Oh E6, I’m So Sorry I Neglected You

My Countryman E6 microphone – perhaps the best microphone on the planet – has sat idle in an old neglected sound box for six full years.  In its place, I've been traveling with and abusing a Shure lavalier mic during the sword swallowing show, and an el cheapo Nady hand held for the hypnosis show.  Both have provided years of dedicated service (the lav mic even entered service before my E6), and have been through thick and thin, including extreme temperatures, humidity and liquids, and have been dropped, trampled, whacked, banged and smashed.  Still, they push on.  They've truly been remarkable examples of technology standing up to the rigors of the road. 

But oh my E6, how I've missed you!  It wasn't until tonight, upon digging you out and placing you momentarily back into service, that I realize the clarity of your voice!  The integrity of the full, rich signal that travels mysteriously down your deceptively thin wires!  I shall not neglect you any longer.  You shall travel once more, though I'll shield you from the harsh realities of touring.  I'll provide nothing but the most luxurious of cases, the most delicate handling and subtle storage.  Never shall you be careless abandoned on stage while busy feet and hands repack the show, and never will you be tossed mindlessly aside to land precariously, perhaps, next to a glass of water, while I tend to other technical demands.

No, you will once again grace the stage to carry your pure, even signal, and in return you will be well cared for, allowed to shine, and to share your elegance with the world.

Posted via email from Roderick Russell / amalgamate.stream

When Your Doctor Calls It As He Sees It

When I visited the doctor today, as part of my ongoing regular treatment and rehab, I was filled with questions, concerns and hypothetical scenarios to discuss. My injury is getting better.  It truly is.  So much so that I’m on the verge of easing back into running.  Yet I still have this nagg

The doctor says I’m biomechanically sound. But what else did he say?

Posted via web from Roderick Russell / amalgamate.stream

How To Enhance Your Mind In Only 4 Days

Having trouble focusing?  Is your memory slipping?  Are you always tired, or bogged down by stress?  Learn how you can improve your mood, think clearly, and naturally make better decisions in only 20 minutes a day with our exclusive offer!

Okay, okay…  I'm not selling anything – yet.  But PsyBlog did just tip me off to a new study published in the journal Consciousness and Cognition that shows that simple mindfulness meditation, even in complete beginners, can improve a whole host of mental functions and significantly improve overall functioning.

This is good news, as many studies have been geared towards investigating the impact of meditation on long-term meditators, and it's no secret that "research has found that long-term mindfulness meditation practice promotes executive functioning and the ability to sustain attention," yet not much has been done in the way of investigating the benefits for beginners.

This study found that compared to a control group (people who relaxed while listening to an audio book), beginners practicing meditation for only 20 minutes a day over the course of 4 days, saw "improved mood, reduced fatigue, anxiety, increased mindfulness, improved visuo-spatial processing, working memory and executive functioning."  How much improvement?  Anywhere from 15% to a whopping 50%!  That's quite a return on just chillin' for 20 minutes.  Seems a worthwhile investment to me!

So now you want the goods, eh?  Alright, I'll fork 'em over.  And it won't even cost you (first one's free).  Here's a link to PsyBlog's beginner's guide to meditation:  How Meditation Improves Attention.

Posted via email from Roderick Russell / amalgamate.stream

Inside The Endurance Athlete’s Mind

I was considering skipping my training today due to an enormous at-home workload – and was feeling guilty about it – when I stumbled upon this great little Forbes article from 2008.

Much of it is mental. While many endurance athletes say there’s nothing special about their physical abilities, clearly people who are drawn to and are able to accomplish feats such as marathons, triathlons and challenging ultra endurance events differ from the rest of us somehow. A big piece of the puzzle is how these athletes think about their lives, goals and the obstacles they face.

“Moderation bores me,” says Dean Karnazes, who completed 50 marathons in 50 states in 50 consecutive days and wrote about the experience in the new book, 50/50. He is also currently trying to be the first person ever to complete the world’s five major desert foot races in one year. “Once I did a marathon, I thought, ‘Huh, I think I can go further than this.’ I wanted to explore not only my physical limits but my mental confines.”

An accompanying slideshow outlines several characteristic traits of endurance athletes:

  • An active interest in seeking their own mental and physical limits.
  • An ability to focus on extraordinarily small steps – or micro-goals – while seeking an unusually enormous overall goal.
  • The tendency to seek out activities that create discomfort or pain.
  • An unflappable commitment to training. “You can’t fake your way through an ultra marathon,”
  • Tendency to compete against themselves more than anyone else.
  • They embrace failure as a chance to learn and grow.
  • Tend not to ever “give up”, despite challenges.

via Forbes.com

Posted via email from Roderick Russell / amalgamate.stream

Running Injuries and Depression

Running injuries affect more than just the body.  Be it a blister, sprain or open wound that merely forces a single run short, or a fracture that sends you to the sidelines for weeks or months, injuries take their toll on your psychological well-being every bit as much as your physical health.

Posted via web from Roderick Russell’s Posterous

How Words, Images and Beliefs Can Turn Off the Brain

Fascinating and brilliantly simple experiment that explores how perception of a speaker can impact brain function.
"In other words, there is some reason to believe that when religious subjects listened to Christians they perceived as being charismatic—even if the speaker did not make a special effort to use persuasive words or tone of voice—they actually “turned down” the parts of their brains responsible for judging what they heard and, in Schjoedt’s words, effectively “handed them over” to someone else."

While this study focused on a particular type of religious experience, it has implications far beyond the realm of religion.

"If our interpretation of the results is correct, our study may be indicative of a general effect of stereotype interaction. Doctors, judges, teachers, officers, etc., who are recognized as having special competencies, may all benefit (or suffer) from ‘stereotype’ effects, and this neural mechanism may play a central role in the general dynamics of social authority and obedience as observed in the early behavioural studies by Stanley Milgram…"

Most lay observers do not realize that, in work such as my own, this effect is of paramount importance.  The work begins before I even step on stage.  The question is, knowing this, is it possible to turn off the effect?  Can knowing impact the experience? 

Link to full coverage in Inkling Magazine: http://www.inklingmagazine.com/articles/if-i-may-be-so-bold-how-charisma-inhibits-the-brain/

Posted via email from Roderick Russell’s Posterous

Charles R. Wood Theater presents Roderick Russell, Sword Swallower

Wood-1117FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

RODERICK RUSSELL, SWORD SWALLOWER
Charles Wood Theater
Glens Falls, NY
August 17th, 2009

TICKETS AVAILABLE ONLINE:
Wood Tickets (Roderick Russell, Sword Swallower)

Roderick Russell brings unusual entertainment to upstate New York.

One of only 50 living sword swallowers in the entire world, Roderick Russell has been described as strangely sophisticated, successfully blending suggestion and psychology with his own personal mind-over-body techniques to present a show that bravely pushes the limits of the possible – both physically and mentally.

Presenting the most dangerous and bizarre feats with wit, charm and style, Roderick also deftly navigates deep into the minds of the audience to create the most personal and profound type of theater experience. Call him a sword swallower. Call him a mind reader. ABC News calls him a “rare find.”

Guiness Book of World Record’s and Ripley’s Believe It or Not both praise him. National Public Radio says that it’s “the strangest…event of the month, and perhaps the weirdest of the rest of the year“. A bold, risky show – but what else would you expect from a sword swallower?

___________________________________________

The Charles R. Wood Theater presents “Roderick Russell, Sword Swallower”

WHERE
Charles R. Wood Theater
207 Glen St
Glens Falls, NY 12801

Phone: (518) 798-9663

Website: woodtheater.org

WHEN
Monday, August 17, 2009 at 7:30 PM

TICKETS AVAILABLE ONLINE: Wood Tickets (Roderick Russell, Sword Swallower)

Artist Contact
Roderick Russell
www.roderickrussell.com
roderick@roderickrussell.com

Theater Contact
Charles Wood Theater
mail@woodtheater.org
518-798-9663

___________________________________________

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[tags]Entertainment, Live Entertainment, Mentalism, Mentalist, Mind Reading, Roderick Russell, Sword Swallower, Sword Swallowing, Theater[/tags]

Bizarre Entertainer Lights Up Maine In February

RoderickRussellMatadorXRayRipley’s Believe It Or Not featured performer and Guinness World Record holding sword swallower Roderick Russell is coming to Maine to perform two unique, two entirely different shows in February, and you have two chances to catch him!

On Friday, February 6th, the Winthrop Performing Arts Center plays host to the show that National Public Radio calls “not only the oddest event of the month, but probably the weirdest of the rest of the year.” Experience the sword swallowing, bizarre mind reading, fire eating and escape that has launched this show into the national spotlight. Not circus, not sideshow, but definitely strange, sophisticated and powerful!

RoderickRussellHypnosisWilliamsport08 (56)Then, on Saturday the 7th, Roderick will be performing his laugh-out-loud stage hypnosis show at the Oddfellow Theater in Buckfield, ME. Utilizing his training in clinical hypnotherapy, Roderick induces a group of willing volunteers from the audience into a surreal hypnotic state, then takes them on a comedic journey into their psyches that will have you laughing so hard your face will hurt. Watch as the participants believe they’ve lost certain body parts, think that they are world champion dancers and can’t remember their own first name!

If you’re looking to combat the cold winter boredom, you can’t get much more unusual than this! So strange, it will keep your mind occupied until spring! Bold, risky shows – but what else would you expect from a sword swallower?

Details:
—————–
Roderick Russell : Sword Swallower
Friday, February 6th at 7pm.
Winthrop Performing Arts Center
211 Rambler Rd.
Winthrop, ME 04345

Tickets: $10, $6 students
Call 207-623-1152 for advance tickets.

—————–
Roderick Russell : Stage Hypnosis
Saturday, February 7th at 7:30pm
Oddfellow Theater
Route 117
Buckfield, ME

Tickets: $15
Call 207-336-3306 for advance tickets.

—————–
For more information about Roderick Russell, visit his website at www.roderickrussell.com
He’s also available via MySpace and Facebook

For more photos, visit Roderick Russell’s public Flickr page.
For media inquiries, contact roderick@roderickrussell.com

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Roderick Russell, Hypnosis, Stage Hypnosis, Sword Swallower, Sword Swallowing, Fire Eating, Maine, Winthrop Arts, Oddfellow Theater

Calling Aldous Huxley

Jeffrey J. Kripal, professor and chair of religious studies at Rice University, gives a delightful little treatment of Aldous Huxley in the December, 12th 2008 edition of The Chronicle of Higher Education. More interestingly, he states that “a kind of Huxley renaissance is under way” in response to the current political and religious climate.

What do neural Buddhists, individualist spiritualities, cultural wars over science and religion and creationism and evolution, a nature-hating technology, the violence of extreme religious belief, and potentially omniscient government surveillance all have in common? They were all core elements in the life and work of the literary prophet Aldous Huxley (1894-1963).

I think that we could all do with a little more Huxley in our lives.

Link to Brave New Worldview in The Chronicle.

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[tags]Aldous Huxley, Brave New World, creationism, evolution, Huxley, mysticism, The Chronicle[/tags]

Responsible Approach to Cognitive Enhancement

This weeks issue of Nature includes a commentary entitled Towards responsible use of cognitive-enhancing drugs by the healthy which discusses the “growing demand for cognitive enhancement” through the use of pharmaceuticals and outlines a strategy for intelligently, morally and safely incorporating smart drugs into modern society.

I am no stranger to nootropics. Though I can no longer claim to be an active user of cognitive-enhancing drugs – save for my morning caffeine – I have a long historical interest, both personal and professional, in the topic. Just last week in fact, while searching through some of my archives, I came across an old ‘zine from the 90′s – Collected Letters it was called – in which appeared a small article featuring a long list, the title of which was The Chemical Additives of Roderick Russell. This may strike those who know me as a teetotaler as odd. Never have I engaged in drug use in the tradition sense – no smoking, no drinking – but peak performance of the human brain has always been a subject near and dear.

With such a long history of interest and involvement in the field – and I tell you all this to demonstrate that I do indeed have a very positive interest – one may wonder why, on the surface of it, I seem to be opposed to widespread use of cognitive-enhancing compounds. My own ’04 article on the topic seems at first glance to be very anti-nootropic – but that is only at first glance.

My concern is that by engaging in widespread promotion of cognitive-enhancing pharmaceuticals, we serve more to undermine the foundation of peak performance and the moral development of society as a whole.

I am entirely in favor of individuals having the right to modify as they see fit. I worry only that these individual choices may come about in absence of the educational foundation necessary to make a truly informed decision, and this uneducated choice may have wider consequences for others in society.

The commentary in Nature provides a well-balanced look at the many issues facing the introduction of cognitive-enhancing drugs to healthy individuals in society while also offering up a reasoned path for such widespread implementation.

Some of the encouraging statements found within the commentary (all emphasis mine):

The drugs just reviewed, along with newer technologies such as brain stimulation and prosthetic brain chips, should be viewed in the same general category as education, good health habits, and information technology — ways that our uniquely innovative species tries to improve itself.

Drugs may seem distinctive among enhancements in that they bring about their effects by altering brain function, but in reality so does any intervention that enhances cognition. Recent research has identified beneficial neural changes engendered by exercise, nutrition and sleep, as well as instruction and reading. In short, cognitive-enhancing drugs seem morally equivalent to other, more familiar, enhancements.

This statement is encouraging insofar as the authors recognize the role of more traditional – less pharmaceutical – methods of cognitive enhancement, but their placement of these foundational methods on the same moral ground as drug-based methods is simply wrong. They go on to address this in the following statement:

Many people have doubts about the moral status of enhancement drugs for reasons ranging from the pragmatic to the philosophical, including concerns about short-circuiting personal agency and undermining the value of human effort

It is exactly this undermining of human effort that I oppose. I feel strongly that one should work hard and focus on maximizing performance through the methods of education, exercise, nutrition, sleep, reading – all of the methods outlined above – as well as practice, and only once character and ability have been developed through these means – true building of character, not augmenting of character – should one seek to push further through drug-based cognitive-enhancement.

The authors recognize the importance of these other cognitive-enhancement methods. They intelligently incorporate the question of smart drugs into the larger picture of society, social morality and education. Unfortunately, I fear that there is a major gap that exists between theory and policy on the one hand, and practice on the other.
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[tags]brain, cognition, cognitive enhancement, nature, nootropics, peak performance, smart drugs[/tags]

True Gamer Geek – D20 Tattoo

How can you tell the true geeks from the faux geeks? The diehards get signs of their geekiness inked into their skin.

This is a picture of a very fresh (day of!) tattoo of a flaming D20 (twenty-sided die, for all you non-dorks) sported by my brother, Chris McCarthy.

Chris decided to get his first tattoo on the occasion of his 18th birthday. This one should attract all the ladies as he heads off to college in the fall. ;)

Here’s to all the geeks willing to wear their pride on their arm! Go Chris!

I still say that it makes him critically flaming.

Reznor Blows Hot Air

Standing in a knitting shop in upstate NY – don’t ask – studying the walls, I spotted this label from afar on an air heating unit. Trent Reznor being one of my favorite musical artists, I was naturally compelled to take a photo.

What I didn’t anticipate seeing were the words “Mercer, Pennsylvania” on the label. You see, that’s precisely where Trent is from, and I’m led to believe that this must be the family business!

Delighted to discover that it wasn’t just a random appearance of the name as I first suspected but is instead “the” Reznor name.

-Roderick
-
Sent from the road via Wireless Blackberry
www.roderickrussell.com

[tags]mercer, nin, nine inch nails, reznor, trent reznor[/tags]

Flickr Stripper Saves The Day

flickrstripperHaving decided that I needed a decent moblogging solution for my self-hosted WordPress blog, I recently ran tests of several options open to me and my setup.

My needs were simple. While on the road I’m likely to post primarily photos and video with short bits of accompanying text commentary. No need for elaborate layouts, minimal-to-no links included and text commentary is – even with my legendary loquaciousness – usually no more than a few short paragraphs.

Preferring maximum control and self-contained systems, my first choice was of course to keep whichever solution I implemented as close to the core of WordPress as is possible, so naturally I investigated the WordPress-native “Post via E-Mail” solution. Unfortunately the system is, at least at the time of this writing, not handling images terribly well, though passing text through my phone into the system is working flawlessly. Alas, it was really the combination of photos, videos and text that I was interested in, so at this time the WordPress-native solution is not for me.

Not wanting to venture too far from the core of the code, I decided to explore several plugin options. There were many contenders, notable among them Brett Duncavage’s PostMaster 2.0. In fact, Brett’s plugin is quite good and handles images very, very well! There is a downfall to the plugin though, and that is the fact that – exactly inverse to the WordPress-native support – it does not handle text very well. This is no fault of the plugin author’s, of course. In fact, he’s worked very, very hard to keep up with and account for the myriad of idiosyncrasies that each cell carrier throws at him, but at this time the code is not handling messages from my carrier (Verizon) very well if they include more than, say, one short paragraph.


Venturing even further out of the WordPress system, I reluctantly decided to explore what options might be available via Flickr, as I have a Flickr Pro account that I use very regularly.

As it turns out, there are some great external blog integration options available through the Flickr system and, as I post most of my photos there anyhow and already upload via email from my cell phone, working through their system is quite convenient. It was very simple to integrate my blog and very easy to create a new private Flickr email address that I can use to post simultaneously to Flickr as well as my blog.

All seemed to be working perfectly, save for one thing; that is, the photos and blog posting appeared on Flickr just fine, but when passed into my self-hosted WordPress system the text exhibited an overwhelming number of seemingly random line breaks which in turn threw off the alignment of each entry, leaving it looking hideous, unkempt and difficult to read on the screen!

I searched and searched and searched for a solution and all I could turn up were numerous unanswered Flickr Help Forum posts (here, here, here, here, etc…). Many users were experiencing the exact same thing as me, and there was no solution to be had. In fact, many of the forum threads became closed due to lack of response!

The Flickr staff and development team has not been in a position to help much, as they themselves are rather stuck in the middle of cell carriers and email clients on one side and external, third-party blog servers on the other, each with their own proprietary setup.

Eager to get the system working for myself though I decided to take matters into my own hands and track down precisely what was happening.

As it turns out, the text going into Flickr is filled with new line indications that correspond to my email client’s limitations. These new lines then translate into an unusual short-width blog post on Flickr, though on the Flickr pages it looks just fine.

The real problem creeps up when Flickr then shoots the entry over to my WordPress blog for posting, where all of those new lines are replaced with HTML line breaks, and what then becomes rendered on my personal blog page is a hideous mess of text that breaks both at the end of the available page space as well as randomly throughout sentences!

There’s no way to fix this from the carrier/client-to-Flickr side of things (mind you, the Flickr staff may be able to implement a solution), so the best that we can do is to utilize our access to the WordPress side of things to write our own plugin to handle the resulting mess as best we can – and I’ve spent a few minutes this evening between travel and work to do just that. The result is Flickr Stripper.

Why is it called “Stripper”? Because that’s precisely what it does. It strips out all “\ n”’s and replaces them with “ “ (a space) so that there are no more random line breaks. Beyond that, it detects new paragraphs by searching for double “\ n”’s and replaces them with the HTML “< p >” tag.

Are there problems? Sure. It was written in very short order to do a quick and dirty job and, frankly, there’s only so much that one can do with the data that Flickr is passing through.

One such problem is that a genuine, bona fide new line can not be had. The plugin works great if you write in a general “full paragraph” by “full paragraph” style, but if you have text that you truly want to appear on new, single lines such as this:

This is one line.
And this is another line, with a single carriage return.
While this is a third.

You won’t be able to have it. The text will appear like this:

This is one line. And this is another line, with a single carriage return. While this is a third.

Unfortunately, the data does not give us any way to distinguish between bogus new lines and actual new lines. The only thing that we can truly detect are new paragraphs, as they give us clues by appearing as a double new line. So you can have this:

This is text in one paragraph. This is in fact the first paragraph, and in a moment you’ll be reading the second. The second paragraph will tell us that we can have as many paragraphs as we want, but that we’re limited in other formatting options.

This is the second paragraph. While we can have as many paragraphs as we want, we are limited in our formatting. For instance, we will not be able to have single new lines throughout our post. Paragraphs are all we have.

The third paragraph – this one here – tells us that thankfully, most posts of pictures and video via phone are unlikely to have anything but basic text anyhow, which means that for the most part, we’ve solved our problem.

Your mileage may vary based upon carrier and/or client. Users will undoubtedly discover their own idiosyncrasies, but the best bet is to just try it out and see if it works for you. It works great for me. The good news is that the code is extremely simple so adjustments to unique situations can be quickly made.

How To Setup Flickr Stripper

1.) Download the code here
2.) Unzip the file and place flickrzipper.php in your WordPress plugins directory as per usual.
3.) Activate the plugin via the Admin panel
4.) Setup your Flickr account to allow you to upload photos via email.
5.)In your Blog Layout (on Flickr), make sure that you use {description_raw} (the default is {description}, simply replace that with {description_raw}).
6.)Send a photo to your Flickr blog email address to test it out!

Feel free to leave comments, let us know if it worked for you or if it didn’t, and if you’d like to see something like this evolve into a more robust bit of code to support more options and scenarios. Who knows, I might just have a break in my schedule to make it happen.

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[tags]Flickr, mobile blogging, moblog, moblogging, Plugins, Verizon, WordPress[/tags]

Fraud Exposed as Fraud

hardmanNigel Hardman, a 40-year-old “illusionist” from England was recently charged with eleven counts of cheating the benefits system (aka collecting unemployment, for those in the States) after his “act” brought him to the attention of authorities.

Performing – and I use that term very loosely – under the name Prince Razaq, he is said to have presented “death-defying” stunts such as sword swallowing, fire eating, walking on broken glass, escapes from straitjackets and standing on a bed of nails. Investigators apparently became curious regarding his claims of “too ill to work” – for which he was collecting benefits – after seeing him perform on the television show The Big Breakfast, clearly demonstrating that he was, well, not too ill to work!

I could care less about his cheating of the benefits system – that’s something that the authorities are now on top of. What really gets my goat is that this fraud is a fraud in so many ways, and a complete hack in terms of performing, yet he nevertheless grabs the attention of society! The papers – and granted we are talking about the Daily Mail here – genuinely used the term “death-defying” in describing his “feats” and claim that he swallows swords. I haven’t seen any video or pictures of him with a sword in his mouth (if you have some, send them this way!) so I can’t say for certain, but given that the straitjacket he uses is a gimmicked jacket and not a genuine one (industry insiders will be able to tell very quickly at a mere glance), and the fact that he is such a ridiculously laughable performer – wearing a turban, curled toe shoes and a cheesy vest nonetheless – I can’t help but suspect that his sword swallowing too is fake. As a full-time professional sword swallower myself I’m proud to know just about every other sword swallower out there, and though I can’t keep tabs on every single one, this bloke has never crossed my radar. He’s cheesy, not entertaining and not genuine – yet he still gets air time. He’s still described as death-defying. It boggles my mind. But then, look at the state of television in general, I suppose…

Actually, perhaps he can cite his performance fraud to wiggle out of the benefits fraud charges! After all, it was Warren Spencer, the prosecuting attorney, who said:

Despite this [collecting benefits for being too ill to work] he did death-defying feats such as sword swallowing, lying on beds of nails and bathing in broken glass.

I’d be happy to testify that this guy is a fraudulent entertainer and that his performance contains absolutely nothing life threatening! It might help to remove the stain that he’s left for other performing artists!

Link to Daily Mail article here.

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[tags]Benefits System, Daredevils, Fraud, Nigel Hardman, Prince Razaq, Sideshow, Sword Swallowers, Sword Swallowing[/tags]

TECH NOTE: Tools for Web Design

How to view your website in 53+ browsers on 3 major platforms in mere minutes with zero effort.

browsershotsscreenshotThough current statistics indicate that almost 62% of web users are surfing the web with some version of Internet Explorer (reaffirming that I always find myself in a minority) with Firefox coming in a distant second at around 28%, web designers need to be aware that users will be viewing their websites in a huge variety of web browsers each running on a wide cross-section of platforms. Safari and Opera are the only other browsers to regularly make the top stats lists, but there are literally dozens of browsers and platforms available.

As a business I keep close tabs on my usage statistics and sure enough, most users are visiting with some version of Internet Explorer or Firefox. Because getting my product into the marketplace is so crucial, however, I can’t afford to alienate the minority of users hitting my server with less-than-popular browsers. I need to assure that everyone receives roughly the same experience with only minor variation – if any. Some businesses by their nature may attract the minority browser – and everyone should know what the usage patterns for their websites are – and a designer can never assume that visitors are receiving the same experience that they are.


Short of running multiple systems with multiple boot options each running different OS’s and browser versions, or setting up complex and tedious virtual systems and emulators, how can a designer be certain that their website looks as intended in a cross-platform environment? My own personal approach is to first make certain that the variety of processing occurs server-side and that I deliver a minimum of code that needs to be interpreted client-side. Then, I visit browsershots.org.

What is Browsershots?

In the creator’s own words:

“Browsershots makes screenshots of your web design in different browsers. It is a free open-source online service created by Johann C. Rocholl. When you submit your web address, it will be added to the job queue. A number of distributed computers will open your website in their browser. Then they will make screenshots and upload them to the central server here.“

Simply visit the website, submit the URL that you’d like to test and select from any or all of the platforms and browsers available. Platforms include Linux, Windows and Mac OS, naturally, while the over 53 browsers include multiple versions of not only the major players but the more minor ones as well, and some decidedly obscure browsers are among the mix.

No need to test them individually, as you can submit your request for all of them at once and the results will be compiled and displayed directly on the Browsershots page in thumbnail format. Roll over each thumbnail for a slightly larger peek at how your URL appears in each given browser, or click them for a higher resolution image complete with all of the details regarding platform, browser and version. For safe keeping, you can download the whole lot of results as one zip file, including all of the high res screen shots. The site isn’t graphically pretty, but it’s extremely functional.

It should be noted that Browsershots provides only screenshots, it is impossible to test functionality. I myself discovered with one of my own sites that as a result of some transparent png’s and the way in which I made them backward compatible with older browsers, everything looked fine from IE version to IE version, but in actual fact my scrollbars were inoperative in older versions of IE – something that I could never tell from the Browsershots service.

Nonetheless, for checking visual layout it’s second to none. There are fee-based services that are available to provide the same functionality and more (see end of article for links), but for a quick, powerful and dead simple way to assure that your website appears as intended – a way which avoids the tedious setup of emulators and separate systems – Browsershots is the way to go. It also operates on the principles of distributed computing and community support, something in which I strongly believe.


Fee-Based Cross-Browser Testing Tools

-Browsercam
-Litmus
-NetMechanic

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[tags]Browsershots, Compatibility, Firefox, Graphic Design, IE, Internet Explorer, Web Browsers, Web Design, Websites[/tags]