I hereby claim:
- I am johnbacon on github.
- I am johnbacon (https://keybase.io/johnbacon) on keybase.
- I have a public key whose fingerprint is 4B0E BBBC 10FB 6CDC 8F7C A31C 7E7D D004 1887 658C
To claim this, I am signing this object:
h1 { | |
color: #999; | |
font: bold 80px Helvetica, Arial; | |
text-shadow: | |
1px 0px 1px #ccc, 0px 1px 1px #eee, | |
2px 1px 1px #ccc, 1px 2px 1px #eee, | |
3px 2px 1px #ccc, 2px 3px 1px #eee, | |
4px 3px 1px #ccc, 3px 4px 1px #eee, |
# Show temporary page for everyone but certain IP addresses. | |
# My home IP: | |
RewriteCond %{REMOTE_HOST} !^12\.220\.82\.229 | |
# My work IP: | |
RewriteCond %{REMOTE_HOST} !^12\.220\.82\.229 | |
# Server IP (needed in some cases): | |
RewriteCond %{REMOTE_HOST} !^64\.207\.128\.246 |
I have a new tag {exp:stash:embed} which allows you to include Stash template files and store | |
in the database. Files can be fully or partially parsed when read before saving (set), OR | |
saved and then parsed on retrieval (get). Stash variables can be accessed in the Stash | |
template files as {stash:variable} and of course all the usual {global_variables} work as | |
expected. | |
An example: | |
{exp:stash:embed | |
name="news_listing" |
background: #aaaaaa; /* Old browsers */ | |
background: -moz-linear-gradient(top, #aaaaaa 0%, #595959 4%, #666666 18%, #474747 40%, #2b2b2b 70%, #1c1c1c 97%, #131313 100%); /* FF3.6+ */ | |
background: -webkit-gradient(linear, left top, left bottom, color-stop(0%,#aaaaaa), color-stop(4%,#595959), color-stop(18%,#666666), color-stop(40%,#474747), color-stop(70%,#2b2b2b), color-stop(97%,#1c1c1c), color-stop(100%,#131313)); /* Chrome,Safari4+ */ | |
background: -webkit-linear-gradient(top, #aaaaaa 0%,#595959 4%,#666666 18%,#474747 40%,#2b2b2b 70%,#1c1c1c 97%,#131313 100%); /* Chrome10+,Safari5.1+ */ | |
background: -o-linear-gradient(top, #aaaaaa 0%,#595959 4%,#666666 18%,#474747 40%,#2b2b2b 70%,#1c1c1c 97%,#131313 100%); /* Opera 11.10+ */ | |
background: -ms-linear-gradient(top, #aaaaaa 0%,#595959 4%,#666666 18%,#474747 40%,#2b2b2b 70%,#1c1c1c 97%,#131313 100%); /* IE10+ */ | |
background: linear-gradient(to bottom, #aaaaaa 0%,#595959 4%,#666666 18%,#474747 40%,#2b2b2b 70%,#1c1c1c 97%,#131313 100%); /* W3C */ | |
filter: progid:DXImageTr |
{exp:channel:entries channel='external_link'}{exp:low_variables:single var='{external_link}'}{/exp:channel:entries} | |
{exp:channel:entries channel='external_link'}{exp:low_variables:single var='{external_link:var}'}{/exp:channel:entries} |
(function() { | |
var url = '//connect.facebook.net/en_US/all.js'; | |
var iframe = document.createElement('iframe'); | |
(iframe.frameElement || iframe).style.cssText = "width: 0; height: 0; border: 0"; | |
iframe.src = "javascript:false"; | |
document.getElementById('fb-root').appendChild(iframe); | |
var doc = iframe.contentWindow.document; | |
doc.open().write('<body onload="'+ | |
'window.inDapIF = true;' + | |
'var js = document.createElement(\'script\');'+ |
I hereby claim:
To claim this, I am signing this object:
"Find something that nearly worked and make it better."
If the results of your content are surprising, it will create discussion. Surprising content has potential for good PR. (Guardians of Galaxy death count example w/James Gunn)
Think about mobile-first indexing as "entity-first indexing."
More than half of Google's searches are now mobile, but 61% of mobile searches don't get clicks.
Mobile-first indexing is not just about websites! You are competing with entities.