Extended Live Archive for Wordpress 2.8 (ish)

published on August 30, 2009 » filed under Tech, WordPress

I’m running Wordpress 2.8.4 and I love the Extended Live Archives Plugin. Unfortunately it would seem development has dried up and so I’ve resorted to many many forums and angry blog posts for help. Can’t find the answer- but I’ve collated the information out there into one file.

Understand this plugin patch doesn’t exactly work, it doesn’t show actually show the extended live archives- but structurally the back-end appears to be sound.

Attached is a hacked Extended Live Archive for anyone out there interested. I am not the author of this plugin- but couldn’t find any simple download out there that takes the modifications / hacks up to speed… let me know how it goes. Continue the discussion on this Wordpress Forum page if you could!

Note: do not update when asked. As you will overwrite the changes I’ve made.

Download: Extended Live Archives for Wordpress 2.8 [PHP 5 Required]

Update (6/09/09)
One of the commenters below, Eduardo, has very kindly offered his (previously unreleased) version of ELA which has made it through all kinds of patching and hacking to become a working Extended Live Archive under Wordpress 2.8+ Unfortunately it does not work on PHP 4 – so, thought I’d update the link (above) to offer his version. I’m still working on a fix for everyone– as is Charles who runs the official listing in the Wordpress Plugin Directory. Check both those links out.

Meetin’ GK

published on August 17, 2009 » filed under Film, Noteworthy

I caught up with Garrison Keillor outside the Filmhouse, minutes after completely failing to pitch any of my prepared questions during a Q+A that followed a special screening of A Prairie Home Companion. The film, directed by Robert Altman, written and starring 67-year-old Keillor, is the semi-fictional story of his old-time variety radio show, which I’ve been a fan of for years. Not to belittle the man’s achievements – which include a dozen novels, poetry, 35 years of radio, countless newspaper columns – but Keillor has one of the great American voices I’m sure you’d recognise. His literary tone is similarly baritonic; deep, soulful, vaguely satirical tales of a fictional Mid Western hometown called Lake Wobegone.

“Oh, it’s you?” came the sagacious lilt – understand Keillor does not speak, rather he spreads his voice over conversation like ketchup – I responded with something original like “hello Garrison,” and produced something for him to scribble on. After some initial star-struck, weather related, prattle, I got to some questions. He graciously responded as we ambled in the direction of Princes Street.

“I read your piece in the Chicago Tribune about bloggers being writers who’ve been liberated from editors.” I explained my worried interpretation; that writing sans-editor has only led to an increase in misappropriated sound-bites, that it’s become too easy to blog a half-baked non fact-checked story. “It’s not easy enough…” he answered, now jaywalking across Lothian Road, he regards bloggers as wholesale memoirists. “The internet is great for that… you can read the source material for yourself, the web is going to be a wonderful archive”.

“That’s what Obama really gets,” he added. But was it Barack Obama or rather his team who really ‘got’ the idea of exploiting blogs and social networks – comprehensively connecting their message with my generation. “Have you spoken to the President about this?” Keillor replied that it was an interesting question and although they hadn’t met they had talked.

I then asked a pretty dumb question, “are the real American’s back in power?” Following that by wondering if a character from Keillor’s film, a scripture guided Texan played by Tommy Lee Jones was a veiled parody of George Bush. He paused for his trademark genial sigh and replied thoughtfully, “I think George Bush is a real American,” a truly Democratic answer, “…America is a complicated country.”

He asked where I was from and what brought me to Edinburgh, we talked about heritage for a bit; he thought it odd that the Glaswegian accent was so incomprehensible to him despite being the grandson of a Glaswegian. Raised in the countryside ,like myself, Keillor (now staring up at the castle from a dismembered/tramlocked Princes Street) told me he was defiantly “a city guy” he asked me what I made of it. Humble and generous, he’s an uncannily easygoing idol to chat with.

I jokingly asked if he was still haunted by his small town upbringing, which imparted many of the wry, parochial, anxieties that I found so bitterly familiar in books like Lake Wobegone Days, where he writes:

I’ve been taught the fear of becoming lost, which has killed the pleasure of curiosity and discovery. In strange cities, I memorise streets and always know exactly where I am. Amid scenes of great splendor, I review the route back to the hotel.

He smiled, recalling the passage, “No, I’m over that -I’m looking for adventure.” I asked who was guiding this newfound adventurous lifestyle; his instant response was, “Why, I am.”

At this, our paths diverged; he had signed my book ‘good for you’, which as platitudes go, is a pretty a good on but his sign off from the show A Writer’s Almanac is a little more fitting: ‘be well, do good work, and keep in touch’. I intend to.

Japanorama

published on June 6, 2009 » filed under Film, Travel, Web

japanorama

Jonathan Ross made a great TV Series a few years back called Japanorama. Its a classic BBC Documentary well paced, enjoyable and informative – one of my favourite subjects too. The series highlights a few popular Japanese exports and customs and offers nothing more than Ross’ irreverent commentary and a brief introduction- no silly camera work, no ground breaking mysteries for a team to tantalisingly uncover within a loud introduction (then dragged out for 25mins, talking to you Horizon!) just fine TV. Hope the BBC come out with a box-set someday, I’ll buy it.

Meanwhile, Japanorama is available on YouTube and on Guba.com where you can watch all of series two.

le Carré – on Radio 4

published on May 24, 2009 » filed under Politic

BBC Radio 4 are running a series of adaptations from the early novels of John le Carré. The first dramatisation (of Call for The Dead) was on yesterday morning and enjoyed it immensely.

One of the most enjoyable performances I’ve ever heard on the radio was the author reading his own work (Absolute Friends). He sounded like a madman jumping around the recording booth no doubt, doing the accent for little Mustafa and his mother Zara in broken Hungarian then jumping into eurobanker English and back to that lost boy Mundy and his head prefect voice, which lé Carre mimics well, considering he’s the son of a disgraced con-man / social climber. He knows his characters well and obviously cares about their voices beyond the page. Listen to this short interview on Front Row if you’re interested. There’s more lé Carre archived on the BBC’s website- he’s an writer well worth investing some serious time to. Remember this is the author of The Constant Gardener, that bitter melancholic story which was turned into an unlikely Oscar winning film. Much more than simple espionage plots. His new novel A Most Wanted Man does sound interesting.

Live Archives CSS Mess

published on » filed under Tech, Web, WordPress

Here’s a quick fix for a CSS issue that has plagued my K2 installations of the Extended Live Archive (or Better Live Archive as it is now called) plugin. See below, notice all the text is jumbled as if there were no line space between all the items. This appears in Safari / Firefox on the mac, I don’t know why this hasn’t been solved elsewhere.

picture-1

You need to navigate to the plugin directory in your wordpress install, then under ‘af-extended-live-archive/includes/’ you’ll see a file called ef-ela-style.css open this in a text editor and change the lines:


#af-ela-post-chrono li, #af-ela-post-cats li, #af-ela-post-tags li {
position: relative;
font-size: 1.1em;
line-height: 1.7em;
color: #bbb;
margin: 0 15px;
padding: 1px 20px;
}

to:


#af-ela-post-chrono li, #af-ela-post-cats li, #af-ela-post-tags li {
position: relative;
font-size: 1.1em;
line-height: 1.7em;
height: 1.7em;
display: block;
color: #bbb;
margin: 0 15px;
padding: 1px 20px;
}

Enjoy. Oh, and Meta Comment has an Archive Page again!

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