--- a/content/blog/2009/02/how-and-why-i-dj.html Fri Dec 25 19:44:34 2009 -0500
+++ b/content/blog/2009/02/how-and-why-i-dj.html Fri Dec 25 19:51:15 2009 -0500
@@ -124,7 +124,7 @@
Smart Playlists. I can create a smart playlist that only shows me songs that
are in my "Lindy & Blues" playlist but aren't yet rated.
-![Unrated Smart Playlist Screenshot](/site-media/storage/blog/2009-02-06-DJ/playlist-unrated.png "Unrated Smart Playlist")
+![Unrated Smart Playlist Screenshot](/media/images{{parent_url}}/dj-playlist-unrated.png "Unrated Smart Playlist")
I have an iPod as well, so when I'm out and listening to my music I can set
the rating right on the iPod. When I get back to my computer I plug in the
@@ -137,7 +137,9 @@
### Previewing
-I rarely preview songs before I play them; I know my collection pretty well and usually have a good idea whether or not a song will fit. Still, it's definitely nice to be able to hear a song now and then.
+I rarely preview songs before I play them; I know my collection pretty well
+and usually have a good idea whether or not a song will fit. Still, it's
+definitely nice to be able to hear a song now and then.
Some DJ's really love external sound cards which let you have two music
players open on your machine; one plays the music going to the room speakers
@@ -145,8 +147,12 @@
reasons:
* I can't be bothered to buy an external sound card. I know, I'm lazy.
-* Computers are tricky, and adding another sound card into the mix makes things trickier. Having another audio interface often causes some headaches when you're ready to DJ and no sound is coming out of one port because there's a configuration option messed up somewhere.
-* I don't trust myself. I can easily see myself accidentally trying to preview on the music player that's going to the room.
+* Computers are tricky, and adding another sound card into the mix makes
+ things trickier. Having another audio interface often causes some headaches
+ when you're ready to DJ and no sound is coming out of one port because
+ there's a configuration option messed up somewhere.
+* I don't trust myself. I can easily see myself accidentally trying to preview
+ on the music player that's going to the room.
What do I do instead? I use my iPod. Sure, the interface isn't as easy to
navigate as a music player on a laptop, but it doesn't cost any extra money (I
@@ -171,7 +177,7 @@
iTunes window will usually look like this (except for being slightly bigger
and having the sidebar showing):
-![Sorted Danceable Playlist Screenshot](/site-media/storage/blog/2009-02-06-DJ/playlist-sorting.png "Sorted Danceable Playlist")
+![Sorted Danceable Playlist Screenshot](/media/images{{parent_url}}/dj-playlist-sorting.png "Sorted Danceable Playlist")
I can use the search bar in the upper right if I'm looking for something
specific. I can sort by BPM if I know I want a song at a rough tempo. The
--- a/content/blog/2009/03/candy-colored-terminal.html Fri Dec 25 19:44:34 2009 -0500
+++ b/content/blog/2009/03/candy-colored-terminal.html Fri Dec 25 19:51:15 2009 -0500
@@ -43,7 +43,7 @@
pretty colors. I love the [Monokai][] color scheme for [TextMate][] and so I
based my choices on that. Here's what it looks like:
-![Screenshot of my Terminal, with colors.](/site-media/storage/blog/2009-03-18-terminal/terminal-colors.png "My Terminal colors.")
+![Screenshot of my Terminal, with colors.](/media/images{{parent_url}}/terminal-colors.png "My Terminal colors.")
[Monokai]: http://www.monokai.nl/blog/2006/07/15/textmate-color-theme/
[TextMate]: http://macromates.com/
--- a/content/blog/2009/03/mercurial-bash-prompts.html Fri Dec 25 19:44:34 2009 -0500
+++ b/content/blog/2009/03/mercurial-bash-prompts.html Fri Dec 25 19:51:15 2009 -0500
@@ -34,7 +34,7 @@
Here's what my prompt looked like a couple of days ago:
-![My bash prompt without the branch displayed](/site-media/storage/blog/2009-03-17-prompt/prompt-without-branch.png "My bash prompt without the branch displayed.")
+![My bash prompt without the branch displayed](/media/images{{parent_url}}/prompt-without-branch.png "My bash prompt without the branch displayed.")
Here's the code in my `.bashrc` file to create it. I've stripped out the color
information to save space.
@@ -63,7 +63,7 @@
my prompt whenever I'm in a directory that's part of a repository. Here's what
my prompt looks like now:
-![My bash prompt with the branch displayed](/site-media/storage/blog/2009-03-17-prompt/prompt-with-branch.png "My bash prompt with the branch displayed.")
+![My bash prompt with the branch displayed](/media/images{{parent_url}}/prompt-with-branch.png "My bash prompt with the branch displayed.")
And here's the code in my `.bashrc` that does it:
@@ -96,7 +96,7 @@
not the repository you're in is dirty. I ported it to Mercurial and here's the
result:
-![My bash prompt with the branch and dirty indicator displayed](/site-media/storage/blog/2009-03-17-prompt/prompt-with-dirty.png "My bash prompt with the branch and dirty indicator displayed.")
+![My bash prompt with the branch and dirty indicator displayed](/media/images{{parent_url}}/prompt-with-dirty.png "My bash prompt with the branch and dirty indicator displayed.")
And the code in `.bashrc`:
Binary file media/images/blog/2009/02/dj-playlist-sorting.png has changed
Binary file media/images/blog/2009/02/dj-playlist-unrated.png has changed
Binary file media/images/blog/2009/03/prompt-with-branch.png has changed
Binary file media/images/blog/2009/03/prompt-with-dirty.png has changed
Binary file media/images/blog/2009/03/prompt-without-branch.png has changed
Binary file media/images/blog/2009/03/terminal-colors.png has changed