|
|
|
It's easy to add a web log to your Sitemaker CMS site, or to build your site around your web log. We use this one as our company newsletter.
One of our key upline providers was out of service for about two hours this morning, which affected access to several of our main systems. Web and mail service was briefly unavailable and was restored by about 9 a.m. This was our first interruption of service in several years; we continue to experience "up time" well in excess of 99 percent.
You can make printouts of your web pages more attractive by adding a style sheet that hides the site navigation. The following example shows how to hide the standard navigation areas of your page.
Just add the code to the style sheet of your Sitemaker CMS site. This code precedes or follows your other custom styles in its entirety. You can also place in in the style sheet of a single page if that is more appropriate for your application.
The technique will work with any standard Sitemaker layout. Highly stylized layouts may require additional terms.
<style type="text/css" media="print">
#navigation,
#SM_top_menu_content,
#SM_member_bar,
#footer
{
display: none;
}
</style>
List pages in our Directory tool now have additional information and one functional change, installed today, April 18. Each listing now shows a document icon linked to the listings brochure or personal page. The envelope icon now takes the user to the brochure page and is no longer linked to the email form. Finally, a small red question mark indicates that contact data are missing.
The removal of the email link was occasioned by the increasing problem of spam to listing owners. By moving the email function to the brochure page additional "tunneling" is required, which increases the burden on would-be spammers. We found that when a similar change was made to the new-listings feature the amount of spam from that feature went down.
We have recently installed an upgrade to our email account manager. We suggest all domain administrators sign in and familiarize themselves with it, as there are some major differences. (If you are not an email administrator this article will seem rather meaningless.)
Note especially the presence of a Delete Account link next to each account on the account list page; previously this feature was hidden to prevent accidental deletion. We encourage user feedback on this option; we are inclined to revert to our previous configuration.
The account management software is a third-party acquisition. We have installed it as it came from the developer. Some of the GUI features are not what we would do, including the low-contrast links. We may change these features over time to ease navigation.
Administrators can now edit which services are available to each user. If your domain is so enabled, you can turn off/on IMAP, POP, vacation messages and other features. If you do not understand the options we suggest you create a test account and modify it to experiment, rather than applying changes to real mailboxes, until you are familiar with the new techniques.
Navigation within a domain is improved with a jump-to first and -last link, eliminating much of the scrolling and previous-next linking needed before. A better search tool now quickly finds individual users and mailboxes, and all lists and search results are noticeably faster.
Feedback via your account administrator is welcome. Enjoy!
Standard Biodiesel of Arlington, WA, recycles waste vegetable oil (WVO) into clean-burning diesel fuel that boasts lower emissions, longer engine life and better performance.
Clark Internet Publishing has created a custom Web application to manage routing of WVO collections and customer service for Standard Biodiesel. The same system will be expanded in 2008 to manage plant operations. The entire system is designed for seamless expansion to additional production facilities.
Clark IP's Rees and Gavin Clark have been associated with SB since its early planning stages, assisting in the creation of the original business plan and consulting on the business concept and operations.
The linked article appeared today in The Seattle Times on April 9, 2008.
Read more in The Seattle Times
Here at Clark IP, we're currently working on an exciting data management project with a recycling firm in the Northwest that collects sows' ears and turns them into silk purses (pardon the metaphor, but we cannot use their name right now). The project entails monitoring collection and distribution of the reusable materials from over 2,000 sources and the distribution of the products to a growing number of outlets.
The client needed to replace a customer service management process that was straining the limits of a widely used, desktop contact management program. The source material was backing up at client locations, and production of recycled products was lagging.
Our approach was to offload the data, parse the entire database and migrate the data into a fully relational, MySQL database with PHP middleware driving a web interface that lets managers, production supervisors, drivers and customer support staff access and maintain information from any web browser.
Following a planning and development period lasting about three months, we're happy to report that the system launched with only a couple of page-positioning errors that were quickly handled, and the staff abandoned the old method for the new after only three days of experimentation. The backlog of source material in the region has been reduced from 122,000 units to 82,000 units in about ten days of active collections.
Next to our Journalmaker and Sitemaker tools, this is our largest project to date, and we look forward to presenting a more complete case study later this spring.
Legislation introduced by Rep. Ted Markey last week renews the fight over "net neutrality" and would require ISPs to remain "neutral" in transmitting content. Clark IP supports the principle of net neutrality. The related article from Macworld has more information. ISPs have taken to using the euphemism "shaping" to describe their manipulation of your prepaid connection. Getting what you pay for? Maybe not.
Read Macworld
We have been informed by certain of our upstream providers that they will be relocating key equipment including some of ours during the coming days. UPDATE: The operation is now scheduled for Saturday night after 5PM according to our provider.
During the operation Clark IP web and mail servers will be briefly unavailable.
This will occur some time between Friday morning and Sunday night if all goes as planned. We have been told that the relocation will take only a few minutes; the time required to shut down, repower and restart our server(s) is typically about fifteen minutes, but could be longer when added to the physical relocation. Continues...
Our newest client is Double H Headdresses of Cody, WY. Double H is a designer and manufacturer of classic Plains Indian ceremonial regalia, produced in traditional methods with natural materials. We encourage you to visit them on the Web and in person.
The latest upgrade to our Sitemaker and Journalmaker systems includes a message-bulletin board system called Forums. Each site owner can opt to include this simple feedback mechanism to communicate with visitors or to let members communicate with each other.
Comments by site visitors or members in the Forums are integrated with a generalized comments management service that facilitates a variety of views of comments in blogs, news and informational pages and other content.
Forums requires the Members subsystem to manage login. Each site sets its permissions for use of the forums and other subsystems that require login.
Otherwise known as ‘Cyber Squatting’, domain squatting is the act of registering, trafficking in or using a domain name with the intent to profit from the good name of an organizations trademark, brand or identity. Here are some of the common ways in which domain squatters work.
Source article at Wired
A milestone for Clark IP: Here's the abridged status report from our primary web server: (top - 09:05:34 up 364 days, 23:07...), which means that in less than a day it will have been working without interruption for a full year.
Another way to say that is 100 PERCENT UPTIME! Our confidence is boundless, so we're making this announcement a day early, since if we only achieve the current 99.988584475 percent, we'll still be pretty happy.
Update 12-21-06 - We made it, of course.
Our server network did not falter during the recent storm and is working fine. Some of our clients and staff in the Puget Sound region have been without power or without 'net access since the Thursday (12/14) storm. We're working on the problem.
|
|
|