Apparently there has been some confusion caused by image cacheing. The Kubrick style that the blog has been modeling for a couple days uses an image of the famed director Stanley Kubrick, looking rather disturbed. I had swapped that out with one of my own, but in my laziness left the filename the same.
Some people had apparently already visited the site and got the original image in their browser cache, so when they said I looked evil, they were really looking at Stanley, not Jeff. What a relief!
Very strange… the image that I captured for the last entry was actually a screenshot of what I see in the header. The filenames were not changed, so I figured it must be a caching problem.
In any case, I’m going to replace the entire style with something of my own — maybe as soon as tonight!
Very strange… the image that I captured for the last entry was actually a screenshot of what I see in the header. The filenames were not changed, so I figured it must be a caching problem.
In any case, I’m going to replace the entire style with something of my own — maybe as soon as tonight!
Hey, Jeff… we all have a dark side. Its OK to have mood swings. 😉
Hey, Jeff… we all have a dark side. Its OK to have mood swings. 😉
Actually, I think I worked out the problem. The stylesheet uses PNG images with a transparent background when using Firefox, but GIF images when using Internet Explorer. I originally only swapped out the PNG files, so Firefox users saw me, but IE users saw Stanley. Fixed!
Actually, I think I worked out the problem. The stylesheet uses PNG images with a transparent background when using Firefox, but GIF images when using Internet Explorer. I originally only swapped out the PNG files, so Firefox users saw me, but IE users saw Stanley. Fixed!
And that is why I love Firefox so much. It actually lets things work the way they’re supposed to, like transparencies. IE just doesn’t cut it.
And that is why I love Firefox so much. It actually lets things work the way they’re supposed to, like transparencies. IE just doesn’t cut it.