We’ve done some pretty cool work on Habari’s administrative interface over the last months, and I’d like to take a few minutes of your time to walk you through it.
Oh, and if you like what you see, please, by all means, link back here, drop some comments on Viddler and let everyone know about this, because we want to get more people hyped about Habari, and you’re the key to making that happen.
It’s with great joy, that I can link to the newly released Habari 0.5. It took less than half a year to go from an idea to a fully fledged and wonderfully implemented Monolith.
I might have done the design, but I could never have pulled off the implementation, which was not only a team effort, but a sight to behold.
Work is being done on a demo version, but for now, I hope you’ll take out the time to try it out on your own. I think you might like it.
I’m back from Rome in one piece, albeit paradoxically now in serious need of a vacation. Touristing it is hard work.
Just before I left, a few thing happened in relation to Habari and Monolith, which I didn’t find the time to comment on, but which may be of interest to those of you following the progress of these two projects.
Leave a comment on this entry with the number that popped up.
Profit!
What I’m doing, is trying to figure out how to best use that button for the menu, so I need the keycode for that particular button. But since it’s different in the various territories (192 on my US keyboard, 52 on my Danish), it’s not as easy as it could’ve been.
Update: Turns out I’m getting radically different keycodes with my own code. Never mind for now. I’ll try and figure something out tomorrow. Thanks anyway :)
It’s true, I did. And this is where I would cue the dissonant choral music that builds to the crescendo of civilization taking a step up the ladder; which, by the way, had Rikke trying so very hard to suppress her laughter at its pompousness… Foiled, again!
These things are hard to gauge, and even perhaps overly self-centered, at least by Danish standards. But between Kubrick, through various endeavors, like the Latest Comments plugin and Live Archives (and its successor) and up to K2, I hope my time in the world of blogging has left a mark of some kind; an echo of sorts, for low-level interaction designers, like myself, to not merely lemming their way through the craft, even if it’s on a hobby-level.
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