Slickness is Slick

As documented here, I activated the heretofore unnoticed Automatically discard spam comments on posts older than a month checkbox in the Akismet WordPress plugin.

A month or so in, and my spam trap went from ginormous1 to next to none. And I can much more easily find any false positives that make it into the spam trap2.

The only downside is that the Akismet Badge at the bottom doesn’t roll up the “spam trapped” numbers like it used to. It would be nice if the web mavens at Akismet would have a second number in the badge, an “auto flush” counter, for lack of a better term.

Even in the absence of that, this Akismet feature has been a win-win. Less spam that I even see, and comments are left open, so that anyone with something to say can still say it if they are so inclined.

Thanks, Akismet!

-k-


1 For a little five and dime blog like this.

2 There have been only a handful of those, in my entire history of using Akismet.

Retooling

Ever since WordPress introduced native support for tags, I’ve struggled with getting a decent tagging system in place here at tbbs.

The struggle has been compounded by a well-intentioned, though not well-executed effort to convert my existing categories to tags. Some categories, most significantly my punchlines and RIP categories, translated nicely to tags. Others; e.g., the Life category, turned into a Fibber McGee’s closet of posts, some of which may even be categorized accurately as Life.

Add to the foregoing that I use a variety of blog clients: ecto, ScribeFire, and the WP admin panel itself. This precipitated the installation of an array of plugins whose functions were to expand specially-delimited strings in the post body into tags when the post was displayed. Yet another plugin performed the same function, but for Technorati tags.

Somewhere along the line, the plugins got into a state of mortal conflict, tags weren’t updating properly or at all, and I’m exploding into a blazing fireball of mixed tags, wrong tags, or no tags.

Enough already. Here’s the remedy:

  1. Switch to ScribeFire exclusively for posting. It supports tags, both locally, and Technorati. I rarely use the Mac for blog posting anymore anyhow, so this isn’t much of a change.
  2. Convert all existing categories to tags. Ham-fisted, yes, and the tag cloud will be skewed for a while. You have to break some eggs to make an omelet.
  3. Strip out all the delimited tag strings from existing posts.
  4. Disable and deinstall the plugins that made (3) above work.

So, if things look a little more dishevelled than normal around here for a while, that’s what’s going on.

Pardon my dust, etc, etc.

-k-

And the Banner Flies

And, the memory_limit is at 16MB, 2.5 WordPress files in place, database upgraded, and tbbs-land now proudly flies the WP 2.5 banner.

Another successful upgrade, and another lesson in my computing life.

Now, I can relax, watch the NASCAR race, and get ready for exciting hoops to follow.

Thanks, WordPress, and Hosting Guy!
-k-
[stags]geek, blog, tbbs, wordpress[/stags]

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Passing time

I’ve found it helpful after opening a support ticket, to follow up with a few e-mail notes to be added to the ticket. This causes activity in the ticket queue, and hopefully lets the support guys know they’re not dealing with someone who just fell off the yam wagon.

Sounds good, anyway. Or maybe some of the BOFH karma that I’m sometimes guilty of, has come back to bite me.

-k-