I spent a decent amount of time looking to see if there was a sitemap generator for Plogger. After a lengthy, fruitless search I decided I would take a stab at building my own. It checked out OK with Google so I thought I would share it to see if anyone else had ideas.
This sitemap maps all collections, albums and pictures. This version assumes that .htaccess is enabled for nice URL’s, but it would be a quick rewrite to have it work without nice URL’s. It would be a long rewrite for it to check if mod_rewrite was enabled, but that could be done, too.
Plogger Sitemap Version 0.1
I have been at the doctor’s office more times in the last year and a half than I have been in the prior twenty-seven years thanks to the boys. It is usually just routine visits, but between the two of them, it adds up. I also have to give Beth credit, until RJ was two, she handled the doctor’s visits without complaint. RJ had quite a few checkups before he turned two to monitor for any permanent damage after having meningitis when he was four weeks old.
Once I left active duty I enjoyed the fact that I could take on more of these routine visits, and took the boys to almost all of their appointments. However, Beth was afforded the opportunity to take Tony to his two year checkup. Everything went well up until his vaccinations. Like most of us, Tony does not like to be stuck with needles.
After his inoculations, without missing a beat, Tony promptly told the nurse, “I don’t like you.”
I have never heard Tony state his feelings so succinctly. Is it wrong that I am proud of him for that?
With all of the housekeeping (and phone calls and emails and instant messages i had with my hosting provider) I just now got around to upgrading to WordPress 2.0.6.
We have a pretty important release available for everyone, it includes an important security fix and it’s recommended that everyone upgrade. This is the latest release in our stable 2.0 line, which we’ve committed to maintaining for several more years.
Here’s what’s new:
- The aforementioned security fixes.
- HTML(link) quicktags now work in Safari browsers.
- Comments are filtered to prevent them from messing up your blog layout.
- Compatibility with PHP/FastCGI setups.
For developers, there’s a new anti-XSS function called attribute_escape(), and a new filter called “query†which allows you filter any SQL at runtime. (Which is pretty powerful.) Thanks to Mark Jaquith for handling this release and Stefan Esser for responsibly reporting the security issue.
After a long tiff with my hosting company Carpentology is back on a new server.