Newspaper Front Pages: The Day After the Elections

I’ve been look­ing around for sites with photos of today’s news­pa­pers. There are a couple of good sites with lots of pictures:

Over­all, the qual­ity of front page designs is excel­lent. There is one news­pa­per cover that stands out to me though, is the Chicago Sun-​Times.

I really think this is the per­fect cover. A great pho­to­graph. A simple two words. A grand state­ment, wrapped in restraint. Beautiful.

The runner-​ups are the St. Peters­burg Times, States­men jour­nal, and Virginian-​Pilot.

Hon­or­able men­tions go to the fol­low­ing covers:

Lastly, I have to make men­tion of the Boston Herald and its never-​ending pur­suit of the per­fect tabloid-​style front page.

Best Obama Quote

There are definitly some really inter­est­ing insights into both pres­i­den­tial cam­paigns coming out of the wood­work today. An arti­cle from Newsweek, Hack­ers and Spend­ing Sprees, lists serveral inter­est­ing tidbits.

My favorite of the group is this quote from Obama while he was prepar­ing for one of the pri­mary debates (empha­sis added):

I don’t con­sider this to be a good format for me, which makes me more cau­tious. I often find myself trapped by the ques­tions and think­ing to myself, ‘You know, this is a stupid ques­tion, but let me … answer it.’ So when Brian Williams is asking me about what’s a per­sonal thing that you’ve done [that's green], and I say, you know, ‘Well, I planted a bunch of trees.’ And he says, ‘I’m talk­ing about personal.’ What I’m think­ing in my head is, ‘Well, the truth is, Brian, we can’t solve global warm­ing because I f—ing changed light bulbs in my house. It’s because of some­thing col­lec­tive‘.

I’m glad this type of stuff is leak­ing out.

Today Is A Good Day

I gen­er­ally try and keep my polit­i­cal opin­ions at a min­i­mum on this blog, but today is spe­cial. I remem­ber eight years ago very clearly. I had just turned eigh­teen and I was full of excite­ment about the prospect of voting in my first pres­i­den­tial elec­tion. And then, I remem­ber black Wednes­day. Today marks the begin­ning of the end of eight years of dark­ness in this country.

For the last eight years I have been ashamed to be an Amer­i­can. I have been ashamed of the actions of my coun­try at home and abroad. There are too many things that I have been ashamed of to even begin to list. Today, I am proud. For the first time in eight years, I am proud of my country.

I have hope that the tide is turn­ing. I have hope that Obama, the first African Amer­i­can U.S. pres­i­dent, will make a last­ing mark. I hope that he will make a last­ing mark not because he is the first African Amer­i­can pres­i­dent, but because he could be the next JFK or FDR. BHO, anyone? I also have hope that per­haps this elec­tion will embolden the Demo­c­ra­tic party to finally grow a back­bone. It has been far too long since I’ve dared to hope for the future of my country.

Things to be even more hopeful (and happy) about today

In my home state of Mass­a­chu­setts, all three of the ballot mea­sures went my way. There will not be an income tax ban. Yay! for Mas­sArt (and other public ser­vices). It will no longer be a crim­i­nal penalty to pos­sess less than an ounce of mar­i­juana. Yay! for not wast­ing state money on pros­e­cut­ing the War On Drugs. Lastly, start­ing in 2010, there will be no more gam­bling on dog races. Yay! for the greyhounds.

In Maine, where I grew up, they voted down a mea­sure to allow a casino to be built. In South Dakota, where my lovely grand­mother lives, they voted down an ini­tia­tive that would have banned most types of abor­tion. In New Hamp­shire, they went blue across the board: pres­i­dent, sen­a­tor, gov­er­nor, and house of rep­re­sen­ta­tives. In Mon­tana, a red state where I have many family mem­bers (who may or may not be red), Barack Obama very nearly won.

Only Cal­i­for­nia can put a small blem­ish on this day. As it stands now (accord­ing to The New York Times), the propo­si­tion to ban same-​sex mar­riages holds a very small lead.

If that is the only thing that I am dis­ap­pointed about today, that is worth a cel­e­bra­tion. Today is a good day.

Amazon Frustration-Free Packaging

Amazon is now pro­vid­ing what they call “frustration-free” pack­ag­ing for some of their products.

Amazon Frustration Free Packaging

Basi­cally, these items are pack­aged at in ready-​to-​ship boxes, minus the retail pack­ag­ing. Amazon can send the boxes with­out using extra pack­ag­ing. It sounds like it saves every­body some money and helps reduce waste. Great call Amazon.

Design-​wise, I’m really dig­ging the way that Fisher-​Price card­board box looks in the pic­ture. Nice and simple.

Conditional Classnames

Paul Ham­mond has a very clever idea about avoid­ing con­di­tional sytlesheets for Inter­net Explorer. Basi­cally, if we just use con­di­tional com­ments for IE to include a class­name in the body tag, we can iso­late the spe­cific IE rules in the main stylesheet.

Pros

  • Avoids any extra HTTP requests for files with IE-only hacks
  • Slicker than includ­ing that mon­stros­ity inside the head tag
  • Allows for easier read­ing and main­te­nance of stylesheets. The IE hacks can be placed where they’re rel­e­vant in the stylesheet.

Cons

  • Doesn’t this defeat the entire idea of sep­a­rat­ing out hacks from stan­dard CSS?

Does anyone else have opin­ions on the matter?