Last night Monica and I went to the Lucky Lab to watch the Tour de France on the big screen. The place was jam packed with tour watchers, but I managed to snag a table before Monica got there. Good food, good beer, and excellent company. Good times.

Last night Monica and I went to the Lucky Lab to watch the Tour de France on the big screen. The place was jam packed with tour watchers, but I managed to snag a table before Monica got there. Good food, good beer, and excellent company. Good times.
If you haven’t been following this fiasco (and if you haven’t, I don’t know how you’ve missed it): The ESRB pulled the Mature 17+ rating from Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas because some software modders created a patch that unlocks some game content which lets you have simulated cartoon sex with your in-game girlfriends. This sexual content is hardly what I would call graphic, but apparently it’s okay for kids to play a game where they murder just about everyone in site (and the violence is much more graphic than the sex scenes), but showing the slightest bit of sex is out of the question.
I decided that I’m going to attend OSCON on Thursday, August the 4th. I’m just doing the one day pass thing for $525 because I don’t want to spend $1k to spend all week there.
My primary reason for going is to see David Heinemeier Hansson give his Extracting Rails From Basecamp session. I’ll also be attending most of the Ruby sessions. Anybody wanna go with me?
I may go to the Apple Developer’s Connection Reception that night too, unless there’s some sort of Ruby or Rails related event happening.
The new template now has a name: SummerBreeze. Here’s what else is new:
In addition to creating the new summerbreeze template I re-skinned the administration template. It now shares some of the styling of the summerbreeze template.
You can more information about Retrospect-GDS on the official Retrospect-GDS project page.


The new template still follows the basic pattern of the old template, but is has been updated with better use of fonts and colors. The CSS and markup has also been greatly simplified. The only complicated bit is the new tabbed navigation. I used the CSS Sliding Doors technique from A List Apart and some of the elements from the CSS Sliding Doors 2 article. I chose to leave out the rollovers and I haven’t corrected for the anchor width problem in IE. In any other browser besides IE, the entire tab is clickable. In Internet Exploder you’re stuck with just the text being clickable. The fix for IE requires far too much structural markup for my taste, so I’m leaving it out. After getting all the tabs working, I found that the template started randomly inducing the the IE Peekaboo bug. Thankfully I found that the Peekaboo bug is now easily fixed with the Holly Hack.
What else is new or changed so far?
That’s all I can think of for now. Stay tuned for part 2 as the work progresses.
You can more information about Retrospect-GDS on the official Retrospect-GDS project page.