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Showing posts from May, 2019

Reviewing progress

The blog has reached 20 … blog posts, so time to have a quick review of progress. Since the last review I've established a working process for creating posts and become more familiar with the Blogger interface . But that learning curve and its' documentation has sucked up most of the time available for writing posts. So I have only published twice on non-blogging topics, which isn't what I started out to do. I recall reading once that most things made on a lathe are more tools for the lathe, and so it has been that most of my blogging has been about blogging (and this is yet another post about blogging). I will still continue investigate the Blogger system in more detail as there is more utility to be had from a better understanding of it, but it is also time to do something else. Back to Wikipedia first I think.

Error reporting on the Blogger dashboard

In a previous post I noted that the tool tip associated with the Select all posts check box reads Select all comments instead (tsk, tsk). The Blogger interface has a Send feedback button (circled) which I assume is for this sort of thing. Clicking it brings up a pop-up box that automatically grabs a screen shot of the page. Unfortunately you can't have the tool tip up and select the Send Feedback option at the same time. But I can point to what I mean by selecting Click to highlight or hide info in the middle of the screengrab. After which you can use the highlight tools to mark the issue you have or block out any sensitive information that you think Google doesn't already have. The tool is quite nice as it will automatically select a feature if you hover over it and you can draw as many rectangles as required. Each rectangle can be deleted by hovering over it and clicking the X that appears in the top right hand corner. Once you have marked up

Blogger dashboard footer

The Blogger dashboard footer is focussed on Google's interaction with your use of Blogger. As there's nothing you can do about Google's general terms and conditions, apart from take them or leave them, I will just be taking them. Leaving them would mean switching to another service (probably with similar T&Cs) and getting to grips with it, or setting up a hosted site using something like Wordpress , which is another whole (and much more complicated) kettle of fish. On the extreme lower left hand side of the dashboard is a group of three links to the Terms of Service for using Blogger, a link to Google's Privacy Policy and another to the Blogger Content Policy . The Terms of Service are written in standard legalese so are not that accessible, but to my reading don't really contain anything surprising. Google puts more effort into explaining their Privacy Policy with clear and detailed explanations of what they use and why. There are plenty of non-

Blogger dashboard navigation sidebar

The blogger dashboard navigation sidebar links to pages that allow you to edit everything from individual posts to the whole blog. There's too much in it to cover in a single post, so at this point I will only describe the major role of each of the pages and come back to investigate their functions in more detail later. At the top of the sidebar is the name of the blog that you are currently working on. The drop-down arrow next to the blog name allows you to switch between blogs, if you have more than one, and the View blog link opens the live blog in a new browser tab. Underneath that is a list of the ten function pages. Posts . The default option when you load the dashboard is to display the Posts body, which is essentially a file list of the posts on the blog. It has three options to view All , Drafts or Published posts; the number alongside each is the number of posts in the category. Stats . Selecting this will display an Overview of the viewing