Posts Tagged ‘blog mechanics’

Format change

As of 3:30 p.m. EST Tuesday, Overlawyered has a new format, based on the Movable Type blogging system. (Thanks to Dean Esmay and the MT people for helping.) In addition to saving us a great deal of time and effort compared with the primitive hand coding we’d been using (“baking [my] HTML on clay tablets”, as Glenn Reynolds puts it), the new system gives us much wider scope for such features as guest blogging and on-the-road blogging, pings and trackbacks, and so on. The site’s existing archives can still be reached (follow links in right column of front page), but the search and archive functions will operate separately for postings after June 20. And there will now be topical archives which collect all the new postings on a single subject into a single file, saving readers a lot of clicking around.

What happened to the left column with its long list of links? Much of it is inside now at a new General Links page. One consequence of the new format is that we’ll probably drop our self-imposed norm of posting only once a day, around midnight, in favor of blogging at all hours as the rest of the world does. And: Thanks not only to Instapundit but to other sites that have noted the switch with kind words: Ernie the Attorney, Legal Reader (formerly Weird of the News), and Scott Ferguson (who recalls our editing as “affably ruthless”, and concludes with an assertion that is falsified by this very linkback).

Link to archives before Jun. 23, 2003

If you are reading Overlawyered archives in backward sequence, this marks the breakpoint between new and old archiving systems. To continue reading back in time for our commentaries before June 20, 2003, proceed to our archive page (old system) for second part of June 2003. If you know you want an earlier date than that, proceed to our guide to old archives.

Posts that follow below with dates earlier than Jun. 20, 2003 in our new archive system are intended for housekeeping purposes, to establish many of the resources of the old site in locations where they can easily be found by search on the new.