100%

Recipe for getting your old Drupal export XML into Wordpress:

  1. Wait a year and a half.
  2. Get out the XSLT and write a transform to get the nodes into RSS 2.0.
  3. Get out the PHP to turn the Drupal Unix timestamps into RSS valid timestamps and write out the results.
  4. Import the RSS 2.0 into WordPress.
  5. Remove dupes because you imported some scraps from other backups.
  6. Serve.

This blog is now at 100% for historical content, I believe — it should now include the contents of all the old blogs.  If it’s missing anything, yell at me and I’ll go looking.  Hooray completeness!

In other news, I finished building my big rig, and I’ve eaten barbecue.  So it’s been a pretty full day.

Maintenance Uptime

Well, that was easy.  Both Movable Type and RSS imports in WordPress are apparently idiot-proof.  A good chunk of old posts are in here now.

What’s missing is a period from 2003-2005 that I would like to get in here.  My historical stuff from that period is in Drupal exported XML (I’d point you to a schema if there were one) and I’ll probably need to write a stylesheet and transform it into RSS, unless someone knows of a Drupal-export-to-WordPress-import that is better and doesn’t involve the gnarly custom queries that most Googlable pages on this topic recommend.

Anyway, Drupal to WordPress war stories welcome, but otherwise I’ll have the rest in here soon.

Blast from the Past: Virtual World News

Came across myself on Long Story, Short Pier this evening, and now have a nostalgia for the days when I got to write all day and blog much more often.  I can’t promise I’ll become a more frequent blogger, but I can get off my ass and import my archived back posts — I’ll do that soon.  In the meantime, the least I can do is get Kip Manley the post he’s been looking for.

Originally published: Mon, 26 Sep 2005.  I publish this with apologies to Geoff Johns: this conversation speaks more to a malaise my brother and I shared at the time than to his work, which I actually like a lot.

—–

Not just for MMOGs anymore.

Was having a conversation with my little brother a while ago, and we came upon comics writer Geoff Johns as a topic.  Both of us buy a fair share of his work (he writes a lot of books).  We buy them faithfully, but often do so with the lack of a familiar passion, and we found ourselves asking why.

Anyone who has bought comics regularly knows the sense of inertia that keeps one purchasing a book in which one has lost almost all interest.  You hold out hope that a new creative team will improve things, or else you just aren’t proactive enough about removing comics from your subscription list.  But Johns’ work doesn’t fit into that category: we choose to buy his comics, and read them with interest. I’ve actually dropped his JSA before, just to pick it up again.  They’re perfectly readable comics.

But there’s a sense of aesthetics, of pleasure (or, sometimes, of provocative displeasure), that drives most of our comics purchases.  A sense that the authorial voice here is a distinct signal.  But this is a different experience, strangely becoming more common: engaging with a comic not for its creative voice but for its neutral voicelessness.

We noodled on this for a few minutes, until Adam said, “I don’t know, it’s kind of like reading a newspaper. It’s not like the newspaper is inspiring, but you need to read it to see what happens.”

Which is exactly it. These comics don’t introduce any noise to the signal of the DC Universe. But they transmit it faithfully. Virtual world journalism, reporting the news of the DC Universe as it evolves.

Judge my rig

I’m building my next PC.  I’ve had to tinker with and upgrade computers a lot in my life, but I’ve never built one from the ground up.  Also, I’ve always been a little antsy and phobic when I’ve had to upgrade machinery, so I think this will be a good exercise in developing some more mastery and confidence.

I’m modeling a high-performance PC: this machine will be doing some heavy-ish lifting with Adobe CS3, and I will be gaming on it as well.  It’ll be running a dual boot, Vista and Ubuntu, hopefully 64-bit for both.  I’ll start purchasing parts next week, but before that I’m exposing my parts list to the world for criticism and commentary.

First, have I done anything that’s just dumb (incompatible components, badly weak links in the system)?

Beyond that, am I being a chump in my choices?  Am I spending too much for marginal improvements?  Where can I get similar performance with a cheaper component?  I want this to be a performance machine, but I’m trying to stay away from extreme indulgences.

Be merciless.  I’d rather feel stupid now than stupid with the parts in my house.