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218 results for “kbradnam”
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We first tried ‘feeling’ the blueprint side to see if a piece had gotten stuck underneath but it all felt completely flat.
We then spent ages searching our kitchen, searching our clothes (even inside my slippers) but we couldn’t find that one missing piece!!!
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Originally I had assembled the blueprint side of the jigsaw a bit further away from the exterior version.
When I then tried moving them closer together I had to deal with an annoying fold in the tablecloth. Sliding the puzzle over that fold broke pieces of the puzzle and we had to reassemble parts by hand.
That’s when I noticed a piece was missing!
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I started flipping pieces over to reveal the ‘internal blueprint’ version of the other side. I wanted to then have half of the jigsaw from each version next to each other.
Some of this was done manually and some by using paper and stiff placemats to flip sections.
But something was wrong!
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After completing my 1,000-piece #MillenniumFalcon jigsaw the other day, I thought that - before I put it away - I should try to see what it looks like on the reverse side.
Here is the ‘exterior’ version of the jigsaw (this was the version we assembled).
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I finished this jigsaw late last night. It’s possibly the hardest 1,000 piece jigsaw I’ve ever done with lots of repetition and fine detail.
The last 100 or so pieces involved a lot of trial and error.
It’s a double-sided puzzle with a blueprint version of the Falcon on the reverse.
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I bought a 'walking pad' last month during the Amazon Prime Day sale. Naturally, I am tracking all of the steps I walk with it and I've just passed 100,000 steps.
These are nearly all steps taken while I'm actively working. It's proving revolutionary for me. I think I'm losing weight too as my daily step count tends to end up closer to 15K rather than the usual 10K that it used to be.
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'To sidebar, or not to sidebar' - by Michelle Drumm.
Good overview of the pros/cons of having a sidebar on your website. The rise of mobile has changed the balance a bit I think (i.e. typically sidebar content is moved the bottom of a page on mobile devices).
https://www.newwhyweb.com/blog/to-sidebar-or-not-to-sidebar/
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'To sidebar, or not to sidebar' - by Michelle Drumm.
Good overview of the pros/cons of having a sidebar on your website. The rise of mobile has changed the balance a bit I think (i.e. typically sidebar content is moved the bottom of a page on mobile devices).
https://www.newwhyweb.com/blog/to-sidebar-or-not-to-sidebar/
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In re-reading some of my (many) older blog posts about the CEGMA tool, I came across this one which I wrote over a decade ago. However, I think this contains some advice which remains relevant for anyone who is involved in maintaining a software project (especially if you didn't write the original code!):
Let me repeat the six tips in that article:
#genomics #software #ProjectManagement #CodeDevelopment #documentation #bioinformatics
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In re-reading some of my (many) older blog posts about the CEGMA tool, I came across this one which I wrote over a decade ago. However, I think this contains some advice which remains relevant for anyone who is involved in maintaining a software project (especially if you didn't write the original code!):
Let me repeat the six tips in that article:
#genomics #software #ProjectManagement #CodeDevelopment #documentation #bioinformatics
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One of the common challenges in managing a large website with thousands of pages is dealing with #BrokenLinks.
One source of broken links is organisations that change their name. Sometimes this is from mergers with other organisations (very common with charities) but often it is because of cultural changes.
This week I fixed a broken link on our site from an organisation that has changed its name *many* times...
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One of the common challenges in managing a large website with thousands of pages is dealing with #BrokenLinks.
One source of broken links is organisations that change their name. Sometimes this is from mergers with other organisations (very common with charities) but often it is because of cultural changes.
This week I fixed a broken link on our site from an organisation that has changed its name *many* times...
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One of the common challenges in managing a large website with thousands of pages is dealing with #BrokenLinks.
One source of broken links is organisations that change their name. Sometimes this is from mergers with other organisations (very common with charities) but often it is because of cultural changes.
This week I fixed a broken link on our site from an organisation that has changed its name *many* times...
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One of the common challenges in managing a large website with thousands of pages is dealing with #BrokenLinks.
One source of broken links is organisations that change their name. Sometimes this is from mergers with other organisations (very common with charities) but often it is because of cultural changes.
This week I fixed a broken link on our site from an organisation that has changed its name *many* times...
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One of the common challenges in managing a large website with thousands of pages is dealing with #BrokenLinks.
One source of broken links is organisations that change their name. Sometimes this is from mergers with other organisations (very common with charities) but often it is because of cultural changes.
This week I fixed a broken link on our site from an organisation that has changed its name *many* times...
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Amazing ceiling at the #DesignMuseum. #architecture
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Amazing ceiling at the #DesignMuseum. #architecture
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Amazing ceiling at the #DesignMuseum. #architecture
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Amazing ceiling at the #DesignMuseum. #architecture
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I think I’m at the #DesignMuseum in London but it might also be @ismh’s house 😀💻📱
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More of these please!
A #GridServe EV charging station in the UK (near Braintree) which features about 40 spots to charge your car (up to 360 Kw per hour…if you car can handle it).
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I'm not thrilled that Google has quietly created #GA4 analytics properties for anyone who didn't upgrade from #UniversalAnalytics
This should have been an option a year ago when they were encouraging people to migrate, not something that's stealthily done as an afterthought.
We had already created our own #GA4 property but we now have a redundant copy created by Google which we can't remove. Many others seem to be having this issue too:
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I'm not thrilled that Google has quietly created #GA4 analytics properties for anyone who didn't upgrade from #UniversalAnalytics
This should have been an option a year ago when they were encouraging people to migrate, not something that's stealthily done as an afterthought.
We had already created our own #GA4 property but we now have a redundant copy created by Google which we can't remove. Many others seem to be having this issue too:
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I'm not thrilled that Google has quietly created #GA4 analytics properties for anyone who didn't upgrade from #UniversalAnalytics
This should have been an option a year ago when they were encouraging people to migrate, not something that's stealthily done as an afterthought.
We had already created our own #GA4 property but we now have a redundant copy created by Google which we can't remove. Many others seem to be having this issue too:
-
I'm not thrilled that Google has quietly created #GA4 analytics properties for anyone who didn't upgrade from #UniversalAnalytics
This should have been an option a year ago when they were encouraging people to migrate, not something that's stealthily done as an afterthought.
We had already created our own #GA4 property but we now have a redundant copy created by Google which we can't remove. Many others seem to be having this issue too:
-
I'm not thrilled that Google has quietly created #GA4 analytics properties for anyone who didn't upgrade from #UniversalAnalytics
This should have been an option a year ago when they were encouraging people to migrate, not something that's stealthily done as an afterthought.
We had already created our own #GA4 property but we now have a redundant copy created by Google which we can't remove. Many others seem to be having this issue too:
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I’m finding myself liking ‘the #cheesegrater’ more than I thought I would.
I often take a meander on the way home through this part of #London to admire the #architecture.
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Remember when #Google said that #UniversalAnalytics would stop recording data at the start of July?
🤔
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Remember when #Google said that #UniversalAnalytics would stop recording data at the start of July?
🤔