Latest Activity

Robert Dickinson commented on Robert Dickinson's group Stream of Information
"Brixham, England May. 29, 2012 "
7 hours ago
Robert Dickinson commented on Robert Dickinson's group Stream of Information
"by jasonkillinger. Browse more data visualizations. "
8 hours ago
Robert Dickinson left a comment for kerma ben
"Welcome Kerma!"
19 hours ago
kerma ben is now a member of SWMM5 - Stormwater Management Model
yesterday
Robert Dickinson added a page to the group SWMM4 Input Files
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Historical SWMM 5 and SWMM 4 Engines and Examples

Subject:  Historical SWMM 5 and SWMM 4 Engines and Examples   The web site has http://swmm5legacycode.ning.com/  historical SWMM 5 installs, SWMM 5 input file examples and SWMM 4 input files and engines.   The SWMM 4 engines go back to SWMM 3.5…
yesterday
Robert Dickinson commented on Robert Dickinson's group SWMM4 Input Files
"Subject:  Historical SWMM 5 and SWMM 4 Engines and Examples   The web site has http://swmm5legacycode.ning.com/  historical SWMM 5 installs, SWMM 5 input file examples and SWMM 4 input files and engines.   The SWMM…"
yesterday
Robert Dickinson added a page to the group Blog Links
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SWMM5.NET

15 GPM 1985 1D Components in InfoSWMM 2D 3 Types of Manholes in SWMM 5 and InfoSWMM 3 Types of Subcatchment Flow in SWMM 5 A Basic InfoSewer Wet Well A feedback loop involves four distinct stages A rise in Pipe Inverts Across a SWMM 5 Node A…
yesterday
Robert Dickinson posted groups
yesterday
Robert Dickinson commented on Robert Dickinson's group Stream of Information
"Udaipur, India May. 28, 2012 "
yesterday
Robert Dickinson posted photos
yesterday
Robert Dickinson commented on Robert Dickinson's group Weather
"Man-made Pollution Shifting Tropics and Sub-Tropics Poleward "If a poleward displacement of the mid-latitude storm tracks also occurs, this will shift mid-latitude precipitation poleward, impacting regional agriculture, economy, and…"
yesterday
Robert Dickinson commented on Robert Dickinson's group Weather
"Poor neighborhoods have fewer trees, as these jarring satellite photos reveal.: http://www.treehugger.com/economics/how-spot-income-inequality-space-look-trees.html"
yesterday
Robert Dickinson commented on Robert Dickinson's group Weather
" Climate Change is Frying Our Cities Rising temperatures are set triple the heat-related deaths in cities across the U.S., a new report finds. Cities need to fight back."
yesterday
Robert Dickinson posted a video

RSA Animate - The Power of Networks

In this new RSA Animate, Manuel Lima, senior UX design lead at Microsoft Bing, explores the power of network visualisation to help navigate our complex moder...
Monday
Profile IconThere are 291 members on SWMM5 - Stormwater Management Model
Sunday
Robert Dickinson commented on Robert Dickinson's group ExtraVariables
"Update of May, 20012 Epaswmm5.exe swmm5.dll"
Sunday
Robert Dickinson commented on Robert Dickinson's group Stream of Information
"Ocean Currents "
Sunday
Robert Dickinson replied to Robert Dickinson's discussion How is the St Venant Equation Solved for in the Dynamic Wave Solution of SWMM 5?
"Subject:   Link Iterations in the SWMM 5 Dynamic Wave Solution   Each of the links in the SWMM 5 network can use up to 8 iterations to reach convergence during a time step in the dynamic wave solution of SWMM 5.  The rules…"
Sunday
Robert Dickinson left a comment for wu ze jian
Saturday
Robert Dickinson posted a discussion

How is the St Venant Equation Solved for in the Dynamic Wave Solution of SWMM 5?

Subject:   How is the St Venant Equation Solved for in the Dynamic Wave Solution of SWMM 5? An explanation of the four St. Venant Terms in SWMM 5 and how they change for Gravity Mains and Force Mains. The HGL is the water surface elevation in the upstream and downstream nodes of the link. The HGL for a full link goes from the pipe crown elevation up to the rim elevation of the node + the surcharge depth of the node.  The four terms are: dq2 = Time Step * Awtd * (Head Downstream – Head Upstream)…See More
Saturday

A BETTER TEXT EDITOR, ON FORUM AND BLOG POSTS

For Ning Creators and members alike, adding content is an essential part of any Ning Network. When it comes to adding text, the text editor members rely on should be as easy to use as possible. Starting tomorrow afternoon, adding and editing text on Ning will become even easier.

Previously, all text editors on a Ning Network allowed members to add photos, add links and format text. But using those tools produced HTML code that many non-technical Internet users didn't understand. So a few weeks ago, werolled out a new, WYSIWYG editor to the forum, while still keeping an "HTML" tab so that advanced users could still edit HTML as they always had.

WYSIWYG stands for "what you see is what you get", and it means that when you're doing something like making text bold, you'll actually see bold text, instead of code for <b>bolded text</b>. In the last few weeks, we heard feedback that the WYSIWYG editor wasn't as easy to use as it could be. And so we're rolling out a number of improvements to make it an even better experience editing forum discussions on Ning, while also rolling out this editor to the blog feature:

wysiwyg-small
The major improvements include:
  • More space: 400 pixels of vertical space to edit the text, instead of the previous, 160 pixels
  • Smaller font: A smaller font, so more text can fit in the text editor
  • Resized images: Even though images in the forum and blog can't be any wider than 721 pixels (the full width of the forum and blog), they weren't being resized while editing. Now, any image added wider than 721 pixels will be resized to 721 pixels.
  • Edit image: Previously, once you'd added an image to a text editor, you couldn't change the size, alignment or link unless you knew HTML. Now, in "Rich Text" mode, you'll be able re-open the Image dialog.
When working on these updates, we also realized we made an oversight when adding the WYSIWYG editor to the forum. We accidentally omitted the "Options" drop down, which allows you to customize images that you add to text. We've brought back the Options drop down, with rewritten, clearer text and the ability to customize images even if you add them via URL, not your computer.

Here's what it will look like:

Options

All of these improvements should make editing forum discussions or writing blog posts a breeze. And we'll continue to take your feedback and improve text editors in the future.

Copying pasted text

One note about copying text from other programs or Web sites. One of the nice parts of a WYSIWYG editor is that you can copy and paste not just text, but also links, images, tables and more into your forum or blog post. However, when a WYSIWYG editor tries to maintain all those items, the outcome isn't always perfect. If you're looking to paste text and nothing more, try using the "HTML" tab, and no special formatting will be pasted. 

You can usually copy and paste content into the WYSIWYG editor with good results, but the "HTML" tab is a good bet if you're just looking to copy only text. 

Last updated by Robert Dickinson Feb 3, 2010.

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