Greetings, Fellow Followers!
And thank you again for revisiting☻
This week’s activity is the fifth installment of “Unentitled”
Aug 11 24
Oops, I missed a week. I am sorry to everyone who missed me, which I don’t know if there are any, since nobody has submitted any comments yet, which I eagerly await. Not pinging the Googlebots yet, but dixonsforum.com has been around long enough they probably know about it.
There are eight full pages of detailed notes about Googlebot relations management, taken from the how-to articles from my Search Engine Optimization plugin, SEOPress, waiting, too for now. Real life has caught up with me and I had to take a week off the Web. Now I’m back, and might as well at least tickle the Googlebots with a few Keywords like Stories and Storytelling, art and artworks, poems and poetry, songs and plays, Gallimaufry and Stuelke. Then they’ll at least know how to categorize Dixon’s Forum in their search results for you.
I almost posted the first Gallimauf when I got so far behind for August 4th, but seeing how time-consuming complicated converting it from HardCopy to WebPage would be, decided to just skip a week instead. I am sorry to everyone who missed me, which I don’t know if there are any, since nobody has submitted any comments yet. Can you tell me why?
Putting together the fifth installment of “Unentitled”, ran into trouble laying out the poem “Pity the Blip Blop Plot”. Sometime in all the trials and errors, my WordPress Columns blocks got a whole bunch of extra whitespace and I couldn’t find any way to get rid of it.
Somewhere in the HTML or CSS there is a command that adds it in, I’m sure, but neither the WordPress Padding nor Margin features seem to reach it. The WordPress Code Editor doesn’t seem to access the CSS, only the HTML.
So, short of suspending the whole project until I can master HTML-CSS-JavaScript-PHP-I forget-what-else, I’ll just have to ask that you pretend “Pity the Blip Blop Plot” looks good on your screen, and thank you.
The fifth installment of “Unentitled” tries to explain the power of Rhythm in Poetry. Click here to see it. .
Next Week: I don’t know yet. Maybe the final segment of “That’s my Way”, maybe the first of the Gallimaufs.