Even though the messages seemed to indicate that it had figured itself out, I still got another error message, so it's not a problem with my site. Besides, it shows the correct mini view for my site, so it can't be failing to find it. Oh well, it was just one more way of helping people who might be interested to find my site.
I'll be away from the computer a couple of weeks and don't know if I can find my own site through the hotel computer or other channels. We'll have to see. for now, one more posting of Cerel Gold before I go.
Friday, November 27, 2009
Thursday, November 26, 2009
definately not my thing
I have no idea what the instructions for fixing the problem mean, much less the nature of the problem, but it seems like they might want me to add something else. We'll see. they definately didn't add people to the process though. automated gobbldigook to me.
http://validator.w3.org/feed/check.cgi?url=http%3A//enexplorations.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default
http://validator.w3.org/feed/check.cgi?url=http%3A//enexplorations.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default
Wednesday, November 18, 2009
Sometimes the days are very long
Whoosh! Such a week it has already been and more still to go. About the only upside today was that I got a little spare time to edit a friend's research paper and she had become quite a good writer. Always a pleasure to edit something into which thought and effort have been poured. I like to think I've had a role. Her writing has vastly improved over the couple of years that I have edited papers for her and I hope that my advice has helped the process.
It's always a little hard to tell. The impact of editing can be a very subtle thing, especially as it relates to the next paper (or story, or whatever) rather than the current one. I know that my writing improved any time I could get someone to do a real edit job, the more red the better, and marginal notes even more so. My old writing teachers (pre college and early college) always drove me crazy because they would just grade me with a comment. "Too many words" was a favorite of one. What, because I went over the suggested length? The story was too complex? Years, and I mean several many years before I found someone who would underline the verbose passage and offer an alternative. Maybe three examples was all he did and I bet I cut hundreds of words out of every story I revised thereafter because I could see where I was going wrong, both the specific sentence constructions that were adding verbosity, and the general concept of just using more words than necessary, especially when most of them were likely to be mushy and unconcrete.
Whenever I edit, as part of my regular work or for a friend, I always hope that I can enlighten as well as polish a particular piece. I'll ask question, underline what I'm reacting to, and always trying to comment on why I recommend a change, if I know.
It's always a little hard to tell. The impact of editing can be a very subtle thing, especially as it relates to the next paper (or story, or whatever) rather than the current one. I know that my writing improved any time I could get someone to do a real edit job, the more red the better, and marginal notes even more so. My old writing teachers (pre college and early college) always drove me crazy because they would just grade me with a comment. "Too many words" was a favorite of one. What, because I went over the suggested length? The story was too complex? Years, and I mean several many years before I found someone who would underline the verbose passage and offer an alternative. Maybe three examples was all he did and I bet I cut hundreds of words out of every story I revised thereafter because I could see where I was going wrong, both the specific sentence constructions that were adding verbosity, and the general concept of just using more words than necessary, especially when most of them were likely to be mushy and unconcrete.
Whenever I edit, as part of my regular work or for a friend, I always hope that I can enlighten as well as polish a particular piece. I'll ask question, underline what I'm reacting to, and always trying to comment on why I recommend a change, if I know.
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