Blog

  • *!@#$! Spammers

    April 20, 2005

    Some asshole is apparently using my domain as a return address for their bullshit spam, and as a result I get to reconfigure all my mail filters to ignore the bogus users. Whee. I can’t wait for validated email to become a standard.

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    DSri Seah
  • Redesigning the Everyday

    April 20, 2005

    Visit SiteGed send me this great story of how a design M.F.A. student, Deborah Adler, helped redesign the prescription medicine bottle so it’s less ambiguous and therefore safer:
    Adler grew up in a family of doctors in Chappaqua, New York, but escaped medicine for an M.F.A. at the School of Visual Arts. She was inspired to return, at least tangentially, after her grandmother Helen accidentally swallowed pills meant for her husband, Herman. The drugstore prescription bottle, it occurred to Adler, is not just unattractive, it’s actually dangerous. Statistics back her up: According to a recent poll conducted for Target, 60 percent of prescription-drug users have taken medication incorrectly.

    Check out the article to see what the new bottle looks like, or wait until May 1st to see its debut at Target. It’s great when Design solves something that’s right in front of our noses every day.

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    DSri Seah
  • Comments Broken?

    April 19, 2005

    I’ve been hearing some reports that comments aren’t working for people…if anyone has had any difficulty, please send me an email via the contact form. Let me know what browser you’re using, and the time of day.

    Or leave a comment here and let me know it works for you! Thanks!

    Possible issues:

    • posting during peak times in the afternoon, server overloaded?
    • AOL users w/ browsers?
    • Bad cookies? Erase all the davidseah.com cookies and see if the problem goes away.
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    DSri Seah
  • Spring Turkey Season

    April 19, 2005

    My sister told me about an article by one of our favorite writers, Jeffrey Steingarten, in which goes to England to hunt woodcock. He buys all the right gear, but unhappily leaves it all on the train by accident. The article, “To Kill A Woodcock”, was one of three that landed Steingarten a 2005 James Beard Foundation Journalism Award Nomination. We’ll find out in May whether he won or not.

    Anyway, this got me thinking about Wild Turkeys, the bird that Benjamin Franklin thought to be a more fitting National Symbol than the Bald Eagle. A cunning, wily bird, the American Wild Turkey has made a comeback from extinction here in New Hampshire thanks to the efforts of the New Hampshire Fish and Game Department. And with that, comes Spring Turkey Hunting Season.

    I’ve never hunted in my life, but I remember my Dad’s best friend “Uncle Daniel” who used to hunt pheasant and rabbits in (of all places) Taiwan. I remember eating something at his family’s house once that had pellets in it that I had to pick out. And what could be more American than hunting the Wild Turkey? Jeffrey Steingarten did it in England, so I’m sure he’s be fine with hunting turkeys. This is a part of America that I have not experienced. If I eat meat, I should consider getting it myself. Who knows…the experience might turn me into a vegetarian.

    I don’t know if I could shoot a bunny or a deer, but a big old bird might be OK, especially if I eat it. Maybe I should start with catching fish first and see how I feel about it. And read Steingarten’s article.

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    DSri Seah
  • Statcounter Traffic

    April 18, 2005

    Site Traffic for 2005 I use StatCounter to track hits on the site. They’ve got a great interface, and the service is free for a log size of 100. They can pull interesting statistics out of your site that a regular web log analyzer like Analog and Webalyzer tend to obfuscate because they’re just big lists of page hits. Statcounter, by comparison, allows you to track individual visit paths for the records in its log file. It’s pretty slick.

    If you want more space than 100 entries, you have to pay $9/mo and up. So far I haven’t needed this, but traffic has steadily grown. Primarily, this seems to be due to growing awareness of the Lazy Image Layout WordPress image plugin, regional restaurant reviews, people trying to kill fleas with Borax, and the sudden popularity of Hi Hi Puffy Ami Yumi image searches. It’s fascinating to see what people are looking for.

    No idea how many people are just reading the blog itself…maybe 10-20? That’s still pretty darn cool…thanks guys!

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    DSri Seah