Should have known…which Buffy character are you?
You are
Giles
"You should never be cowed by authority. Except, of course, in this instance, where I am clearly right and you are clearly wrong."
Should have known…which Buffy character are you?
You are
"You should never be cowed by authority. Except, of course, in this instance, where I am clearly right and you are clearly wrong."
I remember when I would write a webpage, and just getting it up and working was enough. My first webpage, which has been lost to the electro-ether, was written in a vi session on a dumb terminal in late 1992 or early 1993. It was post-hypertext, but pre-Mosaic.
After my initial forays into the WWW, I was even guilty of using frames upon occasion, and tables and I were practically on a first name basis.
Now, nothing less than W3C Validated XHTML with CSS 2.0 will do. I simply can’t rest until I’ve eliminated every last stray orphan tag, and design elements in the html? Anathema to me.
<div class=”heston” id=”voice”>
Damn you SILS. Damn you all to hell!
</div>
Maybe it’s hell month. I’m not really sure anymore…all I know is that at one point last night, if you looked at my taskbar, you’d have seen:
A word document: Master’s Paper Question for Dr. Losee, due tomorrow
A dreamweaver window: a web portal for INLS180, due Monday
Opera, with 3 or 4 tabs open in various databases and/or journals
Acrobat, with two articles open for a presentation in INLS180 due Wed
and, of course, iTunes, playing my Study Mix (find me on the UNC system sometime to see what that is)
This doesn’t count the 10-15 page paper I’ve got to work on for Censorship, OR the final paper for INLS201.
Don’t expect to see me until January. Until then, I’ll be the one with the laptop and the headphones at Strong’s. 😛
Not any surprise here…seen on ESR’s blog originally.
William Gibson wrote your book.
Technology terrifies and delights you.
Which Author’s Fiction are You?
brought to you by Quizilla
….it’s my first piece of blogspam. Isn’t it cute? I think I’ll name it George.
It looks like George is from Israel, and George is a ADSL user in Petach-Tikva. Or at least, that’s what this search shows…. if you were curious, “Petach Tikva is located in the center of Israel, seven miles east of the Mediterranean Sea. Petach Tikva is the country’s fifth largest city and its most highly industrialized area. ” It is also a sister-city to Chicago, all you Windy City types out there….say hi!
Perhaps George works at Intel. In any case, I think he’s cute…maybe I’ll keep him. None of the links seem active, and there’s no whois info on the URL’s in them…so I’m not quite sure what the point is. Anyone? Just someone with a fetish for odd prose and trademarked names of drugs?
…if someone is linked to my Old Blog, please update your links to the blog you are reading.
Thank you.
🙂
So here’s my latest revelation about iTunes: it isn’t the Store, or the media playing capabilities. No, no, no. It’s all about the metadata. The usefulness of it comes almost entirely from the complete and utter ease of applying data about the songs to themselves, and then being able to use said data to organize and search your media.
MP3’s have supported metadata (id3 tags) since the standard’s inception, but most media players only use this metadata for informing the user: what song is playing, what song is coming up. They didn’t let you interact with the data, apply your own info to it, and search and sort based on it. This is really the strength of iTunes…from being able to set the “style” (rock, pop, rap) to being able to “rate” the songs with a star count, to being able to attach cover art to a song (as easy as dragging and dropping from a browser…I just search Amazon for the album cover, then yank it).
So that you, Apple, for finally allowing my metadata and media to mix. I love it.
Story from the Daily Yomiuri.
So…I’m trying to figure out how Wired managed to interview Paul for a feature, take pictures of campus, and no one decided to tell me about it? We even get pictures of some classmates in the story. Great publicity for Ibiblio, and here’s hoping it ends up in the print version (not likely, but would be excellent). Very cool stuff…congratulations, all you wacky Ibiblio guys….and great publicity for librarians as well (The title of the piece is “Freedom Fightin’ Librarians…Where sharing isn’t a dirty word”…you GO wired).