"If you are an IE user, head over to the Microsoft Web site and pick up IE 7.0 Beta 3 today."
Except of course unless you're a web developer in which case you still need IE6 on your machine for testing those delightful CSS quirks and, as ever, you can't run two versions of IE on the same machine.
It's odd. MS's developer tools are generally pretty good but they do seem to fall down a bit for those of us who write web applications, especially given the recent rise in far more complex scripting and so on with the whole Web 2.0 buzz / AJAX thing. Oh well.
That's interesting. My legit work copy of XP installed this update this morning and in the Add/Remove programs list it says Windows Genuine Advantage Notifications (KB905474) "This update cannot be removed."
It's interesting that it's Dave Hyatt and the Safari team talking about this as there is experimental support in OSX 10.4 for running applications at a different DPI, though it doesn't work particularly well. I wonder if this is one of the plans for the next version of OS X.
A Greasemonkey script that does this:
document.getElementById('col1').style.display = 'none';
should get rid of that troublesome tab on the left.
"If you are an IE user, head over to the Microsoft Web site and pick up IE 7.0 Beta 3 today."
Except of course unless you're a web developer in which case you still need IE6 on your machine for testing those delightful CSS quirks and, as ever, you can't run two versions of IE on the same machine.
It's odd. MS's developer tools are generally pretty good but they do seem to fall down a bit for those of us who write web applications, especially given the recent rise in far more complex scripting and so on with the whole Web 2.0 buzz / AJAX thing. Oh well.
No, the J in AJAX stands for JavaScript.
That's interesting. My legit work copy of XP installed this update this morning and in the Add/Remove programs list it says Windows Genuine Advantage Notifications (KB905474) "This update cannot be removed."
It's interesting that it's Dave Hyatt and the Safari team talking about this as there is experimental support in OSX 10.4 for running applications at a different DPI, though it doesn't work particularly well. I wonder if this is one of the plans for the next version of OS X.
Fry will get to meet Bender, and I might have a chance with Amy Wong. Lead me to the hibernation unit.
The filtering seems to be for US spelling only. There are no 'assholes' in Google Suggest but plenty of 'arseholes'.
220 x 176, eh? Someone will be already wondering if they can write a ZX Spectrum emulator for it.
Suddenly I'm not so bothered that there's no Mac version!