The Blog

A peek into the thoughts of the man behind Milk Carton Designs

Blogging Survey    5

Posted: October 20, 2006 @ 11:14 AM EDT | Filed Under: Blogging

Hey you. If you blog, in any way, shape, or form, please take Thomas’ blogging survey. Its not for any big important cause, but it’s pretty cool to see the results, so do it!


Random Shapes Member Interview    12

Posted: October 19, 2006 @ 03:18 PM EDT | Filed Under: Random Shapes, Blogging

We just did my new member interview over at Random Shapes. Check it out, because, really, I’m a dork.


A Decent Release Schedule For Wordpress?    0

Posted: October 02, 2006 @ 12:33 PM EDT | Filed Under: WordPress

Matt Mullenweg has proposed a plan to the wp-hackers mailing list to implement a 120 day release schedule after the release of Wordpress 2.1. The proposed plan from Matt would greatly improve the current release schedule which is, pretty much, nonexistent. This has been noted by many people, and the past few releases have been marred with complaints about the release schedule. Plugin developers complain about not having enough warning to update their plugins to suit the changes of the new version of Wordpress, while end-users continually ask when the next release is going to be, only to be met with, “soon, maybe.” With this new plan in place, there would be a set date for release (120 days from the last release), a one month feature freeze, and a one month public beta testing period. This plan should make everyone happy, as well as make things run smoother than they have, for developers and users alike. We just have to hope now that it gets implemented.


Armstrong’s “A” Revealed    1

Posted: October 01, 2006 @ 04:25 PM EDT | Filed Under: News, Technology

An Australian computer programmer has claimed he has found the missing “a” in Neil Armstrong’s famous quote, “That’s one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind.” The quote, as is, means one small step for mankind, and one giant leap for mankind, which, doesn’t make much sense, obviously. It makes a world of difference with the “a.” Read the article, it’s short, but kind of neat.