WordPress 2.6 and Custom Fonts

After waiting a bit of time to see if the world would end after WP 2.6 was released and seeing that it did not end I decided to upgrade my test site. Well, I meant to upgrade my test site, I instead upgraded my main site. Nothing bad happened and my main site could just suck it anyway if it had exploded.

It’s my client’s sites I give a fig about which is why I am such a cautious old so and so when it comes to upgrading. For myself, if a plugin turns out to be non compat I just say see yis to that plugin and move on.

But some of my clients have tastes that can only be satisfied with certain plugins,like Custom Fontswhich is a great plugin but doesn’t look like it’s compatible with WP 2.6. Having it activated seems to get rid of the media upload buttons in the editor page.
I’m being diplomatic when I say seems but I’m almost certain that it is the culprit.When I de-activate it the media buttons come back.When I activate it they go away. I’ve tested it with the visual editor on and off and with that option completely disabled in my user profile.I’m sure it’s an easily fixed problem,though.

I may just go ahead and try to convince my client that it might be more important to have the latest version of WordPress as her website’s engine than it is to have fancy page titles.In her case sifr-replaced page titles was a branding choice and one that I was not able to talk her out of but it was better than the other option which was using images to replace text.

If it’s a popular plugin, the author will get so bombarded with emails and forum posts and etc and will probably make it compatible out of sheer exasperation with the demands of the (usually) non paying/donating public. What a thankless task. I salute all you who do this for free and deal day in and day out with kibuttzers who think you owe them something.

The best news so far is WP Ecommerce seems to chug along just fine on WP 2.6.

Cat Just Chills

on Yahoo! Video
I got this video by using the FireFox addon DashBlog which is the coolest because not only does it get videos,text,images, whatever for you it also posts it to your blog for you. I posted it as a draft but then went crazy and upgraded to WordPress 2.6 and some how the draft got published. Oh well, I hope you all like kitty videos as much as I do.
And no bad things happened when I upgraded.Yay. Now I can go and upgrade 16 other websites.

Google Analytics+Visitor Trending+Design

In a perfect world we would all be using the same technology and wouldn’t have to design for older OS/outdated browsers/different OS/different browsers.We wouldn’t have to provide accessible websites because everyone would have perfect eyesight. We wouldn’t have to worry about our navigation systems because everyone would just get it.

But it isn’t a perfect world and some people are still using Windows 95 and MSIE 5.5.
So we can’t leave them out when we design websites anymore than we can ignore people with less than perfect eyesight. And we have to provide idiot proof navigation. I’m not calling you idiots but too many times with navigation we give more attention to design than comprehensive legibilty.
So I ask myself if someone’s Aunt Rose in Nebraska will be able to use this navigation.

We are up against a lot when we take on a new project, the biggest being taste. Our taste versus the client’s taste. Oftentimes a designer’s taste is tempered with the idea that the design ought to be clear and readable first, pretty last. I don’t think client’s want to skip clear and legible but they do often put pretty first. Personally, I believe it’s possible to have both.

Recently Matt of WordPress fame wrote about how the great day when we can all stop worrying about MSIE6 in applications or website design is upon us(actually I think he was only talking about applications).But because I do not author applications I focused on design.

So if you have signed up with Google Analytics, if you haven’t you ought to, you can see what percentage of your visitors are using IE6. If no one is using IE6 you can probably stop worrying about IE6. Lucky you.

I wish I could stop designing for IE6. But if I check Google Analytics reports for most of my website’s profiles (Visitors>Browsers>Browser Capabilities) sadly IE6 makes up almost half of the graph.

The Website’s Content Makes Design Decisions For Me.
Products or content that draw an older audience who likely have not upgraded to IE7 let alone IE6, have got to be presented in a design that IE5.5 and IE6 can render.

Many times this group won’t have the right version of the flash plugin needed so you might not want to make a flash website for this audience.
Older audiences tend not to upgrade as fast we’d like them to.
I don’t intend to stereotype older people. But in the long run it’s more important to consider what happens to eyesight when someone gets older and how that affects their experience when they come to the website I’ve designed. We have to provide legible, high contrast sites that an older audience (not as able to read small text with low contrast colors) can read. We can’t require them to download a plugin in order to see the website because chances are if they are coming to the website for the 1st time they will just leave if they get asked to download a plugin.

A Solution.
Many times when I am working on a new project I develop it on my own server. It can take weeks to complete.This gives me time to sign the client up with Google Analytics and install the tracking code into their existing website. After 24 hours I will be able to check what browsers are the top ones being used and I can factor that into my design.

New Site Design Project Launched Today

I’ve been in a mad rush to build and complete an entire website and online store for leeleesvalise.com.
The Today Show aired this morning with Stacy London of What Not To Wear talking about shopping online. Leeleesvalise.com was given airtime along with revolveclothing.com.Now, Revolve Clothing is a big, big online store, more like a big big online department store. Lee Lee’s Valise was a small website built in static html pages.It didn’t have a shopping cart and it didn’t have any ability to interact with visitors. My job(I went down to Lee Lee’s Valise in person and kind of demanded that she let me redo her website) was to rebuild the website and implement a shopping cart and do it all by today so that folks who watched the show could shop at the website… I had 2 weeks.

Issues.
Not being set up for such a large volume of visitors, 60,000 in 10 hours, the site crashed during the acid test;shoppers using the cart out of testmode could not have their cards accepted by the payment gateway.Turned out to be maybe the payment gateway’s fault, maybe my fault for not unchecking a radio button or two in the shop admin config….Oops. Never fear, the missed orders were eventually processed, the payment gateway was handled and the radio buttons got unchecked.The orders are now coming in just fine.

I am happy that both the owner (Lisa Dolan) and I can now get some sleep. We were both up for 2 days straight trying to get that inventory online and I was still designing the website the night before the Today Show aired!
There are still many things to tweak.

Have any of you been brave enough to view your websites in MSIE 4.0? Oh my freakin God.
I saw in the webalizer stats that more than 300 folks using MSIE4 come to the website.
Horrorshow. It’s a complete mess in IE4. I know I won’t be able to rest until I can approximate the website’s look in IE4 that we get in Firefox and IE7 and 6.0.
How can people still be using MSIE 4? How is that possible? Are they in a time capsule? Are they just using the same computer they got 10 years ago? Don’t their sons and daughters tell them to upgrade?
People! Forget about trying to get folks to use FireFox how about we start trying to get folks to stop using browsers have absolutely no way to handle CSS? To make myself feel better I am going to go look at some big fancy CSS people’s websites in IE4.

Note
Veerle’s Blog,Wired.com, CssPlay and A List Apart all look crap in IE4. This makes me feel slightly better. But I am still going to make a separate stylesheet for IE4.