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Link-o-Rama for 1.38 giga second mark

Saturday, October 13th, 2007

This is what is Weird Wonderful Web for me…

This Blog has Moved

Thursday, September 1st, 2005

to http://www.falsepositives.com/. Change your bookmarks and feed marks are needed.

The new and (un)improved False Positives!

Friday, August 19th, 2005

I’ve Moved over to http://www.falsepositives.com/ so update your bookmarks and web / rss feed! (I beleive the Feedburnerfeed is switched)

all the “old” content is here, till I import it (somehow).

I’ve still got a lot of learning and hacking to do, but its happening.

I expect the only changes here will be changes to the template.

It’s dead Jim! (and yes I’m using the forbiden blink tag)

Word of the Day: parsimonious

Thursday, August 4th, 2005

Dictionary.com Word of the Day: parsimonious : frugal to excess.

not applying to anyone I know… ;)

Sushi Lessons

Thursday, August 4th, 2005

via Dan Gillmor’s blog we have Noriko Takiguchi’s series of Sushi Lessons “How to eat sushi properly”.

A gentle guide to the novice and those eager to learn more - history, etiquette, foodie isum, and plus a little San Francisco Bay / Silicon Valley Area sushi restaurant guide in 5 parts (so far). Parts inculde: 1 : read the signs, 2: some history; 3: The Encounter, 4: The order, 5: about soy sauce. The comments and responses are also well worth reading.

Looking forward to more on this and other “Living Japanese in Silicon Valley.” topics. and it provides a counterbalance to Ontario’s Sushi Wars madness last year (resolved).

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FalsePositives update

Wednesday, August 3rd, 2005

I’ll be moving this Blog to http://www.falsepositives.com over the course of this month (actually very very soon-ish). This will effect feeds, email and such. Wish me luck! Stay tune …..not yet…

update it’s happening http://www.falsepositives.com and this content at http://www.falsepositives.com/bs/, but still much to do (learn/break)

DWL bought by IBM

Tuesday, August 2nd, 2005

Via ITBusiness.ca.

I almost worked with DWL (coulda/woulda/shoulda?) back at the end of the gold rush, and knew a bunch of people there, once, doing there thing with Lot of Big Blue software. I think they are all scattered now.

CmdrTaco says Slashdot going CSS in next two weeks

Sunday, July 31st, 2005

So says the Journal of CmdrTaco, via Waxy, but still the icky old HTML.

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Migrate apps from Internet Explorer to Mozilla without completely losing your Mind.

Wednesday, July 27th, 2005

Over on IBM Developer Works is an article on Migrate apps from Internet Explorer to Mozilla. Lots of useful information, evey if its too late for me….

Is Mozilla / FireFox important? Should you care Yes.

Given FireFox’s increasing market share amongst the average user ( ~ 9% and much much high in the pointed head population), it’s large download rate (curenttly 75 million in 8 1/2 months), and the stagnation of IE 6 (released Oct 2001!), and the - finally - pending release of a IE 7 beat (soon-ish? (see IE Blog).

If your web application only work in Internet Explorer, you might be tempted to say “Don’t care” or “Our users only use IE”. But, will your application work with IE 7. Does it work for people using Mac OS X (which has a different version of IE)?

How many users, customers or partners are you prepared to annoy?

Mozilla (of which FireFox is the web browser part of the Mozilla effort) it made the conscious decision to support W3C, and other, standards when ever possible. As a result, Mozilla is not fully backwards-compatible with Netscape Navigator 4.x and Microsoft Internet Explorer legacy code.

IE7 is expected to have Better Standards support (improved CSS, Transparent PNG support, XHTML, etc), although MS is known for its flexible ideas of what is a “Standard”.

The IBM article covers topics such as : General cross-browser coding tips; Differences between Mozilla and Internet Explorer (Tooltips and Entities); DOM; JavaScript; CSS; Quirks versus standards mode; Event differences; Rich text editing; XML; XSLT differences.

July 28th Update : speak of the devil….the is out, although not as a public release:

Contrary to some expectations, Microsoft says Internet Explorer 7 Beta 1 will not be publicly available for download. Only invited beta testers and Microsoft TechNet subscribers will be provided access to the bits. The company did not say whether a public beta would follow, and has no timeline for a final IE7 release.

details from the Internet Explorer 7 Beta 1 Technical Overview, claims wrt CSS :

Internet Explorer 7 is prioritizing compliance to CSS standards by first implementing the features that developers have said are most important to them. As a result, in Internet Explorer 7 beta 1 Microsoft has addressed some of the major inconsistencies that can cause Web developers problems producing rich, interactive Web pages.

and says it addresses the IE 6 Peekaboo Bug and the Guillotine Bug. Also limited support for Alpha Channel Transparency to PNG graphics has been added. Very, Very, little in general standards support (CSS/DOM/etc) at this point. Disappointing. Within a week I would expect more detailed reviews on the this aspect of the beta. Most of the changes relate to improving the underlying security architecture (badly needed). Its also looking like MS will sacrifice Standards for Backwards complatiblity (”It’s not a Bug it’s a Feature”).

Position is Everything looks like a amazing source of CSS and information on CSS problems.

Aug 1 Update: in the IEBLog : Standards and CSS in IE confirms where we are at and where they are going. Good, but not good enough….

and GMSV says “Our browser’s plenty smart; it just suffers from test anxiety”, and more about MS faliure to even attempt to pass the Acid2 test and other standard they have publicly committed to supporting.

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Using Arbitrage on the Price of Software

Saturday, July 23rd, 2005

Via the Big Slash, comes ONLamp.com: Calculating the True Price of Software, which applies arbitrage - looking for price differences between two things that ought to be exactly the same - to warranties and - more to the point - software, and software maintenance.

the conclusions are interesting :

a) that the free and open source software folk have stumbled across the financial engineering insight that a significant portion of the value of software is the embedded “derivatives”–options or warrants–on future maintenance and enhancement.

b) the major difference in worldview between open source advocates and proprietary software license advocates is explainable as a differing opinion on the correct value of the volatility of maintenance and upgrade pricing.


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