Submission Wizard now supports Firefox [modified]
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I'm happy to announce that the submission wizard now supports Firefox (with it's snazzy little spell checking feature in v2.0) It's also a little more saner, with uploads being uploaded before the article text so you can preview the images and see exactly where your zips are stored. The HTML editing engine is a hacked version of HTMLArea 3.0, a sadly discontinued project, which does a far better job of cleaning HTML that has been pasted from horrible sources (I'm looking at you, MS Word). However, there are a few things about it I'm not entirely happy with so all bug reports, feature additions and quirks should go to me (chris@codeproject). Syntax colourising (or colorizing, depending on your disposition) is still sub-par so please bare hamster:badger: bear with us for a bit and I'm not sure when I'll get a chance to fully fix it. Speaking of workloads, does anyone know of someone who lives in the Toronto area who enjoys editing and posting articles? We're getting desperate... -- modified at 5:14 Thursday 1st February, 2007
cheers, Chris Maunder
CodeProject.com : C++ MVP
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It's a Freudian thing... not to worry.;)
"...a photo album is like Life, but flat and stuck to pages." - Shog9
Roger Wright wrote:
Freudian thing
A friend's definition: a Freudian slip is when you mean one thing and say your mother. :)
"For fifty bucks I'd put my face in their soup and blow." - George Costanza
CP article: SmartPager - a Flickr-style pager control with go-to-page popup layer.
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Chris Maunder wrote:
who lives in the Toronto area
You do realize the irony of this statement don't you? A web site populated by and accessible by people all over the world and you want someone who lives in Toronto? That's just bizarre on so many levels. :)
It's just so much nicer yelling at someone in person than having to do it via IM. I'm just old fashioned like that ;)
cheers, Chris Maunder
CodeProject.com : C++ MVP
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I'm happy to announce that the submission wizard now supports Firefox (with it's snazzy little spell checking feature in v2.0) It's also a little more saner, with uploads being uploaded before the article text so you can preview the images and see exactly where your zips are stored. The HTML editing engine is a hacked version of HTMLArea 3.0, a sadly discontinued project, which does a far better job of cleaning HTML that has been pasted from horrible sources (I'm looking at you, MS Word). However, there are a few things about it I'm not entirely happy with so all bug reports, feature additions and quirks should go to me (chris@codeproject). Syntax colourising (or colorizing, depending on your disposition) is still sub-par so please bare hamster:badger: bear with us for a bit and I'm not sure when I'll get a chance to fully fix it. Speaking of workloads, does anyone know of someone who lives in the Toronto area who enjoys editing and posting articles? We're getting desperate... -- modified at 5:14 Thursday 1st February, 2007
cheers, Chris Maunder
CodeProject.com : C++ MVP
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It's just so much nicer yelling at someone in person than having to do it via IM. I'm just old fashioned like that ;)
cheers, Chris Maunder
CodeProject.com : C++ MVP
Chris Maunder wrote:
It's just so much nicer yelling at someone in person than having to do it via IM.
After the web launched an outsourcing trend that slashed and burned its way through the industry, it's kinda nice to see someone with a "locals only" frame of mind. Since the down side to outsourcing is often so subtle, and tends to become more obvious in the long term rather than the short term, I'd love to see some position papers from people who have had legitimate reasons for hiring locally rather than hiring remotely.
Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes www.PracticalStrategyConsulting.com
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Chris Maunder wrote:
It's just so much nicer yelling at someone in person than having to do it via IM.
After the web launched an outsourcing trend that slashed and burned its way through the industry, it's kinda nice to see someone with a "locals only" frame of mind. Since the down side to outsourcing is often so subtle, and tends to become more obvious in the long term rather than the short term, I'd love to see some position papers from people who have had legitimate reasons for hiring locally rather than hiring remotely.
Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes www.PracticalStrategyConsulting.com
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I'm happy to announce that the submission wizard now supports Firefox (with it's snazzy little spell checking feature in v2.0) It's also a little more saner, with uploads being uploaded before the article text so you can preview the images and see exactly where your zips are stored. The HTML editing engine is a hacked version of HTMLArea 3.0, a sadly discontinued project, which does a far better job of cleaning HTML that has been pasted from horrible sources (I'm looking at you, MS Word). However, there are a few things about it I'm not entirely happy with so all bug reports, feature additions and quirks should go to me (chris@codeproject). Syntax colourising (or colorizing, depending on your disposition) is still sub-par so please bare hamster:badger: bear with us for a bit and I'm not sure when I'll get a chance to fully fix it. Speaking of workloads, does anyone know of someone who lives in the Toronto area who enjoys editing and posting articles? We're getting desperate... -- modified at 5:14 Thursday 1st February, 2007
cheers, Chris Maunder
CodeProject.com : C++ MVP
Chris Maunder wrote:
Speaking of workloads, does anyone know of someone who lives in the Toronto area who enjoys editing and posting articles? We're getting desperate...
When you're desperate enough to consider telecommuters, let us know. ;-)
Grim
(aka Toby)
MCDBA, MCSD, MCP+SB
SELECT * FROM users WHERE clue IS NOT NULL GO
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This is industry specific and I don't have time to write a paper on the subject, but foreigners can't have US security clearances so almost all defense work is non outsourcable.
-- Rules of thumb should not be taken for the whole hand.
An excellent point that really doesn't leave much more to be said!
Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes www.PracticalStrategyConsulting.com
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I'm happy to announce that the submission wizard now supports Firefox (with it's snazzy little spell checking feature in v2.0) It's also a little more saner, with uploads being uploaded before the article text so you can preview the images and see exactly where your zips are stored. The HTML editing engine is a hacked version of HTMLArea 3.0, a sadly discontinued project, which does a far better job of cleaning HTML that has been pasted from horrible sources (I'm looking at you, MS Word). However, there are a few things about it I'm not entirely happy with so all bug reports, feature additions and quirks should go to me (chris@codeproject). Syntax colourising (or colorizing, depending on your disposition) is still sub-par so please bare hamster:badger: bear with us for a bit and I'm not sure when I'll get a chance to fully fix it. Speaking of workloads, does anyone know of someone who lives in the Toronto area who enjoys editing and posting articles? We're getting desperate... -- modified at 5:14 Thursday 1st February, 2007
cheers, Chris Maunder
CodeProject.com : C++ MVP
Well, I'm in Pickering and despite not having had professional experience as an editor, I've done that sort of thing before... How big of a workload is it?
Christopher S. 'coldacid' Charabaruk E-mail: chris at coldacid dot ent Web: http://coldacid.net/
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Chris Maunder wrote:
who lives in the Toronto area
Is that extremely important? I know some who may be willing to work remotely.
Yah, CP would definatly get more applications if you just say anywhere. It shouldn't be too importiant, with telephones and email for communication, and VPNs for access, it couldn't be too hard.
Tyler Menezes www.TylerM.info
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Well, I'm in Pickering and despite not having had professional experience as an editor, I've done that sort of thing before... How big of a workload is it?
Christopher S. 'coldacid' Charabaruk E-mail: chris at coldacid dot ent Web: http://coldacid.net/
It's a full time job. It's not hard, you just need to be very, very picky. Email marcela@codeproject if you're interested. At the very least she'll give you a tour of the office ;)
cheers, Chris Maunder
CodeProject.com : C++ MVP
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Chris Maunder wrote:
It's just so much nicer yelling at someone in person than having to do it via IM.
After the web launched an outsourcing trend that slashed and burned its way through the industry, it's kinda nice to see someone with a "locals only" frame of mind. Since the down side to outsourcing is often so subtle, and tends to become more obvious in the long term rather than the short term, I'd love to see some position papers from people who have had legitimate reasons for hiring locally rather than hiring remotely.
Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes www.PracticalStrategyConsulting.com
Christopher Duncan wrote:
I'd love to see some position papers from people who have had legitimate reasons for hiring locally rather than hiring remotely
You can't slap someone upside the head via netmeeting. Seriously, though: outsourcing simple, easily broken off tasks that require no supervision can be an excellent solution when you simply cannot find someone to fill a role. For anything else, though, having that "I'm part of something bigger" knowledge is insanely valuable to a group working together. The hardest part of a job isn't the job, it's the people. Make communication fast and simple and effective and everything else becomes easier.
cheers, Chris Maunder
CodeProject.com : C++ MVP
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Christopher Duncan wrote:
I'd love to see some position papers from people who have had legitimate reasons for hiring locally rather than hiring remotely
You can't slap someone upside the head via netmeeting. Seriously, though: outsourcing simple, easily broken off tasks that require no supervision can be an excellent solution when you simply cannot find someone to fill a role. For anything else, though, having that "I'm part of something bigger" knowledge is insanely valuable to a group working together. The hardest part of a job isn't the job, it's the people. Make communication fast and simple and effective and everything else becomes easier.
cheers, Chris Maunder
CodeProject.com : C++ MVP
Chris Maunder wrote:
The hardest part of a job isn't the job, it's the people.
You're preaching to the choir on that one. I've been writing about that for years, and techies still think it's all about the code. :rolleyes:
Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes www.PracticalStrategyConsulting.com