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Archive for the ‘Cruft’ Category

Change in site organization

July 17th, 2010 staze No comments

Implemented a change in how my site is laid out today. Where posts used to be /year/month/day/postname/, they are now just /postname/. I think this makes the site a lot more logical, and certainly shortens the URLs. I’ve also removed the “category” “directory” for all my categories. So rather than my reviews being /category/reviews/, they’re now just at /reviews/.

All previous links should work, and will get a 301 redirect to the new location.

I’ll expect my pagerank to drop a bit until google reindexes everything.

Thanks go to two pages:

Thanks. Hope it isn’t too traumatizing. =P

Categories: Cruft Tags: category base, posts

New Optimize Prime!

July 13th, 2010 staze No comments

So, thanks to a friend, I’ve started plugging away at my site again to make things run faster, take less bandwidth, and score higher on YSlow and Google Pagespeed (oh, and webpagetest.org, which I’ll get to later).

So, first thing I did was get some baselines. I ran my site through Yslow and Pagespeed again, and got a 84/100 and 94/100 respectively. When looking at Pagespeed, there was really nothing that wrong (or at least, nothing Google was telling me was egregious). Yslow, on the other hand, had a lot to say. The main thing, and something I’d wrestled with before, was CSS and JS minification (combining all of them, stripping out whitespace/comments, and compressing). So, I went back to work on getting that working. Turns out, in the theme I use (the seemingly wildly popular iNove) doesn’t load CSS or JS in the proper way. It would load them with normal HTML, and a PHP call to fill in there location. This is not correct. What SHOULD be done is a wp_enqueue_style or wp_enqueue_script to add the style/script to a queue, so that they can all be added by WordPress. This was preventing WP-Minify (a minifying plugin for WordPress) from intercepting the stylesheets and scripts, and minifying them. So, some hacking of my theme later, and viola! it works.

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ARG, Thinkgeek!!!

June 19th, 2010 staze No comments

UPDATE: A wonderful rep. with Thinkgeek refunded all the expired points!!! While this means I’m 75 short of the 2,500 needed for the Buckyballs, it more than satisfies my complaint. Thank you Thinkgeek! I’ll still be a loyal customer. =)

Original Post: After a coworker brought in some Buckyballs to work yesterday, I finally decided they were pretty fun. So, I’ve been looking around town for them. No love, at all. But, I knew I had some geek points with Thinkgeek, so I figured I could get them that way. So, I go and check my geekpoint balance, and low and behold, it’s 0! What the hell? So I look at the history, and see they’ve started (at some point) expiring points if you don’t buy anything from them in 13 months (it was 13 months since my last order in April… I last checked my balance in March I think). So, I went from 2,500 to 0 in 2 months.

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Categories: Cruft Tags: Buckyballs, Thinkgeek.com

My D2:LOD resurgence

May 10th, 2010 staze Comments off

When Diablo 2 came out, I played it for quite some time. But, finally quit back in 2006 or 2007 after taking a break that was just longer than 3 months, and coming back to find my level 90 Sorceress had been deleted. GAR. So, I gave up and went about my life.

Then, when I got on the Starcraft 2 beta, a friend and I started playing D2 again as “relief” from SC2. I’m back up to level 71 at this point after playing for a couple months on off, and am now in Hell Difficulty. But, I’m playing more now as I get back into the Magic Find habit. Since I played, Nightmare and Hell have become a lot more difficult. So, here, I think I’m going to detail however many MF (Magic Find) runs I can do on NM Mephisto. I’ll try to do as many as I can before I go crazy.

My MF right now is is 185%. Not high by any means, but it doesn’t need to be super high for Mephisto runs.

Click “Read More” to see the list of items from each run. “On way” means I got the item on the way to Meph.

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Toyota Prius 2007 HID Bulb replacement

April 18th, 2010 staze Comments off

Forgive me, the first part of this post covers some back story. If you just want to see the process, feel free to skip ahead to paragraph 4. Thanks! Please pay special attention to the bolded text, as it’s the main tips I have to offer that weren’t directly covered in other documentation I found.

I own a 2007 Prius Touring Edition, that came with HID headlights. Which, is nice, since they provide a lot of visibility at night. But, around the time I had the car serviced for a CHS (Coolant Heat Storage) water pump service bulletin (TSB-0087-08) my driver’s side light began flickering. Then, it just went out one time. But, upon turning the lights off, then back on, it came back, and didn’t go out again for about a year (odd). Then, it started to do it in ernest, and it’s “friend” joined in (the passenger side started to go out). But, all along, turning off the headlights, then back on, they would both come back on. So, I was a slacker, and waited to call Toyota about it (one time it did it, I stopped by a dealer, and they quoted me $450/bulb!).

Finally, about 3 months ago, it started getting bad. On a given nighttime drive, one or both of the lights would go out at least once (they never went out together at the same time). So, I brought the car into the dealer, and they quoted me $150/bulb, plus $100 in labor. Better, but still $400! So, I called up Toyota Customer Care, and spoke to them. First person said there was nothing they could do, so I asked to be escalated. They took my name and number, and said they’d call back. Which, they did in a couple hours. After some discussion, and another call back, they said they would cover the cost of one of the bulbs (they couldn’t get both to go out at the dealer), but not the labor… so, $100 to do one bulb. I said I could do both myself for $60 ($50 for a pair of bulbs online, and about $10 shipping). They were flabbergasted that it was that cheap. I said “Thanks, but no thanks” and left it at that (with a few choice words about how horrible it was that Toyota was not addressing this issue).

So, I went online, and as per numerous reviews, I ordered some D4R 4300k (4300k is the stock color temperature for the Prius, although I find these 4300k bulbs to be “whiter” than the OEM ones were) bulbs at High Performance Bulbs for $49.99 and less than $10 shipping, and had them here in 5 days (from NJ to OR!). I first tried the “lazy” method (please note, changing the Driver’s side this way is not too difficult. However, the passenger side is extremely tight, and unless you’re rail thin, you will not be able to replace that bulb) of not removing the bumper… it proved fruitless as it’s difficult to know which way to turn the bulb enclosure back, and the space is quite limited. So, I put the new bulbs on the bench and said I’d come back to it in a couple weeks.

So, this last week, while driving for no more than 20 minutes at night, the drivers side bulb went out 5 times. So, I decided to go ahead and do it this weekend. So, yesterday, I did.

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Categories: Cruft Tags: Bumper, HID, Prius, Toyota