Always Renovating & Innovating

I’m not sure I know how to “leave well enough alone”, but you cannot say I don’t spend a lot of time working on df.com. Clearly I may spend too much time, but that’s neither here nor there. With that some of the latest things I’ve done to make things run better and simpler to do what needs to be done are:

  • Added Print/PDF button to make printing off the blog and other sections a breeze. Try it out, it works pretty darn good and helps save you ink by not printing all the graphics/theme gobbledygook.
  • Updated CAPTCHA code so you can comment, but spammers can bug off. Yes, that means less Viagra adds on df.com than the average blog.
  • We’ve tested the new mobile df.com on several phones and it works great.

In short, these are tiny changes, but I think they’re worthwhile ones. As always, if you think there’s something we should be doing or using on the site to make it better drop me a comment and let me know what you think.

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About The Applefest Thing

Applefest 2009Every year my hometown of Warwick, NY holds Applefest on the first Sunday of October and this year was its twenty first anniversary. Applefest is a traditional community fair and festival to celebrate the fall harvest. Warwick’s main harvest crop is apples. Hence the name Applefest. This year rolled in the biggest crowd I can remember in five years. I have to admit, I thought that Applefest had jumped the shark and was doomed to be forgotten, but for whatever reason the crowd turn out was at least 30,000 people. One economist theory is that a bad economy makes for people doing less foreign/long distance vacation travel meaning they do more local spending in a 30 mile radius  and it certainly seems feasible given what I saw at Applefest a week ago. This meant for one day the Town of Warwick, NY’s population (~35k people) was doubled and shoved into the tiny Village of Warwick. The Village is at the town’s center and where most of the festival takes place. Cars were lined up down Route 94 into New Jersey and over the mountain down Route 17 to NYC. Admittedly traffic going into Northern and Western Orange County was light so clearly the metro crowd was in full effect.

The unfortunate downside is the festival at that level of attendance in such a small village results in it being very hard to enjoy with two young children. It’s hard to move around with a stroller and my eight year old daughter doesn’t have the patience to wait in line twenty minutes for a ride or forty minutes for a bag of popcorn. So our trip through the festival was very brief in the form of two vital favorite family stops.

First we got gyros down on Church Street. Every year this great gyro stand setups and make the best lamb gyros ever. They are simply amazing. The price is forty dollars though (not exactly priceless). Pretty steep for three gyros. Then we went over to Stanley Deming Park on the other side of the Village so my older daughter could ride the carnival rides. Twenty five dollars later, three hours, and some six rides (yes I said only six rides in three hours– absolutely packed) everybody was cranky, hot, and tired. So we called it quits.

I like Applefest, don’t get me wrong. I think it’s a great way to support local community organizations, raise funds for volunteer emergency services and non-profits, draw crowds to the local agri-entertainment venues (orchards, farms, etc…), and expose people to the cheeky preppy Village shops that is Warwick (a God to honest amazing feat in a world filled with horrid big boxes and corporate owned chains). It is hard though to really enjoy it like in the lower volume years of the last part of the decade. I guess if sacrificing one day in Warwick for the masses to support the community is the sacrifice I have to make– then so be it, but I won’t lie that I miss being able to get through the carnival and get gyros in two hours.

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Pushback and Pushrods

2000 Ford Corba R (#5)So I call my orthopedist today to find out where my short term disability paperwork is (my company’s HR department needs that to put me on FMLA and get me job leave security blah blah blah). Mid-conversation I find out my surgery wasn’t ever on 10/14/09 (even though that’s what they wrote on my appointment card… I quadruple checked that). It’s actually on 10/21/09. So then I got to scramble and let everyone in my company know. Then my family. And now you. Either way it works out because there is number of big jobs I’d like to bang out before I’m laid up and cannot go to work for a few weeks. I guess it all works out in the end. The even better news is they completed my paperwork and HR should have it tomorrow, which means I’m all set with everything I need to do to go on sick leave.

I saw a 2010 Ford Taurus SHO commercial called “SHO (pronounced “show”) time” and I was shocked to see Ford showing the SHO beating a V-8 Audi A6. Then I found this on You Tube.  Point nine seconds is bragging rights indeed. Completely sick. Now if I only had $40k to burn… hmmmm.

Or maybe if I had more to burn I could have stopped over at the Barrett-Jackson auction in Las Vegas, NV yesterday to pick up a ultra rare 2000 Ford Cobra R Mustang sporting serial number 5 of 300. One can only dream.

Finally, I’ve been told that Dave’s gig at TGI Friday’s has been canceled and moved to 11/5/09 at 10pm EST. If you planned on going adjust your calendar accordingly.

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DF.com Mobile

I’m proud to announce we’ve updated the site so it can be displayed relatively quickly on a mobile device. Point your mobile phone or PDA to the normal http://www.digitalflood.com URL and we’ll handle the rest. As soon as the site sees a mobile browser it triggers the mobile site. If you use a normal PC or Mac web browser, the regular site comes up. And for you daring types you’ll find a link in the right hand menu that lets you override the detection settings and see whatever you want (mobile or normal mode) at any given time no matter what you’re using. Seamless. Simple. Groovy. I like it. Now you can get df.com 24/4 anywhere you can connect to the Net. Start your mobile browsing!

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“The Moon Cannot Be Stolen”

New Moon Over The Brushwood GateIt has been a complicated day of success and failures. Of frustration and simple pleasure. It’s days like this that make me think of a Buddhist Zen fable I learned about in college. It’s a simple story, but one with so many analogies and underlying moral implications. The story is called “The Moon Cannot Be Stolen”. No one is sure who wrote it or when it was written, but it is understood to be over a century old if not more. It’s rather short, but worth several reads before you think about it. There are hundreds of ways to interpret it like a Rorschach blot test. With that here it is:

“The Moon Cannot Be Stolen”

A Zen Master lived the simplest kind of life in a little hut at the foot of a mountain. One evening, while he was away, a thief sneaked into the hut only to find there was nothing in it to steal. The Zen Master returned and found him. “You have come a long way to visit me,” he told the prowler, “and you should not return empty handed. Please take my clothes as a gift.” The thief was bewildered, but he took the clothes and ran away. The Master sat naked, watching the moon. “Poor fellow,” he mused, ” I wish I could give him this beautiful moon.”

Let me know what you think and feel free to comment. I’ve told this story to many people and it’s one of my oldest daughter’s favorite bedtime stories. Hope you enjoy it as much as I did when I first heard it.

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