I've just updated the WordPress Theme Toolkit to make it compatible with the upcoming WordPress 2.0

WordPress Theme Toolkit is a theme addon that allows designers to create an admin menu, integrated within WordPress' admin area, as easily as editing 3 lines in a file. Version 1.0 (initial release) of the Theme Toolkit was causing WordPress 2.0 to die, whining about some function shipped with a theme that could not be declared twice. Doh.

To upgrade, simply get version 1.1 and replace all your existing "themetoolkit.php" in all theme directories using it.

Of course, this newer version of the Theme Toolkit is downwards compatible with WordPress 1.5x. Theme authors should update their theme package files as soon as possible. Theme users are advised to upgrade too.

It's possible that once you've installed WordPress 2.0 and the newest Theme Toolkit, you still see the "cannot redeclare function" error : blame WordPress' new cache system :) Hit the "Refresh" button of your browser and you will be hopefully done.

Useless egocentric post of the day : I’m about to rank below 3000 in Technorati. Ah ! My wife is always so proud of me when I tell her I’m #3000 out of 20 millions 8-) (0) «

There is an interesting hack over at HTnet using my own WordPress Theme Toolkit to display feeds from other sites. That's what I love with coding : make things that do smart stuff, then smart people use them to do smarter stuff :)

Speaking of this Theme Toolkit : initial release is not compatible with upcoming WordPress 2.0, but as soon as this is released, I'll published a slightly updated version that works. If you're working on a theme and need to be WP 2.0 compliant as soon as possible, please get in touch.

Note to people reading this through a feed reader : if you happen to be a happy GreatNews user, be sure to read the comments on my post about my using this software. The fine dev folks are giving away cool tips to fine-tune your GreatNews installation. (0) «
In: , , On: 2005 / 12 / 05 Short URL: http://ozh.in/ab

Je connaissais Bash, un site qui collectionne les "quotes" (citations) venue d'IRC. C'est hilarant. He ben je viens de découvrir sa petite soeur française, BashFR, ben c'est tout aussi hilarant :)

Extrait:

  1. <N1_lalah> vous etes d'ou
  2. <Sarmpa> je suis dans un royaume appeller azeroth, je ne sais point
  3. si vous connaissait ce lieu
  4. <N1_lalah> ou exacte
  5. <Sarmpa> Pres de stormwind, enfin j'habite dans une auberge
  6. <N1_lalah> moi algeriene kabyle tu connais l'algerie
  7. <Sarmpa>oui, enfin un peu
  8. <N1_lalah> tu fait quoi dans la vie
  9. <Sarmpa> je fait des quetes, et je pourfend les enemi de la nation
  10. <N1_lalah> ok
  11. <N1_lalah> moi bts en electricite
Paris, 5 et 6 décembre : Les Blogs 2.0. Le programme comporte des trucs qui m’auraient bien intéressé, et ça m’aurait également plu d’entendre quelques personnalités marquantes : Scoble, le PDG de Technorati, Calacanis de Weblogs Inc., Matt ‘Wordpress’ Mullenweg entre autres. Ca a également l’air d’être plein de personnalités qui aimeraient bien être marquantes :-P (0) «
In: , , , On: 2005 / 12 / 01 Short URL: http://ozh.in/a9

There are so many things to read on the internet that we need some sites and tools that read them all then hand pick the most interesting sites so we don't have to.

Be it a boredom surfing tip for when you're idling, or a way to satisfy an insatiable curiosity for interesting, weird, funny or informative links, here are some links to bookmark — and feeds to add to your subscription list.

Social bookmarking sites

These sites show, in real time, what pages users are bookmarking. Of course, this comes with tags.

User driven "approval" sites

Where people don't really bookmark pages, but vote for them if they think it's worth it.

  • Digg
    Provides numerous feeds for popular stories and links, by age and topics. Fear your bandwidth bill if your site is dugg.
  • Shoutwire
    Very similar, with more topics while Digg focuses mainly on geek and technological stuff.

Automated selection tools

Some tools produce interestingness rankings, not from users vote, but from their writing on their own blogs (and mostly from the frequency of links that get blogged). This is a pretty good populariy indicator, but you mostly cannot filter results by topic.

  • Bloglines Toplinks
    The famous web-based aggregator computes a daily list of links that are mentionned in blogs.
  • Blogpulse Analysis
    Blogpulse generates several daily rankings : blog, blog posts, links.
  • Blogniscient
    This one gives few explanations about the technology used to pick links, but this is probably something very similar to counting links in blog posts
  • Memeorandum
    To be honest I don't like this site (and my eyes go "ouch" when I try to read the page) but for the sake of relevance I have to include it. Technology in background is rather secret here too.

Aggregation tools

Here two sites that belong to more than one category, since they aggregate popular links from various sites :

  • DiggDotUs
    Digests digg + slashdot + del.icio.us popular links into one single list.
  • Daily Mashup
    Gathers noteworthy links, and images, from various sources including Flickr

Personalized results

To end this article, I'd like to mention a site I really like for its unique concept of content personalization. This site won't tell you what people like, but will select instead what you will like : Findory.

Give Findory a collection of feeds (via an OPML file exported from your feed reader) or tell it what sites you like within its own interface, and it will be able to select related articles.

This content personalization seems to go much further than only search for tags or keywords within blog posts, and is very efficient in a way that it can select a particular post that you will like from a site that you would probably won't be interested in. Forget RSS feeds you subscribed because their authors write good stuff once in a year, and let Findory find this good stuff for you.

My Findory tip would be : give it a list of sites that match a single theme. I've had better results with a couple dozens of site focusing more or less on the same topic than with a hundred sites dealing with 4 or 5.

(I can't conclude this praise to Findory without thanking Nathan from Inside Google, a blogger who is using a lot Findory and from whom I discovered this really neat tool.)

L33T Tiles is a replacement tile set for Scrabble that has been optimized for … l33t speak :) No more “wow Dad, your oxymoron is worth 93 points !” but “dude phear my OMGKTHXBYE taht’s 133 points AH PWNED !!1″. Heh, I can’t believe this kind of things still makes me laugh :) This makes a cool geek Christmas gift. I mean, “coo g33k xmas w4r3z”. (also, check their funny l33t dictionary : pdf, txt) (1) «
Einstein’s todo list. No wonder he’s been such a genius :Þ (from, via) (1) «

For my feed reading needs, I've been using Feed Reader at first. Pretty straightforward and very light software. On the other hand, nothing too customisable and very few options.

My search for something else was restricted by a few technological choices or necessities due to the software configuration of my PC at work : no Java or .NET required, installs without Admin rights needed, light on memory, runs smooth on an outdated machine, etc…

So, for a few weeks I've been running Feed Demon, with the feeling that it was almost exactly what I wanted. Good stuff, but "almost" perfect. I was rather satisfied with it, yet always with something like "hmm I'd rather like this feature to do this instead of that.. well overall that's pretty good software anyway" on my mind.

At that time, I couldn't install Curio Studio's GreatNews. This was probably related to my being an unfortunate Windows NT4 — doh — user, but now that the IT folks suddenly decided to start filling the gap between our company and technology that is just 6 years old (read : I'm now on Windows 2000, wow) I've been able to try this software. And I love it.

GreatNews, despite a somehow silly name that will probably keep it from any decent search engine ranking, is what I've been waiting for. Small executable with no funky install (I usually hate software that come all packed into a single setup.exe so you can't see what's inside before you actually install it), OPML import / export feature that works with Bloglines or local files, and a really good usability of all features like tagging an item or the "Blog this" feature. In particular I like the way GreatNews is using simple .css files to manage display styles, rather than powerful yet too much complicated .xslt documents for Feed Demon. I've been using it for 3 days now, and so far I really love it.

A few things I'd like to see improved or changed. Yes, there are still a few :)

  • less empty wasted space in the "tree" panel on left hand
  • A "discover feed" feature : paste blog url, let the software find its feed (Feed Demon does this, that's cool)
  • The ability to change location of temporary / cache directory