Categories
BlogTalk

òáøéú ÷ùä

îâðéá, îöàúé àéê àôùø ìäôåú àú äëéååï ùì ëì úéáú è÷ñè

îòðééï àéê *æä* ééöà.

I think I need a filter (an MT text formatter>?) to fix up Hebrew paragraphs. Raw HTML (or textile) are quite inadequate.

And I probably need a seperate blog, just for Hebrew.

Which raises the question of how to implement Suzie’s site, which needs 3 languages…

Categories
Blather

Valid use of my time

Slow day at work. Should I finish translating that story for the Tenth Dimension, send out some more job applications, read up on the formats the rice genome data was published in, fiddle with the design for the Tenth Dimension web site (coming soon!) or work on my games for Bigor?

The answer, of course, is that I did none of the above. Instead I fiddled with my web pages, to make them valid XHTML.

Valid XHTML 1.0!

If this makes no sense to you, you’re really better off.

Oh, I also did some more website maintenance, changing the whole site over to the new look the weblog had.

Categories
Roleplaying

Phillip Reed has Whispering Vault

Phillip Reed and Christopher Shy have bought one of the more interesting out-of-print RPGs, converted it to PDF and are offering it for sale online: The Whispering Vault. He’s also brought out an “adventure”:http://www.philipjreed.com/PJR/archives/000188.html, and two supplements, the excellent “Dangerous Prey”:http://www.philipjreed.com/PJR/archives/000194.html and the never-before-printed “Mortal Magic”:http://www.philipjreed.com/PJR/archives/000190.html (the “original cover”:http://www.tombaxa.com/portfolio/illos/jpg_1_mortalmagic.htm was swapped out for legal reasons).

Categories
Roleplaying

Castle Blackmoor

Castle Blackmoor is the home page of Dave Arneson, perhaps the world’s first DM and someone with a justified grudge against TSR and Gary Gygax. Fascinating stuff there about early roleplaying, including the entire Blackmoor supplement for D&D, where a lot of stuff that later showed up in AD&D first appeared (as well as plenty of interesting things that didn’t).

Categories
short Software and Programming

Developing Movable Type Plugins

O’Reilly Network: Developing Movable Type Plugins [Mar. 19, 2003]