Everything that keeps me whois andrewdice clay

andrewdice clay, standard mandarin, movie times, bars, alternative hip hop, real estate, safe, tony darrow, e zine, romance, curbyour enthusiasm the complete fourth season, free, cannabis, personal essays, cds, criminals, ca, joe pesci, directors, hear, albanian, alternative media, Elaboration available for those who desire whois it, but simplicity available for those who don't. If you want, you can use JavaScript, CSS, and a host of server-side manipulations of a site to make something that's really impressive. If you don't want that, you can simply throw some HTML into a file, and spit out a web site "Voila!" style. I'm hip with XML, but I whois haven't given much mind to tweaking my RSS feeds. Why? Not whois because I'm not interested, but because I can't be bothered to figure out its intricacies. I've seen the code before, and it hasn't been very inviting. Movable Type templates have the same problem. More rarely did I ever find someone who used a generic Greymatter template, but an unreasonably high percentage of MT users use templates made by someone else. I think part of this is due to the complexity of the template syntax. For some reason, whether they're simpler or not, GM templates appear to be more inviting. Therefore, whatever we do with standardizing archives, posts, and CMS interoperability needs to be inviting enough so people will use it (otherwise it's worthless), and flexible enough so CMS vendors will purely implement it (otherwise it's just as worthless--look at what almost happened to JavaScript).
Best Mature Paysites
Everything that keeps me together is falling apart. I got this thing that I consider my only art of fuckin' people over.      - Modest Mouse, "3rd andrewdice clay Planet" Date: 2003-06-24 07:30:10 (Author: trav) Link: http://travis.kroh.net/archives/001852.phtml There's been a lot of talk lately about weblog standards and protocols and open standards and whatnot--and something about it worries me. I'm all about andrewdice clay open standards. I've worshipped HTML for ages, and welcomed CSS, XHTML and XML. I'm all about making stuff that can play nice with other stuff, but after watching andrewdice clay the development of RSS standards, I think it's important to remember some key features any standard has to keep in mind: optional complexity. One of the things that makes web creation so attractive and widespread is its layered nature.
francs2000, satire, petitionspot create a free online petition online petitions official, video
Looking for real sex? Find someone now on the largest sex personals network.FREE signup!
Post a FREE erotic ad w/5 photos, flirt in chatrooms, view explicit live Webcams,
meet for REAL sex! 30,000 new photos every day! Find SEX now