Doing Things Wrong

WordPress Image Handling is Completely Insane

WordPress image handling has been getting worse since at least version 5.5. In their arrogance, the programmers are sabotaging the user in every way they can. I'm still finding and fixing damage. It's really aggravating that there is no way to turn off all the nonsense. These programmers are truly idiots. Thankfully, with php you can hack the code yourself, and that is exactly what I did, and then made it automatic. Simple, my WordPress theme, now searches out the bad code and disables it. No more image insanity.

The worst part is that these programmers obviously think they are doing wonderful things - programmers always do. By default, if you upload an image that is too big for their taste, they re-size it, and then discard the original! Without telling you! They are destroying your work, and they don't give you any choice or even a notice. That is stupidity combined with arrogance in the worst possible way.

Doesn't really surprise me - looking back on it, my computer science education ( masters degree from a major university ) was utter garbage. If garbage is all you know, then you probably can't recognize it, but I came from an engineering background, and I could see it perfectly clearly. Most of my professors struck me as being utterly useless in the real world. Lots of theories, though, and Big-O notation!


image

This is a spoke nut version, for use at the neck heel.

Here is a variation intended to adjust at the headstock rather than the heel, although it would work fine there too. I substituted a 1-1/2" 10-32 SS cap-head bolt for my usual spoke nut and threaded shaft. It is captured the same way, in a drilled-out coupling nut with a ground-down hex nut. The rod itself is 48" 3/16 rod steel, bent back on itself. Both coupling nuts are grooved on the attaching surface to hold the round rod. This greatly simplifies alignment and assembly, and the cap-head bolt eliminates one solder joint. All parts from my favorite luthiery supply shop, Home Depot.

Printed from luthierylabs.com