March 20, 2012

Navigation bar using Pages in Blogger

How to get a horizontal navigation bar to work perfectly in Blogger. I had previously written about how I wanted to create a horizontal navigation bar with tabs that could could link within my blog. I had come to the conclusion that using Pages was the wrong way to do this. I WAS WRONG!

How to create a Page that can link within your blog?

The first step is to change to the updated Blogger interface. I had first resisted this when it first came out but now realize that was a mistake. I find now I really like the clean design of it.

The updated Blogger interface is a major improvement over the previous version.

Updated options with new Blogger Interface.
Next access the 'Pages' options. You'll now see the main option navigation is along the left hand side. Below the 'New Post' button, the third option is 'Pages', click the link.

Get ready to add new pages. The first option is 'Blank Pages' which are perfect for your 'Contact Me' or 'About Me" page, or as Blogger describes it "Add text and media". The new option that wasn't in the previous interface, or if it was it was well hidden, is the 'Web Address' option. This can be used to "send readers to another web address" or best of all to a spot within your blog.

Page title and URL.  The 'page title' is what is going to appear in your navigation tab and the URL is without explanation the webpage that you want to link to. Save your work and View your Blog. Voila!!

My experience: The first page that I created was to search for all my blog posts with the same label. In this case it was http://www.steveccoleman.com/search/label/Blogger since I wanted to share tips about Blogger as I learned them. This one especially made me happy since I was so frustrated the first time I tried to achieve the same goal. The new Blogger interface made it too easy which is OK for me.

Have you found any other features in the new interface that made your blogging life easier?


March 16, 2012

Check-box click reveals new question

Here is some quick and easy JavaScript that you should add to your online form projects to get more information out of your contact.

Depending on someone answers a certain question you can reveal a follow up question to ask. The example I use below poses the question "Do you want a sales person to contact you?" If they check off 'Yes' then we reveal a new question asking for their phone number. It allows you to guide the contact along instead of blasting them with a list of questions. IT feels more like a conversation.

My example and how you could do it yourself


Check if you want a sales person to contact you.


March 13, 2012

Three Thoughts about Toy Quality

You may have caught on from previous posts that I don't like to waste money, and when I do have to spend it I like to buy quality. How I don't want to spend my money is on replacing toys that have broken one week after receiving it. Grrr Argh!

I have two girls and they are by no means rough with their playthings. So it is always disappointing for me and especially them when something breaks due to poor quality. And it makes me wonder what are they learning from all of this, or where a valuable life lesson might exist. Here are three thoughts on that:

1) Environmental
When a toy breaks and can't be fixed, it goes into the garbage. And it seems to me that this is happening in greater frequency (especially after Christmas and Birthdays). I can't help but thing of all that plastic that is ending up in our landfills. It is going to take years for it all to break down. Not to mention the wasted resources each year to make more toys that quickly turn into junk. I want my children to think about the planet first and not playtime things. A hard lesson for a five and two year old.

2) Financial 
No amount of crazy-glue was
able to save these two toys.
How are kids (and sometimes adults) supposed to learn about the value of money when their immediate response when something breaks is "Can I get a new one?" Our immediate response is "No". That isn't the solution to the problem, you can't just run out and replace things. Sometimes you need to step back and ask yourself, "Do we really need that?" and "Is there a better quality alternative?" You sometimes end up paying a little bit more, but then you are buying quality.

3) Family Values
My girls are playing with the Sesame Street Clubhouse by Fisher-Price that I played with at their age. Why? Largely due to the better built toys from that time but also because their dad took care of it and he respected his toys. Since toys these days seem to be lacking quality it more important than ever to take care of our belongings which includes putting them back where they belong at the end of the day. Again a hard lesson for a five and two year old.

Thinking of the Fisher-Price clubhouse and the fact that is was made in the USA makes me think twice about buying products with the now all too common "Made in China" label. I'm not seeing the quality anymore and I think it is all about getting consumers back into the stores to buy more things.

How does your family handle broken toys?
What toys have stood the test of time in your house?