varjohaltia: (Eye)
varjohaltia ([personal profile] varjohaltia) wrote2004-12-15 09:57 pm

Another day at work

Scene:
Me walking into the office with a steaming cup of tea, Joe bumping in at the same time.

Joe: "Remember those pages you got this morning about chemistry?"
Me: "Yeah?"
Joe: "Well, I went to check it out. Turns out they started demolition work on the building."
Me: "Oh."
Joe: "Would've been nice of them to tell us."
Me: "Yeah."

So, we spent the next hour going through the chemistry building, which had overnight been transformed from a grad-student-ville into a hard-hat zone full of big burly guys tearing things apart. And pulling out cold metal boxes, without gloves. Brrrr. But at least I got to feel big and burly.

Seriously, though, I really like the weather. If anything, it makes me miss winters in Finland. Everything's crisp and clear and sharp.

Other odds and ends:

Do any of you have experience with freeware content management systems? So far I've looked at Contenido and Typo3, but I'm not horribly happy with either.

Anyone in need of 1) a DVD-ROM drive? (Not writer, just reader) 2) a small digital pocket-sized radio (the kind that doesn't have a speaker but needs headphones.)?

The Snow Leopard in Me

[identity profile] hyanan.livejournal.com 2004-12-16 03:30 am (UTC)(link)
Likewise, I sometimes miss the crisp and clear and sharp feeling of a nice friggin' cold Boston winter.

But only sometimes. ;)

[identity profile] yotogi.livejournal.com 2004-12-16 01:28 pm (UTC)(link)
SCSI or ATA drive?

[identity profile] cinzazul.livejournal.com 2004-12-16 09:01 pm (UTC)(link)
Ooh DVD-Rom would be nice. I don't NEED one. But I'd like one.

[identity profile] chipotle.livejournal.com 2004-12-17 03:13 am (UTC)(link)
Define "content management system."

Claw & Quill uses a freeware one, Textpattern, that most often shows up as a weblogging tool, but it's far more flexible than things like Movable Type or WordPress are. Textpattern includes some relatively nifty features and has one of the nicest templating systems that I've seen (all XML-based, and you can write "plugins" in PHP that provide new tags). On the downside, it doesn't have a lot of features whether or not the ones that are there are verifiably nifty, and documentation primarily consists of people puzzling things out on the Textpattern forums, hoping that every so often the developer will emerge from his cave in France and throw out a patch.