It appears that limited SVG capability was enabled by --enable-svg in the latest Mozilla release (1.4). I did, and then hit the link provided in the article. It's interesting that when comparing Moz 1.4 with Eye Of Gnome 2.2.0, that Moz renders better than EoG on some things at the same time that EoG handles more of the SVG language. An example is http://www.croczilla.com/svg/fosdem2003/w3c-confor mance-suite/rendering-text-BE-02-ps.html, where EoG renders the checkered background while Moz does not, while Moz renders all three lines of text while EoG fails to render the middle line (text stroke).
The Moz version I'm using was built with gcc 3.3 and is running on RH9.
From the beginning, the Media Lab was a monument to technical optimism--or maybe hubris. Its very building, designed by MIT alum and world-famous architect I.M. Pei, was a symbol of elegance and waste. On the outside, its tiled surface resembles nothing so much as a bathroom.
But inside, it is almost entirely empty, with a giant courtyard stretching up through its center--just because it looked cool. Maybe if that space had been filled with offices, the Lab wouldn't be spending money constructing a new building next door. And perhaps without the expense of the new building, the Lab wouldn't need to lay off staff now. At one point, Bender says he actually suggested filling some of the atrium -- which is four stories high -- with office space instead of moving staff out of the building. MIT nixed the idea.
(quoted directly from the article)
Just like the Internet bubble - spiffy on the outside, empty and nearly useless within.
You rail on about the injustices of Microsoft, yet when you have an opportunity to do something about it, the majority of you sit around with your collective finger up your ass and don't do a damn thing.
You either have the strength of your convictions, or you don't. And the majority of you don't. It's just fun to join in the anti-Microsoft mob.
"I would rather be exposed to the inconveniences attending too much liberty than to those attending too small a degree of it."
-- Thomas Jefferson to Archibald Stuart, 1791.
"He that would make his own liberty secure must guard even his enemy from oppression."
-- Thomas Paine
"Hypocrisy is both the hobgoblin of enslavable minds and the hallmark of their would-be slavemasters."
-- Rick Gaber
"[Oppose] with manly firmness [any] invasions on the rights of the people."
-- Thomas Jefferson: Draft Virginia Constitution, 1776. Papers, 1:338
"I believe there are more instances of the abridgement of freedoms of the people by gradual and silent encroachment of those in power than by violent and sudden usurpations."
-- James Madison
It appears that limited SVG capability was enabled by --enable-svg in the latest Mozilla release (1.4). I did, and then hit the link provided in the article. It's interesting that when comparing Moz 1.4 with Eye Of Gnome 2.2.0, that Moz renders better than EoG on some things at the same time that EoG handles more of the SVG language. An example is http://www.croczilla.com/svg/fosdem2003/w3c-confor mance-suite/rendering-text-BE-02-ps.html, where EoG renders the checkered background while Moz does not, while Moz renders all three lines of text while EoG fails to render the middle line (text stroke).
The Moz version I'm using was built with gcc 3.3 and is running on RH9.
From the beginning, the Media Lab was a monument to technical optimism--or maybe hubris. Its very building, designed by MIT alum and world-famous architect I.M. Pei, was a symbol of elegance and waste. On the outside, its tiled surface resembles nothing so much as a bathroom.
But inside, it is almost entirely empty, with a giant courtyard stretching up through its center--just because it looked cool. Maybe if that space had been filled with offices, the Lab wouldn't be spending money constructing a new building next door. And perhaps without the expense of the new building, the Lab wouldn't need to lay off staff now. At one point, Bender says he actually suggested filling some of the atrium -- which is four stories high -- with office space instead of moving staff out of the building. MIT nixed the idea.
(quoted directly from the article)
Just like the Internet bubble - spiffy on the outside, empty and nearly useless within.
You rail on about the injustices of Microsoft, yet when you have an opportunity to do something about it, the majority of you sit around with your collective finger up your ass and don't do a damn thing.
You either have the strength of your convictions, or you don't. And the majority of you don't. It's just fun to join in the anti-Microsoft mob.
Just tried the site pages using Opera 6 on Win2k. They are as annoying there as on IE.
`excite @home' is (soon to be was) Excite@Home
`providers' should be provider's
`milions' is millions
Or is that too much to ask?
"I would rather be exposed to the inconveniences attending too much liberty than to those attending too small a degree of it."
-- Thomas Jefferson to Archibald Stuart, 1791.
"He that would make his own liberty secure must guard even his enemy from oppression."
-- Thomas Paine
"Hypocrisy is both the hobgoblin of enslavable minds and the hallmark of their would-be slavemasters."
-- Rick Gaber
"[Oppose] with manly firmness [any] invasions on the rights of the people."
-- Thomas Jefferson: Draft Virginia Constitution, 1776. Papers, 1:338
"I believe there are more instances of the abridgement of freedoms of the people by gradual and silent encroachment of those in power than by violent and sudden usurpations."
-- James Madison
And you wonder why Microsoft will roll right over your pansy asses? Or why Microsoft has a legitimate concern over the GPL?