These are posts tagged ‘website’

Site verification

Screenshot of a root directory of a web server

Is it just the root of my server that looks a bit like this? With the upcoming launch of Twitter’s analytics service for website owners (which will presumably require some kind of verification), I was wondering:

Why isn’t there a standard, similar to robots.txt, for verifying that you own a domain? verification.txt?

Screenshot of an example verification.txt file

google: Pt8rpfeQC4SCyzABFilZiJC5Tqw8f
googlehosted: Rb0S6k5si3nOj5rVfPmnzU0pYit
bing: eXB4oWQR1iVLtKp6Yk2hTq7N7JPjmoX5
yahoo: y_key_uyxZucu9dvrzsr3PWaYx9G5gLT
twitter: rqcSmFJIlugbPjXvI6vGuZi7YCiWXYR

I can’t think of a reason each service needs more than a few alphanumeric characters for this.

Log files, laziness and stupidity

Up until a few months ago, my site was hosted by the lovely people at NearlyFreeSpeech.NET. Although I’ve had a Linode since the end of 2009 for development, sheer laziness had stopped me from moving this WordPress installation from NFS to my virtual server.

With hindsight, I did several stupid hosting-related things over the last year and a bit:

  1. If I had just got around to it and moved the site from NearlyFreeSpeech to my Linode in January 2010, I would’ve saved myself $100 in payments to NFS.
  2. Why so much? Well, if I had kept an eye on what was going on I would have noticed that I had (for some bizarre reason, which we’ll chalk up to ignorance) disabled log file rotation in the NFS admin interface. Which meant that every time somebody visited my site, the log file grew, and grew, and grew. And I paid for it. If I had enabled log file rotation, I still would have been out $40. But not a hundred.

Here’s a graph of my monthly payments to NearlyFreeSpeech:

NearlyFreeSpeech.NET cost per month

This isn’t a knock at NFS: they provide a great service for very reasonable prices, as long as you don’t want to store too much stuff with them. I’d still happily recommend them for small(ish) sites.

Part of the reason I kept putting off the move was a worry that something would break and I wouldn’t be able to repair it. But the reason I rented a Linode in the first place was to learn more about how server maintenance and configuration works; I now know that “it might break” isn’t a good enough excuse.

The next time I procrastinate over something simple that could end up costing me $100, I’m going to slap myself hard and re-read this post.

FaceYourManga

FaceYourManga

Been around for a while, but I only just saw it on the RealMac photo stream.

I don’t need to say anything more… the image accompanying this post does it all.

Grab one from http://www.faceyourmanga.com/.

I wish I could draw – might be something to practice and learn this year.

Main Paged

Digg ScreenshotSo today (14th August) is my birthday and my first front page story on digg

Does it get any better?

I think not.

SPS Web Design

As school’s finished and i’ve got nothing better to do at the moment, i thought i’d take on the ‘fun’ task of a new design for our school intranet. To start, here’s a look at what we see at the moment:

SPS Intranet Current Screencap

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