POTD How-To

This morning a reader phoned me for directions to brother Dennis’ daily poetry.  Depends on what kind of device you are using to browse the Web.  Here are three alternatives:

1. If you are using a desktop or laptop computer or other wide-screen device, you can always access the poetry page via the POTD link that appears on the left side of the page when you scroll down:

 

 

 

 

2. If you are using a smartphone or a tablet in portrait mode, you will probably see a display something like this:

 

Click the “hamburger” icon, and then you should see a display of the side panel links, similar to that for the full-sized display described initially.

 

 

 

3. The third alternative is to use (and bookmark) this link:

http://whilebusy.com/potd-dennis-poem-of-the-day/

A Word About What’s Happening Online

Most of my non-virtual, real friends know that I generally avoid Facebook and most social media. This mostly came out of my experience over the years working with my ISP (internet service provider) colleagues, as it became obvious to us long ago that FB was harvesting data much more aggressively than most “civilian” FB users may have realized. Furthermore, as a programmer and web designer myself, I had the tools and skills to create a web presence for myself that was completely unique and custom (and I didn’t like to be forced into a personal online scenario that looked and operated just like everyone else), and did not have to rely on advertising. Finally, I found the concept of “likes” and “friending” to be shallow and rather meaningless. Admittedly, I have swallowed the kool-aid in the case of Google, as many of its services have proved to be pretty much essential to my online negotiations. And I’m not dismissing social media out of hand. Look at the wonderful Netflix documentary, “Twinsters”, to see what can come of it, for example.

Lately, you have undoubtedly been hearing of Russian troll factories and deceptive political advertising that have been used in an attempt to undermine American democracy and US citizens’ faith in its political and governmental institutions, including most recently the Cambridge Analytical scandal (examples here and here).

Anyway, I want my viewers to know that my sites do not grab any data from you, nor do they track you. (Your browser knows where you have been, of course, but that is not shared with me.) And I intend to never inflict any advertising on you when you visit my custom-built family, photography, car or music sites.

Have a decent day.

P.S.: Here’s something I noticed in today’s incoming

rDay Eight-Hundred-One: EOU Football Explainer & Follow-Up

Okay, I have been asked to clarify my mention about seeing the EOU football practice field pano in an expanded view. Here goes:

1. Click on the tiny sliver of an image you see inside the blog post.

2. Now you see a larger image within the bounds of the blog window itself. It is still not expanded to its fuller potential.

3. Click again on this larger image — or right click it, and then select “open in a new window (you might be able to open it in a new tab, as well).

4. Now you see that the image has “jumped outside” the confines of the blog post area, and should be occupying the full width of your browser itself.

5. Now you can mouse over the image you are now seeing, and — at least in Windows 10 — you should see your mousepointer change to a “handle” attached to an encircled “plus” sign.

6. Click the plus sign mousepointer and the image should now further expand to the full height of your browser window, allowing you to scroll horizontally to see a more-or-less maximum sized view across your screen.

7. Alternatively, right-click on the panoramic image and save it to your local machine, then view it with whatever picture browsing facilities you have in your device’s operating system.

8. These instructions are mostly tailored to a Windows desktop machine. Some variance may occur with other devices and other operating systems. For example, you should be able to use the two-finger expand gesture on touchscreen devices.

Hyperlinks and Searches

Hyperlinks

From time to time, I learn that some readers may not be uptaking all of the available content in blog posts here. I sometimes receive email inquiries asking for more information or detail on matters that are already answered because they are linked within the text.

Confession: I may be guilty of assuming that readers are well-accustomed to reading Web pages as I have been building these sites since the early 1990s when I was at UCLA (and experimented in the 80s with alternative, predecessor technologies that evolved into common Internet and Web page usage).

ASIDE: Did you know that some of President Roosevelt’s staff in World War II used unique means of linking blocks of text, as something of a conceptual forerunner to hyperlinks used in today’s Web pages?

Hyperlinks, aka “links”, are typically represented by underlined text, which often change to a different shade or color (typically blue) when passed over by your mouse pointer. This is a standard feature of the language used to program or code Web pages throughout the Internet, although some Web designers stray from the strict industry standards to try to introduce a bit of their own unique style, perhaps making link text appear in, say, red, when moused upon. Or the link text might be shown in a different typeface or color altogether. Here is an example (in the form of an inactive graphical snippet) of a hyperlink embedded in the text of one of my blog posts:

hypertext_example

Note that the first indicator is that the words, “recent mention of SPARC” are underlined. This tells us that this is an active hyperlink and that clicking (or tapping) on this chunk of text will take us to another page or block of information; in this case, clicking immediately jumps you to the original cited blog post of a few days ago. Furthermore, by simply passing your mouse pointer — which typically is in the form of an arrow in its default state — over the underlined text, it amplifies its significance and identity as a linkable object by changing to a representation of a tiny hand with a pointing index finger, while also temporarily removing the underlining and fading the text to a lighter shade.

Such a hyperlink on a Web page effectively serves the same purpose as a numeric footnote indicator or an asterisk does in conventional printed text.

So if you read a blog post here and feel that it doesn’t tell a complete story, or that something seems to be missing, check to see if you overlooked any underlined text within its body. (Of course, if you are someone who looks at pictures only and never reads text, I probably can’t help you.)

Note that we can apply hyperlinking to other objects as well as plain text. For example, photos or graphical images inside a blog post often will reveal the “pointy finger” when you mouse over them. This means that clicking will lead you to something else. Usually, in the case of a photo “thumbnail” (a tiny representation of a larger photo), clicking will jump you to a full-size version of that photo. Move your mouse around a blog page and you will see that the title of a blog post is actually a hyperlink and is clickable, even though it is not underlined as is the case for body text. Clicking that will lead you to the blog post on a separate, permanently-addressed page. Likewise, the “pointy finger” will appear upon a mouseover of the blog name itself (in the top left corner) and clicking it jumps you to the first page of the site (this is a standard Web practice and usually will get you to the home page of any site you happen to visit).

One more important — extremely important — behavior of the Pointy Finger that you should know about: When the Pointy Finger appears, your browser should also subtly tell you WHERE that link will take you should you click it. This is shown in the form of a URL (i.e., Web address such as “http://somesite.com/pagesomething”) that appears in small text in the bottom left footer bar of your browser. Like this:
mouseover

 

If you are wary of clicking a link on an unfamiliar Website, look to see if the destination URL of the link is one that is part of the site you are on, or is somewhere that you feel safe with. This technique can also be used in links that appear in email text to help you know whether links are going to a destination that is not what they purport to be — as in “phishing” email.

ASIDE #2: Beware of clicking willy-nilly around sites you do not trust or are unfamiliar with. And don’t click on links inside email unless you know for certain that they are safe. This also applies to links in ads or links supplied by other users on sites such as Facebook!

Finding Information

There are a number of ways to find something specifically on the WhileBusy blog site. Some readers who subscribe receive email notices automatically that provide a link directly to the newest blog posting. Or you can just go to the home page and scroll down the page, as the newest posts will always appear chronologically at the top of first page.

If you want to track down something in a previous post, or have a particular question, you might try one or more of these tactics:

1. Use the Search box in the left panel near the top of each page. Type in a possible search term or keyword that you think might appear as a match in the body or title of a previous post somewhere.

2. Just below the Search box is a sort of calendar display for the current month. If an entry was posted on a particular day, that day will appear with a black background on the calendar grid. Click a day to jump to that specific blog posting. You can also navigate back and forth to previous and next months.

3. Farther down the left panel is an “Archives” heading which lists month names you can click to see a page that contains all posts for that month.

4. Even farther down the left panel is a “Categories” select box (aka pick list) that gives you a selection of predetermined categories, together with a count of the blog posts under each category, which you can click on to see a page that instantly retrieves all of those posts and displays them together.

5. Note that every individual post also lists on its bottom line any Category or Tag that was specifically assigned to that post. For example:

category_tag

By clicking on the category text, you will jump to a page that is dynamically assembled to display all of the posts of that particular category, giving you a way to quickly find related material. Likewise, clicking on the tag text, you get a page or pages of everything that shares the same tag. (By the way, you can also click on the date that appears on that bottom line; this will show you all posts that were published on that day.)

Hope this helps!  Let me know …

rDay One-Hundred-Twenty-Eight: A Little Research

Yesterday, a conversation with Janet took some unexpected seques and led to a bit of a discussion about a circa-1961 summer job that my brother Dennis and I had.  We worked at the Fat Jones Stables, a sizable ranch in North Hollywood.  Fat Jones was a supplier of horses, mules, donkeys, goats, bison, camels, almost any other four-legged beast you could imagine, as well as related equipment and vehicles.,  to the movie and TV industry.  My job was in the paint shop, helping restore old buckboards and stagecoaches.

Fat Jones himself would come around daily in his chauffeured limo, and the ranch would often receive drop-in visits from actors seen in Hollywood westerns of the time.
fat_jones

The above photo is sourced here:

http://www.westernclippings.com/treasures/westerntreasures_gallery_20.shtml

I could only find a few references, mostly on cowboy movie nostalgia sites, like this following …

Apparently Fat Jones Stables no longer exists:
https://stevesomething.wordpress.com/category/fat-jones-stables/

Some remnants:
http://www.sageandsky.com/fatjones.html

See comment of Mike Milstead (grandson of Clarence “Fat” Jones) at bottom of page:
http://horsefame.tripod.com/actors.htm

Here is a reminiscence from a descendant of Fat Jones (from http://www.angelfire.com/film/horsefame/hollywoodhorses.html):

—– Hollywood horses Updates —–
Fat Jones stable – Hollywood Horses
COMMENTS & INFO from: Nancy Sue
– December 2008 –
You asked for some Fat Jones Stables info. I stayed there with Ben & Carol Johnson. Uncle Ben’s line was that when he first brought horses out to California for Howard Hughes’s movie called “The Outlaw” he saw a pretty girl sitting on the fence, that was Auntie Carol, the rest became history. Whenever I showed up, “Fat” would hand me a ream of paper and lots of sharpened pencils to sketch the horses there. I used to ride a little red mare that was branded with Quien Sabe brands from shoulder to hip. She was marked like Man o’War, and was my favorite to ride. I also rode Peanuts a bay horse. Worked with Cochise (who was killed), as well a riding Dunny Waggoner (Lorne Green’s Bonanza horse) leading the fretful Chubby (who if separated from Dunny would throw fits). Soldier, Goldie, Buster (a pinto that was given to Johnny Jones), Blue (that belonged to Jimmy Cagney), Mexico (Rober Culp’s horse on Trackdown), Blanco (did a painting of him) Black Diamond and Steel. I have pictures of Blanco, Black Diamond and Steel. I was the only person on the place that could turn my back on Black Diamond. And did it in front of Uncle Ben, that’s how I got the reputation. Then I also got to ride Zane the brahma, that was used in the movie Greatest Story Ever Told. All in all, my memories of Fat Jones Stables were and are wonderful.

And here is a snippet on Fat Jones and his gravesite at Forest Lawn: http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=65825360