Category Archives: Tech
Twitter Cards
Twitter Cards are meta data added to webpage that tell Twitter information about the page’s content. Twitter uses this information when a Tweet links to your page, which enriches the tweet. The information is typically shown when the user clicks … Continue reading
Customising WordPress Themes and Plugins
WordPress is a great platform to use as a CMS (Content Management Scheme) for driving a website. It comes with great built-in functionality and many free and paid-for plugins and themes. Advanced features can be included very easily and quickly by both programmers … Continue reading
Spree Admin Bar
We’ve been using the Spree open source e-commerce framework on a website, and found that the owners would often be browsing the shop front-end and spot something that required a quick content change. However, it was not that straightforward to navigate to … Continue reading
Spree Commerce Blog Plugin
A online shop recently wanted me to build a blogging solution for their Spree website. Spree in an open source e-commerce framework written in Ruby-on-Rails. We didn’t need advanced functionality for the blog, just some posts with HTML content and … Continue reading
Ruby vs Python
Ruby and Python are similar programming languages in that they use much of the same syntax, runtime speed, they both come with large standard libraries to do most common tasks, and are generally suited to solving similar kinds of problems. However, people often strongly … Continue reading
Google Authorship
People’s faces have been appearing more and more in Google search results, looking something like this: This comes about by people claiming authorship of their own pages and linking them to their Google Plus accounts. There are lots of reasons why … Continue reading
Using fonts on the web
The fonts available when a web page is rendered in a web browser depend on which fonts are installed on the user’s system. While a user can install more fonts, it is the fonts that come as default for an … Continue reading
Dnsmasq (no editing /etc/hosts)
I’ve played around bit recently with Pow (http://pow.cx/) on Mac OS for running Ruby development sites. One of the nice things it does is automatically handle resolving requests to the dev site. For example, requests to http://mysite.dev/ will automatically be handled by the localhost, … Continue reading