Monthly Archives

Archive for March 2005

Thursday, 31 March 2005

An open letter to Mike Wendland of the Detriot Free Press

Dear Mike~

In the article “Apple, Microsoft prepare for war with new systems“, you mention that The name Longhorn just doesn’t get people very excited — unless they live in Texas. Actually, people from Oklahoma, Kansas, Mexico, and Cuba also have the potential to get excited, as longhorn cattle exist in those areas.

Let’s turn the argument around:
The name Tiger just doesn’t get people very excited — unless they live in China, the Russian Federation, North Korea, Indonesia, Cambodia, Laos, Malaysia, Burma, Thailand, Vietnam, India, Bhutan, Nepal, or Bangladesh. Hmm.

Tuesday, 22 March 2005

Why I need Firefox: open letter to DOE

I will be editing web pages for the Energy Library and Law Library and need to check my work in multiple browsers — more specifically, multiple rendering engines. Internet Explorer doesn’t adhere to web standards as devised and recommended by the W3C — it doesn’t fully support XHTML or CSS2, and has numerous page-rendering bugs, most notibly the box model problem. IE 6.0 is a stale, flawed product and hasn’t had an update in over five years. The Firefox codebase is constantly being honed and improved, and has richer support for web standards — most noticably XHTML, CSS2/CSS2.1 and parts of CSS3.

From a developer’s standpoint, Firefox comes with a standard set of developer tools including a powerful JavaScript and CSS error/warning console, and an optional Document Inspector that gives detailed insight about your pages. Coding and fixing web pages is easier with Firefox because it’s more strict and less forgiving if you throw mal-formed code at it. Web designers find it easier to code in Firefox, then check their work in IE, rather than the other way around.

From theage.com.au:

Microsoft has hampered standards support in Explorer for five years with its go-slow campaign against the web. Standards-oriented page layout is not possible on most versions of Explorer (CSS box model). Explorer has never met standards for web document identification (HTTP MIME content types), or if one is supported, then simultaneously the other is not.

Security:
Secunia.com reports that IE has 79 security alerts, 33 of which are rated highly or extremely critical. In comparison, Secunia.com reports that Firefox has 4 unfixed security alerts, 0 of which are rated highly or extremely critical.
http://secunia.com/product/11/
http://secunia.com/product/4227/

I also seriously recommend a Department-wide rollout of Firefox to supplant IE6.0.

Sunday, 20 March 2005

Ray’s karate meet

Ray (in red) at a karate meet Jade, Annie, and I went to Ray’s karate meet today. He’s a second degree black belt, and one of the judges on the panel. He’s depicted here testing his student Willie for competency. The youngest competitor was a twelve-year old girl, a first degree junior black belt at that. Definitely someone I wouldn’t want to encounter in a dark alley!

Monday, 7 March 2005

Starbucks, remixed

My two favorite Starbucks drinks are the cafe mocha and the chai latte. Today, I got the idea to ask for a 50/50 mix of mocha and chai. Not a good idea. Please learn from my mistakes and do not mix these two drinks!

Saturday, 5 March 2005

The banana peel fall

One particular anecdote from my high school years stands out: I was heading to the student lounge to eat lunch one afternoon. For some reason, I didn’t see a metallic folding chair lying on the floor. I walked over it; the chair shot out from under my feet and I was soon horizontal to the floor. I fell straight on my back, and luckily my backpack softened my fall. A friend and I laughed so hard, we had tears. What made it funny was the fact that it closely resembled what you’d see in an old cartoon when someone tripped over a banana peel.