We’re not sure whether to be happy or not that someone was stealing an image from us. It appears that it was found via Google Images, so it’s not like the thief reads us regularly. And that goes double, since the thief in question is a radical right-wing site. However, we have dealt with it in a way that amuses us (rather than using any of Tim’s highly valuable suggestions) and await our no doubt inevitable apology.
posted by Tk at 17:14 • • sealed in amberThis’ll cheer you up
If you’re having a hard time dealing with the loss of Fred Rogers, as we are, perhaps seeing a (finally) subtitled version of the Kikkoman video will help.
Via, of all places, Dave Barry’s blog. (Psst . . . Dave! Your stylesheet needs help. Ring us up.)
Farewell
He was such an important part of our life when we were young. We used to see him every day after school, and only missed him when there was an overriding concern, or when we had disobeyed our parents (such as when we went to Kevin Jackson’s house after school and watched cartoons all afternoon). We soon thought that we were too old for him, though, and stopped seeing him. It wasn’t a conscious decision, and he took it like the mature and wise adult that he was. He knew that he had made the impression on us that he had intended, and knew or maybe just hoped that he had taught us valuable lessons that we would remember later in life. Indeed, we later looked back with a fondness on time spent with him, and considered that if we ever had children they too would get the opportunity to enjoy and learn from him. Alas, that is not to be, as Fred Rogers has died.
Marko Karppinen has published the results of his annual survey of World Wide Web Coalition member sites’ web standards compliance, and as in the last two years, the results are poor but spinnable. (Well, two years ago, it was hard to even spin the results into something other than burlap string.)
Our maternal blood uncle is a bit of a geek (nice to know this fascination of ours doesn’t come from nowhere) and was on a standards committee of some sort several years ago. In a discussion about web standards we once had, he said, essentially, that most of the big companies on these standards committees have little interest in full and real implementation of new standards. They see standards as holding them back. The longer they can dither at the meeting table, the longer they delay approving the standards (or—extrapolation—the more they push the standards into the realm of the theoretical; we’re looking at you, XHTML 2), the more they can work on obtaining their market share by hook or by crook. Once they obtain market dominance, their way of doing things becomes the standard.
Case in point: innerHTML. IE used this for many years, and it was indeed a useful property for DHTML work; now it’s been accepted by Mozilla despite that browser’s otherwise close hewing to standards. However, it does not semantically fit with the way web standards are going. If standards are created with the idea that they will still be valid in 50 years, we would ask, “Who will be using HTML in 50 years?” Maybe XML, maybe some other markup language that can benefit from a property that translates into “the content between the delimiters”, but not necessarily HTML at all.
A few days late and several dollars short, my post about the five questions from the pro-war folks in the Great Cross-Blog War Debate:
Outside of all that, let us be clear: We are in favor of the Bill of Rights and the Universal Declaration of the Rights of Man being extended to all peoples everywhere. Heck, we’re in favor of the United States minimum wage being extended to everyone everywhere, too. But there has to be some consistency in our international stand, some respect for the world community that we have agreed to respect, and some political thinking that goes beyond the next election.
posted by Tk at 11:05 • • sealed in amberAs happens often, Mark Pilgrim succinctly encapsulates (if that’s not redundant) a complex issue. This time, he reports on Clay Shirky’s piece titled “Power Laws, Weblogs, and Inequality”. Pilgrim’s summation is more or less the reason we persist in writing Bleahh. We’re still in the realm of possibility, since we have not made friends through this blog with whom we could have lunch, and we’re not particularly looking for that. However, we do get people who read occasionally, and if a preexisting friend with whom we don’t communicate much gets to keep up on our life through this means, so much the better. As well, like so many things, it’s worth doing for the doing, not necessarily for the rewards it does or does not bring.
Coming back to the original piece: We would like to see, in the interest of egalitarianism, a refutation of the Shirky piece or at least a constructive argument against all or some of it.
Since you just really needed something to kill more time while at work, or while unemployed, or suchlike, Activision’s Pitfall has been ported to Shockwave. Ye gods! (Thanx to the ever-inspiring Coudal)
posted by Tk at 13:50 • • sealed in amber