Star Wars II Trailer
The new Star Wars trailer is out. Forget starwars.com, it's too crowded. Try Apple's Quicktime site and go to the movie trailers section.
The new Star Wars trailer is out. Forget starwars.com, it's too crowded. Try Apple's Quicktime site and go to the movie trailers section.
The Toronto Java Users Group had Floyd Marinescu present "The design and implementation of TheServerSide.com J2EE Community". Floyd is the architect behind TheServerSide.comand gave a fantastic presentation showing a good framework for building dynamic web sites based on J2EE. I'm going to start implementing some of those features behind my Cocoon sites. Check out his site when you have a chance.
Joel Spolsky's Working on CityDesk, Part Four is a good example of why I refuse to work with Microsoft tools for programming. Let someone else deal with the documentation headaches and lack of source code.
The Microsoft bashing is tiring but my main beef is lack of information. I've worked on two Microsoft ASP based web sites and both times the simplest problems resulted in hours if not days of frustration trying to figure out why certain functions wouldn't work. In all cases a lack of documentation prevented me from obtaining the answer.
Documentation is a pain in the butt to write but it makes things much easier for the programers / user. At least a Java stack trace while not pretty is better than a Microsoft error 9857362. Which BTW, will cost you something to figure out either via Technet or a support phone call.
Articles like Joel's remind me why I should strive to make the user experience better and at least strive for a clear message when developing.
I'm bouncing through my un-filed bookmarks and found an article from the UWO Gazette on my friend Jonathan. "Jonathan Coe is the biggest DJ you've never heard of."
I also remember a Gazette article on AndyCapp, ah here it is.
"I have fought since the beginning of the Web for its openness: that anyone can read Web pages with any software running on any hardware. This is what makes the Web itself. This is the environment into which so many people have invested so much energy and creativity. When I see any Web site claim to be only readable using particular hardware or software, I cringe - they are pining for the bad old days when each piece of information need a different program to access it. " - Tim Berners-Lee on Microsoft's Latest Browser Tricks.
This is a wireless test for Wally. Man I love wireless. I have to get a RIM device.
Jezebel is the home page of fellow Canadian Heather Champ of the Mirror Project. Heather was also a player in two recent Photoshop tennis matches, 10.19 and 10.17. The latter took place on the October 17, 2001 episode of The Screen Savers.
The Mirror Project turns the camera around. They're up to 2409 photos as of this moment.
I wanted to get this link up for quite some time. Photoshop Tennis.
I found a humourous post at The Daily Brad (via Evan) detailing why it might be helpful for you to get to the airport early these days.
" Do not say 'shooting match' to an airport security guard during times of national panic. Colloquial banter is neither ignored nor properly appreciated."
Bookmarked.
Programming religion debate sparked by Joel Spolsky's article on programming CityDesk in Visual Basic. Ah the dreaded C pointer! I couldn't agree more.
I lost the link to eye candy from the underground but just found it. I particularly like the school of HTMinimaLism.
We're starting to take security measures a bit too far. Some people's suspicions are getting out of control.
I think it's human nature to seek retribution. Hiding behind a religion makes it that much worse, not justifiable.
Time and again military leaders describe their actions with references to Islam or Christianity. Neither religion approves of the hatred towards your enemies. In fact both practice forgiveness.
You want to wage war against your enemies, fine. But don't hide behind your religion when it advocates a peaceful solution. Religion isn't even what this is about. Referring to "your god" will only polarize the issue.
Everyone else is linking to this and after reading it I thought I'd point to it as well. Wired is reporting a failed amendment to a new U.S. anti-terrorism bill by the Recording Industry Association of America that would make it legal to hack into a persons machine for the purpose of upholding copyright law. The amendment failed to pass but the RIAA still wants similar measures put in place.
This is one virus update I'll make sure I download.
Mozilla 0.9.5 is out. Not many changes that I can see from 0.9.4 but it's probably more stable. I can't wait for the outstanding mail bugs to get fixed. Now I only need to find out how to fix all those web pages that render strangely under Mozilla.
Via a Slashdot article, Apache Tomcat 4.0 has been released. I think it's time I put JServ to bed.
I felt a little bit older today and memories of my childhood slip farther away when I learned that Ernie Coombs (Mr. Dressup) passed away last night due to complication from a stroke. I still miss Casey and Finnegan too. Story at Canoe.
New virus spreading today. Windows only as usual spreading through email. Symantec has the info on the virus here. McAfee doesn't yet have it up on their new virus page yet.