Skip to content

Climb to the Stars

Stephanie Booth's online ramblings

  • Blog
    • Being the boss
    • Life Improvement
    • My work
    • Blogging
    • Personal
    • Thinking
    • Conferences
    • Connected Life
  • Random
  • Photos
  • Coworking
  • Digital Crumble
  • Pages
    • India
    • Multilingual
    • Troubles musculo-squelettiques (Repetitive Strain Injury)
    • WordPress
    • Writing
  • About
    • Presse
  • Newsletter
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Work
  • Contact

Category: CTTS News

About the website you’re reading.

Secrets of my Online Presence Revealed! [en]

[fr] Un tour d'horizon de la façon dont je gère ma présence en ligne, des outils que j'utilise et à quelles fins.

I was having a chat with Kevin this morning, and realised that though the way I had organised my online presence seemed obvious to me, it could hold some interest for other people. So, for your enlightenment and enjoyment, I am sharing with you the secrets of my life online these days and how the different tools and services I use fit in. ;-)

The backbone of my online presence is my blog Climb to the Stars, which you’re reading. That’s where my thinking goes. This is, I hope, my contribution. I don’t write here as often as I’d like to.

Aside from Climb to the Stars, I have a professional website (a bit static and inevitably out-of-date, but it’s a start). I’m intermittently active on project-specific blogs of mine: Going Far, Going Solo, eclau, Coworking Léman. I’m also involved professionally on two blogs which aren’t mine: Fleur de Pains and the ebookers.ch travel blog, both in French. At some point I did a podcast with my friend Suw Charman-Anderson, Fresh Lime Soda.

As you can see, blogging in the traditional way is far from dead for me.

My photos are on Flickr (thousands of them), most of my videos are on Viddler (a few dozen). I use Skitch to take screenshots (= photographs of my life in cyberspace) but I publish them to Flickr too.

Another very important way of “being online” for me is Twitter. Using Twitter has brought about a change in my online habits: I’m on IRC way less than I used to (still there, on irc.freenode.net, but idle and disconnected usually) and I’ve more or less loss the use for my Cheese Sandwich blog, where I used to write more “uninteresting” and personal stuff. It remains online, of course, and every now and again I write something in it, but Twitter turns out to be a better outlet for these short snippets of life I used to post there. Another “new” tool (new in the sense that it wasn’t around when I started blogging nearly 9 years ago) that has also reduced my need for a second, “personal” blog is Facebook.

I know a bunch of techy-type geeks are poo-poohing Facebook now (after the honeymoon), but I’ve actually become more involved in it during these last months, as a greater and greater proportion of my offline friends (people who don’t have blogs, don’t IM, haven’t heard of Twitter) are joining it. I use Facebook and Twitter in parallel, but I guess for me the major difference between the two is that I reach a very different audience. Facebook also has some measure of privacy, and I’m connected to way less people than on Twitter, so you’ll often find me a little bit more personal over there. That’s also the reason why I don’t crosspost my status messages between the two services.

I chat on IM a lot, and now on Facebook too. For me, it’s the necessary one-on-one complement to the rest of my rather public life online. I don’t use Skype much (usually upon request, or for certain people I have on Skype but not on my IM list).

For many years now, I’ve been storing my bookmarks on del.icio.us. I’m not somebody who enjoys organising things in hierarchies, so the tag-based mess over there is fine for me. Feedburner inserts a daily summary of those links in my RSS feed. I’ve tried Diigo, and liked it, but for some reason it didn’t stick and got lost in a browser upgrade. Maybe I’ll try again one of these days. I have a very passive account on Last.fm, and the obligatory YouTube, DailyMotion, Dopplr (etc.) accounts, but I’m not very active on them.

I have a VodPod account which I use a bit like “del.icio.us for videos”, but which I’ve fallen out of love with because it keept logging me out and wouldn’t let me log back in (with OpenID) in the pop-up window. So much for one-click bookmarklet publishing. In the video department, I also have a seesmic account, where I am intermittently active. Huge bursts during a few days/weeks, and then nothing at all for month.

I’ve always wanted a way to collect all the stuff I do/publish online into a single lifestream somewhere. I’m not sure anybody would actually want to follow it, but I guess it helps me feel “whole” rather than scattered all over the place. I tried out Suprglu for this ages ago, and was happy with it until the service didn’t seem to be able to follow anymore. Then I used Jaiku for that purpose, and briefly Tumblr (but I was feeding Tumblr into Jaiku too, so it was a mess and I stopped quickly).

Friendfeed came along and seemed the ideal lifestreaming application. SocialThing looked promising, but like Diigo I guess, it didn’t stick for me. I tried being active on friendfeed, but it didn’t really stick either (a few things bother me: I can’t have a summary page with just the items of mine which were liked or commented upon; it’s also very “noisy” for me, in terms of the amount of data it displays, and it displays it in an incomplete form, forcing me to click and come back, click and come back& anyway). So friendfeed sits there, happily lifestreaming me to the world, and to the sidebar of Climb to the Stars.

One old obsession of mine has always been comments. Way before cocomment, I had a tendancy to keep copies of my long comments elsewhere, or bookmark them. I now use backtype to capture my comments. (I also have a Disqus account but it’s pretty passive.)

I’ve recently become much more active on Tumblr, where I have a tumblelog, tentatively named Digital Crumble. As with many tools, I had an account for a long time before finally “getting it”. I’ve found a good handful of interesting people to follow and reblog, and I use it to publish all sorts of random “secondary” content: short notes, my comments (imported via backtype), my screenshots (via Flickr), my collected videos (via VodPod, but probably in future directly through Tumblr). But mainly, I use Tumblr to publish quotes. I’ve always been a note-taker. When I read a book, it’s with a pencil. When it’s only, I highlight paragraphs I like and with the click of a bookmarklet, send them to Tumblr, complete with an automatic link to the source.

This is one of the reasons I use feedly as my feed reader (when I use one), as it allows me to publish quotes and annotations to Tumblr.

Digital Crumble is quickly becoming an important companion to Climb to the Stars: Climb to the Stars for my stuff, and Digital Crumble for things that others have said or created.

I will spare you the long list of services I have an account at but don’t use actively (plus, I’m sure as soon as I’ll hit publish, I’ll think of something I should have included).

I hope this little peek into my online life will have satisfied your curiousity about the life of the pink-haired online geek :-).

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Pocket (Opens in new window)
Author Stephanie BoothPosted on 26.01.2009Categories Connected Life, CTTS News, Social Media and the WebTags backtype, blog, blogging, ctts, del.icio.us, facebook, friendfeed, Kit du blogueur, new media, online, Online Culture, online presence, Pieces of Me, services, Social Software, social tools, stephanie booth, tools, tumblr, twitter, user/07467067922840649993/state/com.google/read, vodpod, web2.0, Weblog TechnologyLeave a comment on Secrets of my Online Presence Revealed! [en]

Slightly Funky CTTS [en]

[fr] Quelques petits problèmes avec Thesis, mon thème. Rien de grave, mais ne vous en faites pas si CTTS a l'air un poil cassé.

Things are slightly funky around here, because I’ve lost all the setting for Thesis, the theme I’m using. Hopefully I’ll be able to fix it soon (database magic) but in the meantime, things are looking slightly off.

I have a bunch of things to blog about here, but I’m having a bout of RSI, so I’m keeping it for later. In the meantime, you can follow me on Digital Crumble, my tumblelog, where I’m pretty active these days collecting snippets of my online explorations.

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Pocket (Opens in new window)
Author Stephanie BoothPosted on 24.01.2009Categories CTTS News, WordpressTags ctts, design, problem, Site News, thesis, user/07467067922840649993/state/com.google/read, WordpressLeave a comment on Slightly Funky CTTS [en]

In Lisbon, at SHiFT'08 [en]

[fr] Je suis à Lisbonne pour la conférence SHiFT. J'y présente demain. Mon serveur a eu quelques hoquets (sites non accessibles ce dernier jour) mais tout devrait être rentré dans l'ordre.

I arrived in Lisbon on Monday. I’m now attending the SHiFT conference, and very happy to be here (my talk is this afternoon, closing session).

Lisbon 2008 - SHiFT - 23

My server was down for about 24 hours or so (if you tried to reach this site, or another site of mine, and couldn’t, that’s the explanation). It’s back up now and things look like they’re going to be OK.

Unfortunately that means that on top of dealing with business as usual, I’ve been scrambling to set up a temporary server (thankfully a useless effort) instead of writing the 2-3 blog posts I wanted to publish: one on the Somesso conference, 31st October in Zurich (I’ll be there), and another one on LeWeb’08 Paris (I’ll also be there).

Some quick news — for you, but also to get it out of my head:

  • Things are looking good for the Lausanne coworking space (lease signed, deposit money found, coworkers found and people still calling up to check the place out) — we’re opening 1st of November (the party will be later) so that means I’ll be very busy setting things up as soon as I get back home from this trip.
  • This week, I’m going to review requests for LeWeb blogger accreditations. There are roughly 4 requests for every pass I have, so I’m afraid many people will not be accredited. Accreditations will take into account blogging language, geographical location, and overall blogger “profile”. We’re really happy so many people want to be part of this, and I apologize in advance that we will not be able to accommodate everyone.
  • I owe a newsletter to my subscribers. It will come. It is not forgotten.
  • I’m taking photos and will post them.
  • My talk here will be filmed. Yay!
  • It feels like summer here in Lisbon.
  • I’m looking forward to meeting bloggers from the Blogging Web 2.0 Expo Programme next week!
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Pocket (Opens in new window)
Author Stephanie BoothPosted on 17.10.200830.06.2023Categories Conferences, CTTS News, PersonalTags ctts, Events, lisbon, news, server, shift, shift08, Site News, Travels2 Comments on In Lisbon, at SHiFT'08 [en]

New Look for CTTS: Thesis [en]

[fr] Je viens d'installer (après avoir acheté la version "Dévelopeur") le thème Thesis, et j'en suis très contente. J'aime les réglages que permet facilement ce thème (nombre de colonnes et largeur, sans avoir à toucher le CSS) ainsi que la "boîte multimédia" en haut à droite, qui permet de montrer des photos aléatoires (et même, si on veut, de spécifier une photo en particulier pour une page en particulier).

A few weeks ago Suw mentioned that she was looking at the Thesis theme for her sites. I went to have a look, and it looked nice and clean. Only problem: it wasn’t free.

However, the theme author, Chris Pearson (not to be confused with Cris Pearson), was offering a lifetime subscription to the theme and support, as well as use on unlimited sites for the developer version ($164), which I bought.

The result is what you see now on the site. I haven’t modified it much yet. Here are a few things I liked.

First, you can control the top navigation menu bar completely (look at how much stuff I put in it — maybe a bit too much). It wraps nicely when you put more items than fit in one line. You can add links to pages in your site, or to outside pages. This also allows me to link to the page named About Me and This Site with the simple word “About”. Basically, this achieves the same thing as the “redirect to” page template that I’m using on the Going Solo site, for example.

Second, you can tweak the width of your columns. The default width for the main content column in Thesis is 480px. Given I insert many medium-sized Flickr photos (500px wide), I widened it. No need to fool with the CSS, Thesis does it all in the background.

Third, the image rotator. Up right, you can see one of my photographs, and when you click on it, it will take you to the Flickr page it lives on. I’ll explain how I did this in a separate post.

At one point, I added a header image, which I now removed because I think it doesn’t go well with the images in the multimedia box up right. Here is the code I used (in the custom.css stylesheet), if ever it comes in handy to anybody.

.custom #header {
background: url("/wp/wp-content/themes/thesis/images/ouchy-header.jpg")
repeat-x top left;height: 160px; }
.custom #header #tagline {color: black;}
.custom #header {paddint-top: 1.5em;}

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Pocket (Opens in new window)
Author Stephanie BoothPosted on 15.09.2008Categories CTTS News, WordpressTags Site News, theme, thesis, Weblog Technology, Wordpress4 Comments on New Look for CTTS: Thesis [en]

Trying the Disqus WordPress Plugin [en]

[fr] J'essaie le plugin Disqus pour WordPress. Prometteur, mais pour le moment pas encore concluant. Je risque de le retirer bientôt.

I’ve been keeping an eye on Disqus, the blog commenting system, for many months now. I stumbled upon one of their blog posts today announcing that their new version came with a WordPress Plugin.

Two main things have been bothering me with Disqus:

  1. I want to keep control of my comments on my server, not outsource them (maybe I’m being silly about this, but well)
  2. I don’t want people commenting to be able to delete or edit their comments after publishing them, because it potentially can wreak havoc in the discussion thread if people aren’t careful about it. OK for cosmetic or “15 minutes after” modifications, but not 1 week later.

The WordPress plugin announces “Auto-sync of comments with Disqus and WordPress database”. Sounds good. Time to try Disqus here on CTTS.

First, I had to claim my blog withing Disqus. Failing to do that resulted in a bunch of server errors when I tried to follow the link to integrate Disqus into my blog (seems they are using the same unfortunate vocabulary coComment chose ages ago). Well, Climb to the Stars is now claimed, and has a community page on Disqus.

I finally found out how to download the plugin (it would be nice to make it available through the WordPress Plugin Directory, guys) and installed it, after backing up my database (daring, but not completely dare-devil).

I didn’t bump into any problems installing it, all went smoothly. I’m just a bit perplexed by this:

Disqus Admin in WordPress

Will Disqus put new comments into my WordPress database too? It seemed to me that it would do that (“Autosync”) but now I’m not so sure anymore.

I’m not too happy about how trackbacks are being treated on the community page for CTTS:

Climb to the Stars Community Page

I know my implementation of “similar posts” messes up the trackback/pingback excerpts, but at least WordPress puts everything on one line. Note also the encoding issues. (I hope the problem is on Disqus’ end, and that I’m not back in encoding hell once again — in my opinion, though, Disqus should be able to deal with any encoding thrown at it.)

I’m also wondering how Disqus and Akismet play together (not to mention Bad Behavior). Can anybody shed some light on that?

At the moment, I’m waiting to see if all my existing comments are getting imported or not (things seems stuck at roughly a week back). I’m also waiting to see what happens with new comments (do they go into my WP database? do they have encoding problems? can people edit them 1 week after commenting?)

The encoding issue is a showstopper (either Disqus fix it, or if it’s on my end, it means I need to go back into encoding hell, and there is no way I’m doing that before October. The “edit comments 1 week later” issue is also a showstopper — I imagine there should be a way for the blog owner to prevent this, but I haven’t found anything in the Disqus admin.

So, I’m leaving the plugin in for a little while, but chances are I’ll have to remove it.

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Pocket (Opens in new window)
Author Stephanie BoothPosted on 23.08.2008Categories CTTS News, WordpressTags commenting, ctts, disqus, editing, encoding, plugin, Site News, test, trying, Weblog Technology, Wordpress7 Comments on Trying the Disqus WordPress Plugin [en]

Eighth Blogversary [en]

[fr] Il y a huit ans jour pour jour, je commençais à bloguer.

Eight years ago today, I stumbled over to blogger.com after seeing one too many “Powered by Blogger” stickers on sites I was visiting after checking out the profiles of my fellow Astounding Web forum pals.

I read the welcome page, and didn’t get it.

I created an account to try to understand. Ah! This was something that would allow me to publish stuff (like my “What’s New?” page) easily, without having to bother with FTP (that was what Blogger was about then — Blogspot didn’t exist yet).

It sounded like a cool tool to add to my site (like Sitemeter, like a local search engine, like a feedback form). Little did I know where it would lead me.

I’ve been a blogger for eight years.

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Pocket (Opens in new window)
Author Stephanie BoothPosted on 13.07.200830.06.2023Categories CTTS NewsTags blogger, blogging, blogversary, ctts, Site News4 Comments on Eighth Blogversary [en]

Upgrade to WordPress 2.5.2 (I Think) [en]

[fr] Mise à jour de WordPress. En espérant que rien ne casse. Vraiment.

There, upgraded my WordPress install. Was much needed. Did a little plugin spring-cleaning while I was at it. Leave a comment if you see anything wonky — I’m still fixing stuff, though.

And oh, no. I’m going to have to update Basic Bilingual. Which means I need to get SVN running on my MacBook again. Wish me luck.

Update: actually, Basic Bilingual still works, though it’s ugly in the admin. So I’ll leave it for now.

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Pocket (Opens in new window)
Author Stephanie BoothPosted on 05.07.2008Categories CTTS News, WordpressTags General, plugin, Site News, upgrade, Wordpress3 Comments on Upgrade to WordPress 2.5.2 (I Think) [en]

December 2007 Recap [en]

[fr] Un récapitulatif de mes publications du mois de décembre. Principalement (vous trouverez le détail dans la partie anglaise de ce billet) des articles au sujet de Going Solo, de mes activités professionnelles, des bidouillages WordPress et quelques sujets divers.

Contrairement au mois dernier (mes excuses plates pour cela, d'ailleurs), j'ai publié un certain nombre d'articles en français. En voici la liste:

  • Du lavage de linge sale en ligne -- suite de l'histoire Pointblog, et des arriérés de Christophe Ginisty, du coup (son entreprise me doit toujours 1050€)
  • Blogs en entreprise, un peu en vrac -- quelques pistes pour saisir la problématique du blog d'entreprise
  • Arghl! Du spam par SMS! On fait quoi? -- conseils pratiques si vous recevez des SMS de pub
  • Website Pro Day, deuxième! -- l'édition une a eu tellement de succès qu'on a remis ça (s'enfermer durant une journée pour bosser sur son site pro)
  • Trois heures pour se mettre à bloguer -- concept d'atelier-blogs pour particuliers que je suis en train de mettre sur pied
  • Qui prendrait des “cours de blog”? -- face au scepticisme de certains, discussion du public-cible pour une telle offre
  • Marketing expérientiel vs. publireportage -- pour comprendre en quoi consiste ce fameux "experiential marketing" dont j'ai passablement parlé en anglais
  • Qu’est-ce que je fais, au juste? -- une tentative d'expliquer ce que je fais, dans le cadre de la réfection de mon site professionnel

Si vous vous sentez d'attaque pour lire quelques articles en anglais, je liste les 5 (et 3) plus importants en fin de billet.

It’s high time for a December 2007 Recap. 36 posts, including the November 2007 Recap. In future, I’ll try to do the recap nearer the end of the month. I will.

And I thought November had been busy?!

Going Solo and Going Far

Let’s get cracking: I’d say one of the major themes of December 2007 was my announcement of Going Solo, and a whole bunch of posts I wrote around that. I’ve now copied the posts over to the blogs of both Going Solo and Going Far, so I’ll link to them there.

On the Going Solo blog:

  • Announcing Going Solo: the announcement
  • Picking a City for an Event: Lausanne: explaining my decision to hold the event in Lausanne, rather than London, Paris or Berlin
  • Headache: Picking a Date for an Event: where I share some of the pain involved in choosing a date (I actually had to change it to May 16th later on

For some reason, Badges at Conferences didn’t get copied over to the Going Solo blog — but it’s clearly related to this conferency stuff.

On the Going Far blog:

These posts are more general musings (most of the time) on the whole “starting a company” thing.

  • News from LeWeb3: LeWeb3 (which I maintain should have been called LeWeb4) is where I started talking about Going Solo and approaching possible sponsors — a very important step for me
  • Why Events?: an explanation of why I decided to start organizing events in addition to my current work as a consultant and speaker
  • Advisors, Boards, Companies, Partners, Oh My!: trying to come to grips with the different levels of involvement others may have in your company (still figuring that one out, by the way)
  • Websites and Blogs, Where Does One Start?: yet another post ending in a punctuation mark — worrying about online presence, and finding it kind of ironic as it’s my job to help people with theirs

Here, too, a post which I think I should also have copied over, but which got left behind: Feeling Like a Born-Again Blogger.

WoWiPAD, WPD, and Work-Related Stuff

While on the topic of events, December saw some action in the “get together and do stuff” department: Website Pro Day (WPD) and World Wide Paperwork and Administrivia Day (WoWiPAD). The second WPD (French post) was announced and took place on the 28th. WoWiPAD1 and WPD2 News was a short announcement/sign-up post.

As a result, I’ve worked a bit on my professional site (this month too, actually), and written about trying to map out what I do and how to “advertise” is: Working on my Professional Site (with a French version: Qu’est-ce que je fais, au juste?.

I also decided to start organizing a blogging crash course. As this targets local people, I’ve blogged about it in French: Trois heures pour se mettre à bloguer (the concept — I’ll be proposing this as a workshop at the LIFT conference once I’ve figured how to write it up… tomorrow — deadline is 20th!) and Qui prendrait des “cours de blog”?, my vision of the target audience for this kind of course.

I sent in a talk proposal for BlogTalk 2008 (BlogTalk 2008 Proposal — Being Multilingual: Blogging in More Than One Language). For the funny story, I had a nasty time booking my flights, then my talk was rejected, then I decided not to go to BlogTalk and started cancelling my flights, then I was invited to come on a panel (which I’ve just agreed to moderate), so I had to un-cancel and rebook a couple of flights. Sigh.

Still in the “work-related” department, as I was booking my flights with Kayak.com, I decided to write up the experience: Being My Own Travel Agent With Kayak. This was a chance to share what I’d learnt with my fellow travellers, and in the same time provide a demonstration of what kind of material I might produce during an experiential marketing campaign. The very next day, I came upon an article on a French blogger’s site (about some form of blogvertising) which prompted me to give some explanations about the experiential marketing concept in French: Marketing expérientiel vs. publireportage. So… two rather long blog posts just before Christmas. (There would be another post or two to write about the end of my adventures in organizing travel: sites that don’t take non-US credit cards, for example, or various weird pricing structures and policies you can bump into. But not now. Today, my travels for Feb/March are booked, finally.)

Though it was written early in the month, Blogs en entreprise, un peu en vrac (in French) also belongs to this pile of “work-like” posts, as it is an explanation of the issues surrounding corporate blogging and what it involves. I actually wrote it for a prospective client at the time.

WordPress Things

Another major theme for December was WordPress-related things (as you can see, I’ve been knee-deep in code):

  • Ridding WordPress Plugins of Template Tags: a couple of neat tricks to save your plugin users from having to add template tags all over the place
  • WordPress Sandbox Theme Problems: not all resolved, I’m afraid
  • Nasty Problem With Basic Bilingual Plugin: resolved, thankfully!
  • WordPress Deaf to Pings: seems to have mostly resolved itself, though I do often end up republishing posts 3-4 times to help the pingbacks get through
  • Browser Language Detection and Redirection: not strictly WordPress stuff, but useful to anybody with a multilingual WordPress site
  • Bunny’s Language Linker: New WordPress Plugin: now also in the WordPress Plugin Index — helps create links between equivalent pages on mirror-translated websites.

The Rest

Now we find ourselves faced with a bunch of posts that don’t seem directly related to one another. My interests are varied, and I must say that I sometimes wonder how anybody else but me would find such a mixture appealing.

Here are some about Web 2.0-ish related stuff:

  • Twitter Advertisers and Friend Collectors: why I block some people on Twitter
  • Hashtags For My Followees: an explanation of hashtags on Twitter
  • Granular Privacy Control (GPC): a thought or two on the Google Reader Shared Items “privacy” non-issue
  • Hoosgot: The Lazyweb is Back!: announcing Hoosgot, reincarnation of the Lazyweb

What’s left? Photography: Being the Model, where I express that though I’m glad to have my photo taken, I do consider I have some rights to the resulting photo as it’s a picture of me. Fresh Lime Soda Episodes 8 & 9 (yes, that was bad — episode 10 is waiting on my hard drive to be edited).

And two more posts in French: Arghl! Du spam par SMS! On fait quoi? — some practical advice on dealing with SMS spam. And last but not least, Du lavage de linge sale en ligne, about using blogs to wash dirty linen in public. The dirty linen being, in this case, the fact that one Christophe Ginisty CEO of Pointblog (the company which ran the now-defunkt Pointblog blog) owes a bunch of people — including me — money for work we did. This has been dragging along for years now (I wrote an article in early 2006 for a magazine that Pointblog was producing).

Selection

There you are! A month of blogging in just one post! Not feeling up to reading it all?

If you were to read only three posts (sticking to the English ones):

  • Announcing Going Solo
  • Working on my Professional Site
  • World Wide Paperwork and Administrivia Day (WoWiPAD) and Website Pro Day (WPD)

Ready for five? Add these two:

  • Being My Own Travel Agent With Kayak
  • Photography: Being the Model
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Pocket (Opens in new window)
Author Stephanie BoothPosted on 18.01.200830.06.2023Categories CTTS News, WordpressTags blogging, Consulting, ctts, going solo, My work, plugins, recap, Site News, WordpressLeave a comment on December 2007 Recap [en]

Websites for Going Solo and Going Far [en]

[fr] Going Solo a maintenant son propre site!

Here we are! Going Solo now has its own (very linkable, please — it’ll need some link-love) website. As with everything around here, it’s still in the making, but I’d rather show it to you now than wait until all is “purr-fect” (ahem) before lifting the veil.

I’ve cross-posted what I’ve written here about Going Solo to the new blog, so everything is over there.

Remember, a couple of months back, when I announced I was starting a company? Well, the company has a name now: Going Far (thanks to Stowe for coming up with the name).

I’ve copied over there the blog posts which have more to do with the whole “setting up a business” aspect of things than with Going Solo in particular.

So, now I have three spaces in which to write about all this “business” stuff. I hope I won’t get lost. Expect some cross-posting, and also maybe some confusion.

In any case, I’m really excited about having these two sites up. Keep an eye on them as they evolve over the next weeks!

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Pocket (Opens in new window)
Author Stephanie BoothPosted on 15.01.200830.06.2023Categories Being the boss, CTTS NewsTags blog, blogging, entrepreneuring, going far, going solo, new, site, Site News1 Comment on Websites for Going Solo and Going Far [en]

Upgrade, Shmupgrade [en]

[fr] Comme lors de chaque mise à jour wordpress, c'est la prise de tête. Plugins, thèmes... il faut vraiment que je mette de l'ordre dans mon site!

Like each time I upgrade WordPress, I find myself facing the sprawling mess that my site has become, and the umpteen hacks made to template and plugins to get things working roughly how I want them.

So I think: time to clean up! Get rid of K2! re-write plugins, so they insert fun things in my themes without me having to put them in by hand all the time!

And then it all goes down the drain, because I try one theme, and another, and another, and none really fits, and I don’t want to yet again go through the half-dozen addition of template tags to make my blog bilingual and shiny. But I do want it bilingual and shiny, don’t get me wrong.

I want to use sandbox. I’d like to adapt my Basic Bilingual plugin so that it injects lang="fr" and lang="en" where necessary. I want a clean layout, and I still like my blue header image of Ouchy (pronounce “ooshee”, please).

I have tons of things in the sidebar, and they need to be laid out so they don’t look too cluttered (a challenge, yes, I know).

I want my tag pages to link to technorati, maybe show my flickr photos with the same tag, or my del.icio.us links.

I want ajax-ification so that I can correct spelling mistakes and add/remove tags without going to the admin interface (Inline Tag Thing looks promising, but I’m not sure I like the interface).

Sigh.

Maybe I should just start a CTTS design contest. Give out prizes. Something like that.

Or stop wanting to push my blogging tool where it isn’t yet? I don’t want to give up.

Update: for the curious, the temporary design is Diurnal, a sandbox skin. The colours change with the time of day — pretty neat in my opinion.

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Pocket (Opens in new window)
Author Stephanie BoothPosted on 29.11.200730.06.2023Categories CTTS News, WordpressTags basic bilingual, competition, contest, ctts, design, header, plugins, sandbox, sidebar, Site News, theme, widgets, Wordpress15 Comments on Upgrade, Shmupgrade [en]

Posts navigation

Previous page Page 1 Page 2 Page 3 Page 4 … Page 15 Next page

Welcome!

Stephanie Booth

Climb to the Stars is Stephanie Booth's personal site. Blog powered since summer 2000. Follow her on Twitter (@stephtara), Tumblr (Digital Crumble), Facebook and Mastodon.

Subscribe to Blog via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Revue: 3 links a week

Steph’s Intermittent Newsletter

powered by TinyLetter

Demande à Steph

Chaque semaine, un truc geek pour améliorer votre vie numérique. Ecrivez-moi avec vos questions!

Archives

Categories

Recent Comments

  • Annette Schwindt on It’s Already September
  • stef on Conte d’une vie
  • Stephanie Booth on Les chats diabétiques: ce qu’il faut savoir
  • Jeanne on Les chats diabétiques: ce qu’il faut savoir
  • Introduire une stratégie médias sociaux B2B – Evren Kiefer on How Blogging Brings Dialogue to Corporate Communications
  • Publier ou ne pas publier? - Evren Kiefer on 10-Day "Back to Blogging" Challenge
  • My Cat’s Tale – Oscar, Erica, And Living With A Diabetic Cat | My Cat's Tale on Feline Diabetes: My Advice for Diabetic Cats
  • My Cat’s Tale – Oscar, Erica, And Living With A Diabetic Cat – The Podcast Corner on Feline Diabetes: My Advice for Diabetic Cats
  • Stephanie Booth on Giardiose: ma copine giardia lamblia
  • céline on Giardiose: ma copine giardia lamblia
  • Blog
    • Being the boss
    • Life Improvement
    • My work
    • Blogging
    • Personal
    • Thinking
    • Conferences
    • Connected Life
  • Random
  • Photos
  • Coworking
  • Digital Crumble
  • Pages
    • India
    • Multilingual
    • Troubles musculo-squelettiques (Repetitive Strain Injury)
    • WordPress
    • Writing
  • About
    • Presse
  • Newsletter
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Work
  • Contact
Climb to the Stars Proudly powered by WordPress