More Mucking About

Another new theme, this time based on Cutline by Chris Pearson. Old theme seemed very slow to load pages. Needless to say, I will be messing up this theme till it’s twice as slow as the last one. Have already managed to add an extra image and three external calls to every page load. Let me know if it’s broken. It will be. ;)

Since I am no use with a camera, and impa­tient to boot, pictures are from flickr though obvi­ously marked with a Creative Commons share-​​alike licence from their original owner. Most are of Richmond Park, which is about 10 minutes’ walk from where I live.

Original URLs for the flickr sources:

Dean Forbes for Between the Storms
SteveC77 for Sungazing Trees

Cropping and com­pres­sion errors are down to me.

One more thing I neg­lected to mention, leaving a comment now gives bonus points in the form of an inbound link, thanks to the ‘Recent Comments’ widget in the sidebar. Get ‘em while they’re hot.

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5 comments to More Mucking About

  • I like the new look! But I liked the old logo with OUCH in a dif­ferent color. It is a bit slower but blogs such as this can be. The GRAZR is great. Now that I know that you are a journ­alist (I didn’t know until now) I can see it in your work. By the way, whatever happened to the inverted pyramid?

    :)

  • Hey Bob — The Grazr was there before — which obvi­ously shows that a new design was in order. Inverted pyramid??

  • I gradu­ated in journ­alism but never took a job as a journ­alist after gradu­ating. That’s where I learned about the inverted pyramid tech­nique which is used in news­pa­pers. It basic­ally states you provide your premises and con­clu­sions in the first para­graph for two reasons. First, it allows the reader to get all the info up front. If they want the detail they can continue in the article. Second, it gives the editor the option of chopping down your article to meet space requirements.

  • Ohh… *THAT* inverted pyramid. I thought it was some sort of feature on the old design. I reckon blogs can sort of mess around with that, though it remains a great general rule.

    I aim for a des­cending spiral myself.

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