Going back (Z) and forward (X) on Opera are faster than any browser I've ever used.
'Back' actually works differently to most browsers, displaying the page exactly how it was when you left it. This works extremely well for forms, where some retarded web-developer has an 'onload' handler that clears all form fields. In Opera, the 'onload' only fires when the page loads, not when you navigate back/forward using the browser buttons, meaning you very rarely find your data blatted by idiotic browser behaviour.
I've read that trademark holders must prosecute abuse of their trademarks, or risk losing them.
As Versign now PROFIT from every trademark.com or trademark.net currently unregisterd, they MUST be prosecuted by any registered trademark holder who finds theirtrademark.com or theirtrademark.net is redirecting to versign's server.
Has anyone called a lawyer?
e.g: microsoft-word.com ibm-visual-age.com co cacola-therealthing.com mcflurry.net mcchickensa ndwich.net visual-studio-6.net
Re:Look out for the ersatz intelligentsia
on
Email Turns Thirty
·
· Score: 1
Emails sent daily outnumber faxes by at least a factor of one hundred thousand (conservatively estimating, likely as high as ten million). The conclusion is pretty simple.
What a fantasticlly well researched set of stats! Let me think if it holds true for someone sending 100 emails a day every day....
At 100,000 emails per fax, you'd expect a person to send one fax more than once every 3 years. At 10,000,000 per fax, you wouldn't expect to send a fax more than once in... 3 centuries?
2 years ago I had to do an evaluation of WebLogic, Oracle's JServer, and NAS/IPlanet (i.e. the last NAS version and the first IPlanet version.) What was annoying at that time was that there wasn't really a standard deployment method (I'm not even sure if there was an 'ear' spec.)
What I'm wondering is; has it all settled down now? How hard would it be to take EJB's developed and deployed for WebLogic or WebSphere, and to move them into a JBoss environment? Obviously if you use specific features of the app servers that's an open ended question - let's assume we're talking about sticking to the J2EE spec though, only using standard J2EE API's?
I'm hoping the answer's going to be very easy. I'm currently looking for work, and people keep asking if I've got WebSphere experience. I keep replying that it's just another Application Server... I can't imagine there being any surprises. Am I wrong? There don't seem to be many web design roles asking for IIS/Apache differentiated experience, so why should an EJB job differentiate between Application Servers?
It's easy to find out... check your cache for files modified in the last day. I just checked mine and found out I've got 1,105 html files modified in the last day.
10 bucks a day? No thanks.
Re:Dude, this is way OFFTOPIC...
on
License to Sit
·
· Score: 1
...store a history of results for download...
Whoah! What sort of results are we talking about? I don't think I want my toilet storing anything to 'download' at a later time. Jeez.
Or, are do you have to aim to score 2 in your SAT's?
(don't even think about joking about 'aiming' your number 2's)
Don't forget to marry it all together with this technology... Basically, you've got an all signing all dancing self contained picture.
Can anyone point out some nice transparent battery technology too? (Or, thinking about it, you can always hide the power source in the window/picture frame...)
You're moaning about a non-US company launching
it's products outside of the US?
Simple really. Nokia's a Finnish company (that's in Europe;-), so they launch in Europe first. When it comes to mobile's, you grand old Americans have got the slightly unusual 1900 frequency instead of the 1800 and 900 used in a hell of a lot more countries.
DVD players, you got those first. Games consoles, correct me if I'm wrong, but you got those in October didn't you? They don't launch in the UK till friday (I'm guessing that's a simultaneous european launch.) TiVo, Replay, you got that first. Massive Rear project TV's... there's a lot more of them in the US then anywhere else. HDTV?
Personally, it's nice to know the US doesn't get everything first.
Maybe this is a simplistic and not totally true
statement, but, I believe 'under' can most easily
be described as 'in a window'. So, if you're
running Windows under Linux, Windows isn't taking
up the whole desktop, you can minimize the little
tyke. And, if Linux is running under Windows,
you'll have a taskbar icon for it (or would
that be a taskbar icon for Plex86 instead?)
I find that pretty ironic, but probably not the same way he does. I think that for people who cry out so much about their "right" to view a DVD on whatever they want, they haven't actually purchased even one legitimate player. No wonder they want the illegal Linux player.
I don't own a DVD player, but I do own some DVD's. I paid money for the content, for the film. Why make it illeagal for me to watch a movie I already paid for without spending more money on a 'licensed' player.
Ever viewed a PDF? That's a nice way of doing things. Pay for the authoring, make the player free.
Do you think the authors of competing office suites should have to pay royalties to Mircosoft to include the ability to import, view, or edit Word documents?
CSS is plain wrong; the whole regional coding thing is wrong. I take a laptop with a DVD player with me on business trips - but there's no point me buying a movie abroad because I can't watch it thanks to regional encoding
I think CSS is pretty stupid and I think that the DMCA goes too far. Hatch even admits that DMCA goes too far. Hopefully it will be fixed soon. But in the meantime, it's the law, and the judge isn't biased and stupid by upholding the law. That's his job.
Is it? I thought the police upheld the law; the judge and jury decided if that law should stand? I believe the key phrases here are 'unconstitutional', and 'case law'.
You've got a choice of carrying round a cell phone, the pda of your choice, and whatever music source you're into today (MP3, minidisc, cd player...)
Or, you carry round one box that plays your music, looks after your addresses and you can use it as a phone. As for the people who think you'll look stupid bopping away with a phone to your ear... have you ever heard of headphone sockets? Don't you think they might just put one in this little baby?
Of course the downside is that you don't get to individually choose your pda/phone/music boxes, but that's the price you pay. If you still want to go around with three boxes, noone's gonna stop you.
Hi, I use the syntax file below. It's very rough, but I find it far more useful than nothing. Basic caveats: it forgets how to format html after a closing JSP tag. Ditto for forgetting JavaScript. But it can be handy all the same.
You'll have to figure out where to save this file yourself; but it should work in vim5.3+
" Vim syntax file " Language: JSP " Maintainer: None " URL: None " Last change: 1999 November 1
" Remove any old syntax stuff hanging around syn clear syn case ignore
if !exists("main_syntax") let main_syntax = 'jsp' endif
" tags syntax include @html:p:h/html.vim syntax include @java:p:h/java.vim syn region jobby start=+ syn region jspCode matchgroup=jspDirective start=++ contains=@java keepend syn region jspOutput matchgroup=Special start=++ contains=@java keepend transparent syn region jspDeclaration matchgroup=Special start=++ contains=@java keepend transparent syn region jspDirective start=++ syn region jspComment start=++ keepend
if !exists("did_jsp_syntax_inits") let did_jsp_syntax_inits = 1 hi link jspDirective Special hi link jspComment Comment endif
Which site? news.bbc.co.uk.
As for the number of hits created by IE vs Opera when browsing a site, that makes no difference to stats if you're counting visitors, not hits.
You make a good point, that cache config can affect the amount of traffic directly hitting your website, and therefore affects your logs.
However, given the headers returned by the BBC site, caches should NOT cache the HTML, as the headers say the content expires immediately:
Expires: Mon, 24 Oct 2005 11:57:59 GMT
Date: Mon, 24 Oct 2005 11:57:59 GMT
Content-Type: text/html
Server: Zeus/4.2
Cache-Control: max-age=0
So, the BBC figures may be more accurate than you think.
Seriously.
Going back (Z) and forward (X) on Opera are faster than any browser I've ever used.
'Back' actually works differently to most browsers, displaying the page exactly how it was when you left it. This works extremely well for forms, where some retarded web-developer has an 'onload' handler that clears all form fields. In Opera, the 'onload' only fires when the page loads, not when you navigate back/forward using the browser buttons, meaning you very rarely find your data blatted by idiotic browser behaviour.
The MS page is a bigger download that google's, so you'd hope it has some sort of extra functionality. When I say bigger, I mean 20x bigger:
google:
Size of main page:
2608 bytes
Number of inline elements:
2 ( 2)
Size of inline elements:
10112 bytes
MS start:
Size of main page:
2682 bytes
Number of inline elements:
12 ( 12)
Size of inline elements:
247109 bytes
I've read that trademark holders must prosecute abuse of their trademarks, or risk losing them.
o cacola-therealthing.coma ndwich.net
As Versign now PROFIT from every trademark.com or trademark.net currently unregisterd, they MUST be prosecuted by any registered trademark holder who finds theirtrademark.com or theirtrademark.net is redirecting to versign's server.
Has anyone called a lawyer?
e.g:
microsoft-word.com
ibm-visual-age.com
c
mcflurry.net
mcchickens
visual-studio-6.net
What a fantasticlly well researched set of stats! Let me think if it holds true for someone sending 100 emails a day every day....
At 100,000 emails per fax, you'd expect a person to send one fax more than once every 3 years. At 10,000,000 per fax, you wouldn't expect to send a fax more than once in... 3 centuries?
Doesn't sound right to me. That's weird! ;-)
Damn!
That only leaves a market of about 320 million then.
2 years ago I had to do an evaluation of WebLogic, Oracle's JServer, and NAS/IPlanet (i.e. the last NAS version and the first IPlanet version.) What was annoying at that time was that there wasn't really a standard deployment method (I'm not even sure if there was an 'ear' spec.)
What I'm wondering is; has it all settled down now? How hard would it be to take EJB's developed and deployed for WebLogic or WebSphere, and to move them into a JBoss environment? Obviously if you use specific features of the app servers that's an open ended question - let's assume we're talking about sticking to the J2EE spec though, only using standard J2EE API's?
I'm hoping the answer's going to be very easy. I'm currently looking for work, and people keep asking if I've got WebSphere experience. I keep replying that it's just another Application Server... I can't imagine there being any surprises. Am I wrong? There don't seem to be many web design roles asking for IIS/Apache differentiated experience, so why should an EJB job differentiate between Application Servers?
It's easy to find out... check your cache for files modified in the last day. I just checked mine and found out I've got 1,105 html files modified in the last day.
10 bucks a day? No thanks.
Whoah! What sort of results are we talking about? I don't think I want my toilet storing anything to 'download' at a later time. Jeez.
Or, are do you have to aim to score 2 in your SAT's?
(don't even think about joking about 'aiming' your number 2's)
Can anyone point out some nice transparent battery technology too? (Or, thinking about it, you can always hide the power source in the window/picture frame...)
You're moaning about a non-US company launching it's products outside of the US?
Simple really. Nokia's a Finnish company (that's in Europe ;-), so they launch in Europe first. When it comes to mobile's, you grand old Americans have got the slightly unusual 1900 frequency instead of the 1800 and 900 used in a hell of a lot more countries.
DVD players, you got those first. Games consoles, correct me if I'm wrong, but you got those in October didn't you? They don't launch in the UK till friday (I'm guessing that's a simultaneous european launch.) TiVo, Replay, you got that first. Massive Rear project TV's... there's a lot more of them in the US then anywhere else. HDTV?
Personally, it's nice to know the US doesn't get everything first.
Maybe this is a simplistic and not totally true statement, but, I believe 'under' can most easily be described as 'in a window'. So, if you're running Windows under Linux, Windows isn't taking up the whole desktop, you can minimize the little tyke. And, if Linux is running under Windows, you'll have a taskbar icon for it (or would that be a taskbar icon for Plex86 instead?)
That's the way I see it anyway.
Plus, you instantly lose a whole bunch of potential customers to the firewalls.
Can you imagine asking your network admin to open up ports for individual ecommerce sites?
I don't think so.
I don't own a DVD player, but I do own some DVD's. I paid money for the content, for the film. Why make it illeagal for me to watch a movie I already paid for without spending more money on a 'licensed' player.
Ever viewed a PDF? That's a nice way of doing things. Pay for the authoring, make the player free.
Do you think the authors of competing office suites should have to pay royalties to Mircosoft to include the ability to import, view, or edit Word documents?
CSS is plain wrong; the whole regional coding thing is wrong. I take a laptop with a DVD player with me on business trips - but there's no point me buying a movie abroad because I can't watch it thanks to regional encoding
Is it? I thought the police upheld the law; the judge and jury decided if that law should stand? I believe the key phrases here are 'unconstitutional', and 'case law'.
Course, I only watch TV
Why?
Isn't it obvious?
You've got a choice of carrying round a cell phone, the pda of your choice, and whatever music source you're into today (MP3, minidisc, cd player...)
Or, you carry round one box that plays your music, looks after your addresses and you can use it as a phone. As for the people who think you'll look stupid bopping away with a phone to your ear... have you ever heard of headphone sockets? Don't you think they might just put one in this little baby?
Of course the downside is that you don't get to individually choose your pda/phone/music boxes, but that's the price you pay. If you still want to go around with three boxes, noone's gonna stop you.
Like you, I also suffer from Attention Defficiency Disorder. Sometimes while I'm out shopping I
You'll have to figure out where to save this file yourself; but it should work in vim5.3+
" Vim syntax file
:p:h/html.vim :p:h/java.vim
" Language: JSP
" Maintainer: None
" URL: None
" Last change: 1999 November 1
" Remove any old syntax stuff hanging around
syn clear
syn case ignore
if !exists("main_syntax")
let main_syntax = 'jsp'
endif
" tags
syntax include @html
syntax include @java
syn region jobby start=+ syn region jspCode matchgroup=jspDirective start=++ contains=@java keepend
syn region jspOutput matchgroup=Special start=++ contains=@java keepend transparent
syn region jspDeclaration matchgroup=Special start=++ contains=@java keepend transparent
syn region jspDirective start=++
syn region jspComment start=++ keepend
if !exists("did_jsp_syntax_inits")
let did_jsp_syntax_inits = 1
hi link jspDirective Special
hi link jspComment Comment
endif