I’ve been having trouble leaving comments at enetation sites; sometimes they go through, but other times it seems as though Safari (my browsing weapon of choice) doesn’t agree with enetation. Or are their servers just erratic? Do other browsers miscarry sometimes?
Posted by AKMA at October 21, 2003 10:29 AM | TrackBackI had lots of trouble with enetation on my blog. Sometimes it showed up, sometimes it disappeared for hours at a time. Other times people attempted to leave comments and were unable to. Once it ate all my comments. I finally dumped it and went with Haloscan instead. So far it seems pretty reliable. I don't know what gives with enetation but it's not just you.
Posted by: AmyMo at October 21, 2003 10:42 AMActually, Amy, I think yours is one of the blogs where I ran into this problem, so that’s a very helpful testimony.
Posted by: AKMA at October 21, 2003 11:05 AMI chose enetation when I started my blog, because I was looking at the blogs I knew, and found that it was one of the few at the time that were (a)functioning well, and (b)accepting new clients. I've not been dissatisfied enough to change, but there are certainly features I'd like to alter.
Suggestions/recommendations welcome...
Posted by: Jane Ellen at October 21, 2003 03:23 PMThis code should compile and run just fine, and you should see no changes in how the program works. So why did we do all of that?
Posted by: Howell at January 12, 2004 07:43 PMWhen Batman went home at the end of a night spent fighting crime, he put on a suit and tie and became Bruce Wayne. When Clark Kent saw a news story getting too hot, a phone booth hid his change into Superman. When you're programming, all the variables you juggle around are doing similar tricks as they present one face to you and a totally different one to the machine.
Posted by: Barnabas at January 13, 2004 09:11 AMBut variables get one benefit people do not
Posted by: Thomasina at January 13, 2004 09:12 AMWhen Batman went home at the end of a night spent fighting crime, he put on a suit and tie and became Bruce Wayne. When Clark Kent saw a news story getting too hot, a phone booth hid his change into Superman. When you're programming, all the variables you juggle around are doing similar tricks as they present one face to you and a totally different one to the machine.
Posted by: Josias at January 13, 2004 09:13 AM