From ca88fbcb3b786f4ac3eb2daa3e3fae38c4eb9c28 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Tom Busby Date: Fri, 6 Jul 2018 00:33:12 +0200 Subject: [PATCH] Fix archicture typo and post image widths --- _getting_started/what-is-the-cypherpunks-mailing-list.md | 2 +- _layouts/post.html | 3 +++ ...e-cypherpunks-mailing-list-archives-must-be-preserved.md | 4 +--- static/css/main.css | 6 +++++- 4 files changed, 10 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) diff --git a/_getting_started/what-is-the-cypherpunks-mailing-list.md b/_getting_started/what-is-the-cypherpunks-mailing-list.md index 7270885..ce96173 100644 --- a/_getting_started/what-is-the-cypherpunks-mailing-list.md +++ b/_getting_started/what-is-the-cypherpunks-mailing-list.md @@ -25,7 +25,7 @@ The main eras of the list can roughly be categorised as follows: + 90s Era - _Mainly hosted on toad.com but moving to a distributed archictecture in 1997. Archives are available for this period. Our archive covers this period, as does Ryan Lackey's._ + 1997-? - _This [article](https://www.wired.com/1997/02/homeless-cypherpunks-turn-to-usenet/) does suggest that there was a Usenet community at alt.cypherpunks for some time. I can't find any archives of this era and it appears to coincide with the move to the distributed architecture, so it may have just been an explored possibility and not have been very active._ -+ 2000-2013 - _The list operated via a distributed archicture using the Majordomo mailing list software with a peak of 7 nodes. By mid-2005 al-qaeda.net hosted the only remaining node. Mailing list archives are not available for this period although I'm pursuing lines of enquiry that might be able to produce them._ ++ 2000-2013 - _The list operated via a distributed architecture using the Majordomo mailing list software with a peak of 7 nodes. By mid-2005 al-qaeda.net hosted the only remaining node. Mailing list archives are not available for this period although I'm pursuing lines of enquiry that might be able to produce them._ + 2013-Present - _Following a brief outage caused by the failure of the al-qaeda.net majordomo installation during a package update, the mailing list was relaunched in July 2013 using GNU Mailman. This meant an end to the distributed architecture, but there had been only one node for 8 years at this point. Mailing list archives for this era are available at [lists.cpunks.org/pipermail/cypherpunks/](https://lists.cpunks.org/pipermail/cypherpunks/)._ More information about this can be found in a section of the [Cypherpunk](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cypherpunk#Origin_of_the_term,_and_the_Cypherpunks_mailing_list) Wikipedia page. diff --git a/_layouts/post.html b/_layouts/post.html index db109c1..e1ab3b3 100644 --- a/_layouts/post.html +++ b/_layouts/post.html @@ -8,6 +8,9 @@ layout: default {{ page.date | date_to_string }} - by {{ page.author }}
+ {% if page.image %} +

header image

+ {% endif %}
{{ content }}

Return to Home diff --git a/_posts/2018-07-05-the-cypherpunks-mailing-list-archives-must-be-preserved.md b/_posts/2018-07-05-the-cypherpunks-mailing-list-archives-must-be-preserved.md index 17661ae..542325c 100644 --- a/_posts/2018-07-05-the-cypherpunks-mailing-list-archives-must-be-preserved.md +++ b/_posts/2018-07-05-the-cypherpunks-mailing-list-archives-must-be-preserved.md @@ -7,8 +7,6 @@ image: /static/img/archive_drawers.jpg categories: [blog] --- -![archives](/static/img/archive_drawers.jpg) - If you're reading this, you should have read [this article](/getting-started/what-is-the-cypherpunks-mailing-list) on what the Cypherpunks Mailing List is and why it is important. Recently, we announced our own hosted copy of the [archvies for 90s era of the Cypherpunks Mailing List](https://mailing-list-archive.cryptoanarchy.wiki/). This is based entirely on a text-dump archive provided by Ryan Lackey at [cypherpunks.venona.com/raw/](https://cypherpunks.venona.com/raw/). This collection is the only known, vaguely-complete archive of posts from this era. @@ -17,7 +15,7 @@ It's important to understand that the mailing list existed in several distinct e + 90s Era - _Mainly hosted on toad.com but moving to a distributed archictecture in 1997. Archives are available for this period. Our archive covers this period, as does Ryan Lackey's._ + 1997-? - _This [article](https://www.wired.com/1997/02/homeless-cypherpunks-turn-to-usenet/) does suggest that there was a Usenet community at alt.cypherpunks for some time. I can't find any archives of this era and it appears to coincide with the move to the distributed architecture, so it may have just been an explored possibility and not have been very active._ -+ 2000-2013 - _The list operated via a distributed archicture using the Majordomo mailing list software with a peak of 7 nodes. By mid-2005 al-qaeda.net hosted the only remaining node._ ++ 2000-2013 - _The list operated via a distributed architecture using the Majordomo mailing list software with a peak of 7 nodes. By mid-2005 al-qaeda.net hosted the only remaining node._ + 2013-Present - _Following a brief outage caused by the failure of the al-qaeda.net majordomo installation during a package update, the mailing list was relaunched in July 2013 using GNU Mailman. This meant an end to the distributed architecture, but there had been only one node for 8 years at this point. Mailing list archives for this era are available at [lists.cpunks.org/pipermail/cypherpunks/](https://lists.cpunks.org/pipermail/cypherpunks/)._ The Usenet community is not particularly notable and, as such, if I can find archives for it then that would be great. If not, then I'm not too worried about it either. The main issue is the glaring hole in the historical record between early 1999 and July 2013 (when the list was relaunched using GNU Mailman). diff --git a/static/css/main.css b/static/css/main.css index 2bccd9b..6b581d7 100644 --- a/static/css/main.css +++ b/static/css/main.css @@ -183,7 +183,7 @@ div.col-sm-3 img.profile-avatar { .post-content img, .content img { - width: 100% + max-width: 100% } /* Responsive Conditional */ @@ -198,3 +198,7 @@ div.col-sm-3 img.profile-avatar { margin-top: 30px; } } + +#header-image { + width: 100%; +}