually type titles first, and weird because I usually hate my titles. Not weird because it’s a stupid title because I don’t usually write great titles. And not weird because I think it’s funny I usually find humor in things most people don’t. :P

Anyway. Yes, I’m behind again. Well, actually, I’ve never really caught up since, oh, about September. There are still quite a few boxes to be unpacked, and our bedroom and the library are in pretty sad states. But then we just moved December 7th, and there was Christmas and all…

So I’m behind at home. And I’m behind at school. And I’m behind on my website work. What’s new?

Well, the amount of website work is new — and really exciting, too! I got eight emails requesting materials today from teachers all across the US and Canada, for example. There were that many over the weekend, too, and I haven’t been able to respond to them yet.

A quick look at this site’s Google Analytics report shows 1,327 visits and 3,373 pageviews in the last 30 days! Very cool! And what’s even cooler is that those 1,327 visits were from people in 57 countries:

1. United States (1,089)
2. Canada (82)
3. United Kingdom (35)
4. Germany (14)
5. India (8)
6. Philippines (8)
7. Australia (8)
8. South Korea (5)
9. China (4)
10. Spain (4)

Wow!

I am so thankful for the opportunity to communicate with many of the teachers who visit my site. I love to get to know these people and find out what they’re doing in their classrooms. Many of the teachers who have emailed me or sent me messages through this site are new teachers, and I’m glad to be able to help them out a tiny bit because I remember being there!

So, please, let me know if you need something, but, please, don’t take offense if it takes me a while to respond. I’m only me. And at least it’s free. :P


Unless otherwise noted, all images and text are copyright © Viable Design. All rights reserved.


Post to Twitter

Finally! This site has a new home.

No, you won’t notice anything different. The address is the same, and nothing about the design is changed yet. I haven’t been writing very frequently, as usual. ;) But behind-the-scenes here at mrshawke-dot-com, it’s all anew!

I’ve been with Netfirms for at least six years or so. I started out with one of their free plans, moving up from Angelfire, which had become overrun with pop-up ads. (Angelfire was the first place I made a website, thanks to the occupational foods teacher at Laurel Park whose name now escapes me.)

As I told the man in the cancellation department today when I called Netfirms, overall, I haven’t had a bad experience with them. I really am looking for a change. But I also need more databases and more domain/subdomain capacity, and BlueHost offers what I’m looking for at a much better price than Netfirm’s comparable plan. Plus, Netfirms’ customer service has left a lot to be desired. More than a few times, I’ve emailed them with problems and haven’t received replies; the times I have received replies, they were too delayed for my tastes.

So I decided to move my five websites and all my “schoolwork” files and all my photos, etc. I’ve been researching hosts for several years now, and BlueHost came highly recommended by WordPress, of which I’m a huge fan nowadays. There are some rants out there about bad customer service and downtimes, but I haven’t found a host without negative reviews, so I took the leap.

I had to wait until the first of the month because that’s when payday comes here at Hawke Place. (My husband and I both get paid once a month, on the last day of the month…) And I thought it would work out perfectly because I knew my Netfirms plan was paid up through the 12th. I’d already spent a day last week at the local Institute for Advanced Learning and Research‘s computer lab backing up all my files and databases; it took me about four hours with a fast cable connection!! I was ready.

We moved to the country a couple of months ago and had to invest in a satellite (which is great compared to dial-up but not nearly as fast as cable), so it has taken virtually forever to upload all of my files to the new server. I’m talking days, and I’m still not done. But this hasn’t even been the biggest problem!

See, I haven’t been checking my email as regularly or as carefully as usual. An email came from Netfirms last week or so, but all I did was verify the ending date of my plan. Then, I got an email from them Monday containing a RECEIPT for my paid plan renewal. For another year. Big problem!

First of all, I never gave them permission to automatically renew my account. For the past years, I’ve had to go and manually click something to renew. So, even if they slipped it into the fine print on last year’s renewal form, they had no right to charge my credit card. But why would they charge my account a week before the ending date?

Ian in cancellation said that most companies appreciate this because, even if the charge doesn’t go through, they have time to fix the problem before their site goes down. He also told me that this automatic renewal wasn’t a new thing, and that most businesses appreciate it. Okay. I know that it’s a new thing–and Mr. Hawke agrees, but I didn’t argue. I just wanted my money back.

I had to log into Netfirms to cancel the renewal, and when I did, my whole account was deleted. Everything was down. No way around it. And they didn’t even give me what I’d paid for–service through the 12th! I guess I could’ve waited until then to cancel, but they’d charged me almost $60 for the renewal, and I’d already paid BlueHost more than that. We don’t have extra money to play with here. I couldn’t wait. So the sites were down. Okay.

Redirecting the name servers so that my domain name (www.mrshawke.com) linked with my files at BlueHost, rather than the old ones at Netfirms (which weren’t there anymore) was easy. I’ve used GoDaddy since I bought the two domains I own (this site and my freelance design site, www.viabledesign.com), and even though they change their design a bit between my annual renewal visits, I’ve been pleased with their services.

I still had no site, though, because I had to figure out the database issues. See, this website is run by WordPress, a content-management system, and all of the posts and comments are stored in a database. I should’ve upgraded to WordPress 2.6 before I moved, I discovered. All day yesterday, I played around with the configuration file (wp-config.php). I deleted the database and created a new one. I deleted the users and set up new ones with different passwords. I deleted my imported SQL files and re-imported them.

Once I upgraded WP, though, I found the problem. My host name had been “MYSQLHOST,” but I realized that in phpmyadmin the host name was “localhost.” Also, in the new WP config-sample.php file, the host was “localhost.” So I changed it, and voila! It was up! All was well in the virtual world. :P

I woke up this morning, though, and my site was a huge “Internal Server Error” message. EEEK! I started a live chat at BlueHost, and Troy soon answered my plea for help. It seems that I have some sort of “chron” file that is set to update every minute or something. I have no idea what that means, but I plan to find out soon!

So I’m not done with the change yet, but I’m so excited about the possibilities of our new hosting plan. It comes with shopping carts and a ton of databases, and we got a new domain name when we signed up: www.everysecondofeveryday.com. More to come on that soon!


Unless otherwise noted, all images and text are copyright © Viable Design. All rights reserved.


Post to Twitter

New WordPress Site Is Up!!

I’ve finally gotten everything moved from the old mrshawke-dot-com to this new site. YAY!

Instead of redirecting the domain name to the subfolder where I housed the new site until I got it where I wanted it, I ended up moving the entire database and files to the root directory (www.mrshawke.com); then, I upgraded WordPress to version 2.3.3. It was all so much easier than I’d thought it would be.

I’m still lacking a site map, and I need to get that up in the next day or so. I started making posts of my teaching resources (three so far…), but I’ve got a ton of materials on my server already, so that will take some time to get online. Also, I still have a good number of student essays from last semester that I haven’t posted.

Mr. Hawke — my QA bay-bay (i.e. my awesome proofreader of a husband) — went through the site this weekend, and we made a list a page-and-a-half long of issues to deal with. He found everything from a missing comma (in a rule about comma usage, no less :/) to a lack of alt text on post-to-post navigation. I’ve already fixed all the easy things, but I’ve got my work ahead of me on things like current link CSS styles for pages (so you can tell which one you’re on at the moment).


Unless otherwise noted, all images and text are copyright © Viable Design. All rights reserved.


Post to Twitter

Major Renovations

For the past month or so, I’ve been working on this remodeled site. I wanted something that was easily updated regularly because the process of copying and pasting all the code for an update page at the old site was getting tedious. Don’t get me wrong; I love code. :P But I just don’t have the time to put into it to keep it up, if you know what I mean. Plus, I needed a way to easily add my students’ work, since that’s always such a humongous job (now that I give extra credit for it ;) ).

So. . .I had become enamored with WordPress sometime last year, and I tweaked a ready-made “theme” for my husband’s site/blog back in August or September. (A theme is a set of templates that work together to create a site. It’s called a CMS.) I knew, though, that converting mrshawke-dot-com was my chance to create a theme of my very own. And it was.

WordPress uses PHP to manage all of the different templates, though, and all I really knew about PHP was that it had a lot of question marks. Oh, and that it was used in creating forums and gathering information. (Thanks, Nick, wherever you are now…) Well, I can’t honestly say that I know a heck of a lot more about PHP now that I’ve tackled the theme-design process. However, I don’t think I could’ve gotten through it without a healthy dose of (X)HTML and CSS understanding.

Well, I’m almost finished moving everything over. I have the paperwork, which will be called “Resources” here, to go. (But I never got all of that online at the old site, anyways…) I have the “About the Site” page to work on, and there is an “Archives” link in the sidebar that goes nowhere. At this point, I don’t even think I’ll be needing that with this new format.

And I have quite a few new essays to get online, too, ones from the first semester at Langston. (We started second semester almost three weeks ago; I know because progress report time is coming up Tuesday. ;) )

The essays include a good number from our “Hurricane Katrina” assignment. We watched much of Spike Lee’s documentary, “When the Levees Broke,” and I had my students write a fictional personal narrative from the point of view of a Katrina survivor. They created some excellent writing, and I’m glad I have some of it to share!

I think I need to tweak the forms a little more, too. I installed and activated cforms II, which is, shall we say, probably not the easiest first plugin.

Oh, and I have a handful of new Grammar Police pictures! (I made Mr. Hawke lean out of the window in the frightfully swirling wind this evening to take the latest… :P I love him!!)

Soon, very soon… I need to update WordPress with the latest security release; the warning’s on every page of the administrative board. Eek. But before I do that, I’ve got to download the databases and all, and I’m sort of waiting until I get everything done first. Maybe that’s backward; I’m not sure.

Once I get the update done (or maybe before??), I’m going to redirect my domain here. I wasn’t sure exactly how to handle the installation/transfer of information because I didn’t want my whole site to be down, so I made a subfolder for WordPress. When I’m ready, I’ll redirect the domain to this subfolder, and all should be well.


Unless otherwise noted, all images and text are copyright © Viable Design. All rights reserved.


Post to Twitter