How to add a Favicon

Filed under: Web Site — Jonathan Griggs at 10:36 am on Saturday, August 6, 2011

How to add a Favicon to my site?

Favicon is short for ‘Favourites Icon’. The name is derived from the bookmark list for Microsoft Internet Explorer which is called Favourites list. When you add a site to your Favourites list, Internet Explorer (version 5 and above) asks the server if it has a file called favicon.ico. If present, this file will be used to provide an icon that is displayed next to the bookmark text.

Other browsers such as Mozilla have also added support for favicons. Depending on the browser, the favicon can appear in a variety of places, not just in the bookmarks list (in fact, it may not even appear in the bookmark list at all). It may be shown in the address bar or the title of a browser tab, for instance.

How to create a Favicon

To create a favicon.ico simply create a 16×16 .PNG or .GIF file and convert it to an icon resource with Chami (check their website for more information). If you want, you can add more images to the same icon resource to provide alternative resolutions. Most browsers only use a 16×16 image but in a different context (e.g. when you drag a URL from the address bar onto your desktop) a larger icon may be shown. If the icon resource only contains a 16×16 image, this will be scaled to the appropriate size, so technically there is never a need to add alternative resolutions. However, doing so can increase the quality of the displayed icon.

Keep in mind that for a user with a slow modem a favicon.ico may increase the page loading time by a few seconds if it is too large, so don’t overdo it. Adding a 32×32 alternative should be enough to make sure the image will look good even in contexts with larger icons. Adding even more and larger alternatives is unnecessary bloat. Try to keep the number of colours below 16 and create a 16-color icon using the colours 16 switch of png2ico (or even create a b/w icon with the colours 2 switch). This will result in a smaller file that loads faster.

When you create the images to include in your favicon.ico, don’t forget that the icon may be composed against various background colours so you should use transparency rather than a solid background if you want to avoid that your icon appears inside a box. Note, that icon resources only support binary transparency, i.e. a pixel may be visible or invisible but not something like 30% translucent.

Installing your Favicon

To add your new favicon.ico to a web page put it on the server into the same directory as the web page it is for (e.g. www.example.com/foo/favicon.ico for www.example.com/foo/index.html). That is the first place a browser will search. If it doesn’t find an icon there, it checks the top-level directory of the server (www.example.com/favicon.ico for the www.example.com server), so by putting it there you can have a default favicon for all the pages in your domain. Depending on browser and configuration, the favicon.ico is not always rendered, even if it is in one of the above locations, unless the web page explicitly declares its presence. To declare that your web page has an icon, you add the following 2 lines into the <head> section of your page:

<link rel=”icon” href=”favicon.ico” type=”image/x-icon”>
<link rel=”shortcut icon” href=”favicon.ico” type=”image/x-icon”>

link to favicon generator:

http://www.chami.com/html-kit/services/favicon/

However WordPress users can just simply use this plugin:

http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/all-in-one-favicon/installation/

Resurrection

Filed under: Web Site — Jonathan Griggs at 9:43 am on Saturday, August 6, 2011

New theme and lay out complete, with only minor adjustments left to make.

Purged site of comments hopefully this will make it slightly more secure.

Things to do:

  • Fix title
  • Customise reply / comments
  • Add white dot back ground
  • Change font /style to “tag’s” in sidebar
  • Number of items in folder next to folder name not under it
  • Research if categories / “folders” can open within sidebar to reveal content
  • Edit footer
  • Add menu under banner – journal – about me – photos
  • Add a profile section RE: author
  • Once above is complete look in to geo tagging…

Garbage Warrior

Filed under: You Tube Videos — Jonathan Griggs at 10:13 am on Sunday, May 25, 2008

Themilate Paint

Filed under: Notes — Jonathan Griggs at 7:06 pm on Wednesday, May 7, 2008

Does insulating your walls have to be an expensive process only professionals can do?

Not if this NASA based paint product has anything to do with it. Simple apply it to your paint and it will create an insulated layer between the paint and the wall enabling up to 25% reduction in your energy bills.

Sounds easier than other options like plaster boarding, anyway only just stumbled upon it myself so not sure how great it really is but below is what the company say about there own product..

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Thermilate is made up of Insulating microspheres – What are these?

Insulating microspheres were developed by NASA to combat the high temperatures encountered by the space shuttle on re-entry.

Each microsphere is a tiny hollow ceramic ball no longer than a piece of sand. They reflect and refract heat like the tiles on the space shuttle. The centre of the ball is not only hollow but has all the air removed and is a vacuum.

It is a known fact that NOTHING can travel via conduction through a vacuum, not even heat. The resulting microsphere is, in effect, a mini thermos flask.

On internal walls and ceilings this reduces heat loss, creating a warmer room.

On external walls and roofs, this reflects the heat from the sun, creating a cooler internal room.

How do they work when mixed in paint?

Conventional insulation products only work by slowing down the rate of heat loss through the actual wall.
However, the microspheres in Thermilate work by helping to prevent the heat getting through the wall in the first place, by reflecting the heat when it touches the wall.
Thermilate even gives excellent energy savings, even when used on well insulated walls.

wet paint filled with thermilate composite spheres evaporation process as paint dies. Dried paint with solid film of Thermilate composite spheres Thermally efficient barrier

Thermilate has ceramic micro-spheres which create a thermal barrier. They refract, reflect and dissipate heat.

SAVING ENERGY, SAVING MONEY & SAVING THE ENVIRONMENT.

http://www.thermilate.co.uk/

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Here’s some chat from people who have used it

http://www.greenbuildingforum.co.uk/forum

End of Suburbia – Promo Clip

Filed under: You Tube Videos — Jonathan Griggs at 6:44 pm on Tuesday, May 6, 2008

Not seen this yet might be a bit negative, but still maybe its worth a watch

Transition Towns – Rob Hopkins Interview

Filed under: Eco Homes,You Tube Videos — Jonathan Griggs at 5:15 pm on Tuesday, May 6, 2008

Transition Towns Lewes – youtube Video

Filed under: Eco Homes,You Tube Videos — Jonathan Griggs at 5:13 pm on Tuesday, May 6, 2008

Earthship coffee table book – Out now !

Filed under: Notes — Jonathan Griggs at 6:09 pm on Wednesday, January 9, 2008

Introduction:
Many people all over the planet know of Earthships. But few really know what they are and fewer still know what the effort is really all about. Some think they are just buildings made of old tires – “what a neat idea” – they think. Others think they are solar buildings made of recycled materials – “great”. Still others are aware of the fact that they are an attempt (getting quite successful) at making totally sustainable homes from by-products of our society. Even this is still an incomplete understanding.

Plants of various types and species once covered the planet. Their existence made the planet more. They contributed to – they were – the nature of the planet. Now, it is humanity that is becoming the nature of the planet. There is a major difference. Plants have a way of unconsciously and continuously making the planet better for themselves and other creatures. Humans have a way of consciously and continuously making the planet worse for themselves – and for plants and other creatures.

My reaction to this is that, the more we interact with and learn from plants and the Earth, the more we will learn about our own survival. Our life methods must evolve to be more like those of planets. Intelligence or not, plants have it together on the Earth – we don’t.

The Earthship concept is an effort to slowly evolve humanity in a direction – a method of life – that continuously improves that life by its very nature. This involves changing building methods, changing utility methods, changing living methods, and ultimately changing thinking and understanding methods. This is a journey, the destination of which cannot be perceived – only imagined.

The Earthship concept must be elastic enough to presently conform to existing dogma while strong enough to evolve that dogma in the future. It will cause some pain in terms of disruption of the “tried and true”. It will enter every arena that exists and grow like a virus as it effects the thinking of what happens tomorrow while flavoring the reality of what is happening today.

It is now only a seed being planted everywhere. As this seed grows, we will find that we are making homes and sanctuaries for plants instead of human leaders, kings and politicians, because it is plants that will truly be guiding us and nurturing us, not human leaders, kings and politicians. We have recreated the world – it doesn’t work. Now we must find the humility to follow and emulate other forces on this planet. The Earthship is the vessel toward that end.

- Michael Reynolds

New earth ship coffee table book is on sale now.

Click here for more info!!

Earthship Concept

Filed under: You Tube Videos — Jonathan Griggs at 12:36 pm on Sunday, December 30, 2007

Earthship Biotecture on CNN International

Filed under: You Tube Videos — Jonathan Griggs at 11:21 am on Saturday, December 29, 2007

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