Archive for 2007

Holiday Light Exchange

Monday, December 3rd, 2007

Residental customers of Southern California Edison can exchange one strand of old holiday lights for a box of new, lights. LEDs use up to 98% less energy and last ten times longer, making them better for the environment and your electricity bills.

The exchange program starts today and runs through December 21st.

LOCATIONS:

  • Carpinteria City Hall: 5775 Carpinteria Ave. (805) 684-5405. Mon - Fri, 9am - 5pm
  • Goleta City Hall: 130 Cremona, Ste. B. (805) 961-7500. Mon - Thur, 7:30am - 5:30pm Fri, 8am - 1pm
  • : Westside Community Center: 423 W. Victoria St. (805) 963-7567. Mon - Fri, 9am - 5pm
  • Franklin Neighborhood Center: 1136 E. Montecito St. (805) 963-7605. Mon - Fri, 9am - 5pm
  • Central Library: 40 E. Anapamu St. (805) 564-5601. Mon - Thurs, 10am - 9pm; Fri, Sat, 10am - 5:30pm; Sun, 1 - 5pm
  • Community Environmental Council: 26 W. Anapamu St, 2nd Floor. (805) 963-0583 x105. Mon - Fri, 9am - 6pm

Internet Explorer 7 and pirated versions of Windows XP

Thursday, November 29th, 2007

Is quietly phasing out ? I think could mean the beginning of the end for installs and support.

Internet Explorer 7 now available for pirated version of Windows XP

Funky Bike Ride and Ginger Ninjas Concert

Tuesday, November 20th, 2007

November 24, Funky Bike Ride and Ginger Ninjas Concert, sponsored by Bici Centro. The free bike ride is at 5:00 PM, starting from La Casa de la Raza, 601 East Montecito Street, . Then from 6:00-11:00 PM, the “Pleasant Revolution” featuring the Ginger Ninjas, Oso, and Shake your Peace will rock out to a bicycle-powered 800 watt PA system. Intermixed will be fun bike contests, raffles, food and overall merryment. Proceeds will benefit Bici Centro.

Web Standards Map

Monday, November 5th, 2007

I just found this through one of the mailing lists I subscribe to. It’s a map that covers technologies on the web. It mentions Mordorsoft and Google’s All Seeing Eye, it’s worth checking out:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/psd/1805709102/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/psd/sets/72157602805227511/
http://www.archive.org/details/TheWebIsAgreement

PDF
http://www.archive.org/download/TheWebIsAgreement/web.PDF

IE7, removeChild and SSL

Tuesday, October 30th, 2007

We recently launched some items into an environment and an JS bug appeared when deleting a DIV. The bug is slightly difficult to debug in that all versions of IE are especially “blind” when it comes to error handling. Here’s the criteria:

  • page is being requested in mode
  • div has a background image in the form url(/path/to/image.extension)
  • the use of the removeChild function

 
Any time the specific div gets removeChild’d AND it contains a background css style, IE will prompt the user the page contains non-secure elements right before it gets removed.

To get around this, delete the background css style before calling the removeChild function. has also released two alternate fixes.

Pelago Gives Back - Press Release

Wednesday, October 17th, 2007

Web design and development company signs up for One Percent for the Planet

(CSRwire) , CA - October 16, 2007 - , the California-based web design and development firm and creator of , the popular web-based task and time management system, announced today that it has signed up for One Percent for the Planet, an alliance of businesses committed to leveraging their resources to create a healthier planet. Members donate at least 1 percent of their annual sales to environmental organizations worldwide.

This decision is yet another step in ’s ongoing corporate commitment to social and environmental responsibility. The web application company already helps businesses reduce their use of paper and environmental impact through , its flagship application, and improve employee work-life balance.

“We were seeking to further integrate what we talk about, what we believe, and how we act,” says Braden Jones, co-founder of , of the company’s decision to join One Percent for the Planet. “It was a ‘put our money where our mouth is’ type of thing for us, and we believe in who One Percent for the Planet supports.”

is committing at least 1 percent of its annual sales to the non-profit program, joining the ranks of more than 700 other companies and individuals committed to the initiative, including founding members Patagonia and Blue Ribbon Flies, musician Jack Johnson, Native Energy, Alima Cosmetics, The TYF Group, and North Shore Productions. So far, One Percent for the Planet members have donated a total of more than $21 million to environmental groups such as Carbonfund.org, As You Sow, and Step It Up.

“Now is the time for us to take steps forward and pay attention to the things that matter to us,” says Michael Payne, Chief Architect of and a co-founder of , of ’ decision to sign up for the program. “It is very easy to get involved in the rat race and have time fly by-seven years have for us. This is the year we are committing to making a few priority changes.”

“I think a lot of small companies don’t think they can afford to do this,” says Payne. “We hope to show that even small businesses matter and have global impacts, and that focusing your priorities matters. We hope that all businesses that think the environment matters will take positive steps as a company to make a difference.”

About
Created by , was originally designed to solve ’s own struggles with tracking time, billing clients, and knowing where projects stood in real time. Targeted primarily to creative and communications services companies and small businesses, is a powerful tool for anyone who wishes to ease the daily stress of organizing and managing people, workflows, projects and time. Learn more about at www.myintervals.com.

About
is a , California-based web design and web development firm founded in 2000. specializes in developing highly intuitive web sites and reliable web-based applications, and injecting them with solid business sense and functionality. clients include JD Power and Associates, Nexxus, Xplane, Network Hardware Resale, and TenetCare. Learn more about at www.pelagodesign.com.

Ubuntu 7.10 is almost here

Friday, October 12th, 2007

This month the latest version of is scheduled for release. Here is the full Ubuntu 7.10 new feature set and the features I am personally looking forward to:

Firefox set to go mobile in 2008

Thursday, October 11th, 2007

I stumbled across this news alert on Yahoo! News today that describes ’s browser efforts with . This is very encouraging news for web developers. The current lot of that work on handhelds are not that exciting (Opera and Safari on the iPhone respectfully excluded from the list - those two work great). Better and more compliant for handhelds = a better Internet experience for all.

With Intervals we have developing a handheld version on our development roadmap, but we are longing for better that allow the functionality to work as intended without having to make a separate user experience for handhelds.

Cycling gains ground in NYC

Monday, October 8th, 2007

They city of New York is currently on track to have 1 mile of bike path for every 10 miles of roadway, which will bring it close to San Francisco’s 1:7 ratio. This distinction is enough for the city to be honored recently by the League of American Bicyclists for bike friendliness

And it’s interesting to note that workers are turning to bicycle in record numbers because it’s become a faster mode of transportation than the car:

“It’s the fastest mode of transportation,” said Sarinya Srisakul, vice president of the New York Bike Messenger Association, noting that it can take half an hour to traverse 10 midtown blocks by car but just five minutes on a bike.

Read the rest of the article here.

Charles Web Debugging Proxy

Monday, October 8th, 2007

We recently were debugging issues with our document uploader in Intervals and needed to throttle the bandwidth on our desktops so we could test the progress meter over our LAN (Typically, the LAN is too fast and the progress meter never appears).

We settled on using the Charles Web Debugging Proxy, which did a fine job of throttling the bandwidth down enough that we could use the Request Viewer to monitor the request / response headers.

A definite thumbs up for this product, as we were easily able to troubleshoot and debug the document upload in a matter of minutes.