iPAP 0.9 Beta is here!
Grab it while hot, beta software served fresh and steaming. Let me know if it hoses your server down. 😉
Grab it while hot, beta software served fresh and steaming. Let me know if it hoses your server down. 😉
Gilbert has an iPAP install with a nice, clean layout that should be a helpful guide for developing your own iPAP theme. Yes, themes.
Someone must be playing tricks on me, my photos section looks different. 😉 Yes, I know it’s delayed — but it’s almost here.
Some of you might be wondering where the MySQL version of iPAP is — so have a look at Hannu’s photos. Coding has not stopped for the past few weeks, and the codebase is now completely migrated to MySQL. I’m refining the administration interface, and will be working on the new template. Mathias has some […]
revolutionx.net has a nice set of wedding photos, presented through a well–customized iPAP install. If you have some photos on iPAP that you’d like to share, leave your link!
Yuga likes iPAP, he told me at iBlog. Wait for the MySQL–ported version, it should be snappier and the upcoming features will surely be interesting.
I emailed Nanette to ask for the URL of her current blog, and she wrote back telling me she just posted an entry regarding her recent visit to Berlin, with photos! Lucky girl, these are places I could only dream of.
My Christmas wouldn’t be complete without a visit to UP–Diliman to take some photographs of the campus decorations, especially around the Quezon Hall area with the Oblation as the usual subject. This is something I’ve been doing since the Christmas of 2001, the very first month I got my digicam, though for some unexplained reason […]
After months of inactivity, I just decided to update iPAP a teeny–weeny bit. Seriously, I just revised the readme.html file and changed the default $cache_life value to a 5–day equivalent. After playing with my experimental 0.8 version, the flatfile database system just doesn’t cut it anymore especially if you have hundreds of photos spanning several […]
The last of the photos from our recent trip to Ilocos, these ones taken with my dad’s old Nikon EM with a 50mm F/1.4 lens, mostly wide open on the portrait shots, resulting with wildly blurred, narrow depth–of–field type of shots. Just the way I want them. I’m particularly proud of this photograph that Joey […]