I’m not just being introverted — though by now, I (like most other people on the Web, evidently) have been outed as an introvert — but I really am working on the hermeneutics article in the few waking minutes left to me tonight. The whole day today was swallowed up by a monster faculty meeting, so I only have tomorrow and a little bit of Friday to get the article done.
I’ not avoiding talking with, for instance, Kurt and Dave (Time’s Shadow) (in Kurt’s comments) about creeds. Just resisting until after I keep other promises.
Go to Manfred Klein’s place and check out this week’s type designs (I doubt I’ll use any of them, but LuziFer is intriguing). go to Nick Curtis’s place, where his new site design is up, and he’s offering two new typefaces, Bulwark and Tropicana. And Diane DiPiazza has offered Laura, a script typeface.
But really, go read Gary Turner. I really must emphaticize that point. If you don’t, I’ll be forced to ask you again. Really.
Posted by AKMA at February 26, 2003 09:22 PM | TrackBackAre there different ways by which to view the article written by Jonathan Rauch concerning introverts?
For more along these lines, check out the blog post entitled "In Defense of Introversion" available at Norsehorse's Home Turf: http://nht.blogspot.com
Posted by: Morgan at March 1, 2003 09:11 AMThe Stack is just what it sounds like: a tower of things that starts at the bottom and builds upward as it goes. In our case, the things in the stack are called "Stack Frames" or just "frames". We start with one stack frame at the very bottom, and we build up from there.
Posted by: Margaret at January 13, 2004 12:27 AMThe most basic duality that exists with variables is how the programmer sees them in a totally different way than the computer does. When you're typing away in Project Builder, your variables are normal words smashed together, like software titles from the 80s. You deal with them on this level, moving them around and passing them back and forth.
Posted by: Ebotte at January 13, 2004 12:28 AMBeing able to understand that basic idea opens up a vast amount of power that can be used and abused, and we're going to look at a few of the better ways to deal with it in this article.
Posted by: Andrew at January 13, 2004 12:28 AMThese secret identities serve a variety of purposes, and they help us to understand how variables work. In this lesson, we'll be writing a little less code than we've done in previous articles, but we'll be taking a detailed look at how variables live and work.
Posted by: Rosanna at January 13, 2004 10:06 AM