June 13th, 2005 by Don
On the CIGHTML list that I belong to, one of the participants pointed out this site today for CSS Examples.
I have to say I like what I see. For example, we have worked on several occasions on towards getting drop shadows to work well. He has a simple example of how to do it with nice floats.
Comments Off on Nice CSS Example Site
June 13th, 2005 by Don
This article on Search Mobile Computing dot Com asserts that a widespread virus that will hamper business is not likely to strike soon. They give numerous reasons in the article, including lack of a common platform, the lack of wide spread executable sharing and the like. While the points made in the article may well be true, if you are the one affected, the fact that it is not wide spread may not be all that consoling. One big advantage to PDA’s is that they are typically backed up on a regular basis. It is only a matter of time until it will be commonplace for phones to have the ability to provide backups I suspect, although right now that is unusual for most phones I have dealt with.
Comments Off on Mass Phone Virus Not on the Horizon?
June 13th, 2005 by Franki
In a boon for Open Source software, Nokia have announced that users will soon be able to browse the web using a browser based on KDE’s Konqueror and Apple Safari browsers. Apple choose the KDE browser core (KHTML) for their Safari browser for it’s clean design, speed and standards (“Rich Web browsing experience” in Nokia speak). That same reasoning is behind the decision to create a smart phone browser for Nokia phones. The core of the browsers is Open Source, indicating that the base Operating System is not the only place Open Source has on smart phones. The new browser will be available for all Series 60 phones and is due in the first half of 2006. This isn’t limited to just Nokia phones as the series 60 Symbian Operating System is used by many manufacturers and the fact that the code is Open Source means it can be used by any of them.
It will be interesting to see what Opera makes of this as they are currently the mobile browser champions.
Comments Off on Safari/Konqueror coming to a phone near you.
June 12th, 2005 by Franki
Richard Stiennon VP of Threat Research at anti-Spyware company Webroot Software, Inc earlier this year announced his predictions for 2005 in relation to security vulnerabilities and Spyware problems. Most of the predictions were fairly predictable like:
The number of new Microsoft vulnerabilities will grow.
Which isn’t a surprise to anyone in the IT industry and probably a good many people that aren’t. Other predictions like: The US and European nations will pass anti-spyware laws, and the number of different types of spyware will double to 3,000 are not exactly unexpected either.
However at least one of the predictions causes a pause for further thought. In short one prediction that RSS syndication will soon be used as a tool to distribute advertising, Spyware and other malicious code. RSS is basically just XML so the medium isn’t potentially dangerous by itself, but flaws that target specific RSS readers could conceivably result in the transfer of Spyware. RSS is already being used to distribute advertising so that one isn’t a surprise either. RSS has most of the benefits of E-mail and that means it also has most of the problems. One of those problems is that malicious parties can use social engineering tricks to get people to follow links in RSS to download malicious content, which is probably what Mr Stiennon meant. The problem with that theory is that a user must first subscribe to an RSS feed to be at risk at all, which makes it considerably less reliable a method of transferring malicious content then E-mail or web pages.
One other prediction Mr Stiennon made was that Firefox would become the target of Spyware sometime in the first half of this year. I’m not so sure about this one because it is mostly the more techie users that have become hooked on Firefox and they would not be particularly good targets for Spyware since they are also the kind of users most likely to have anti-Virus and anti-Spyware software running, if they are using Windows that is.
Comments Off on RSS, Spyware’s next frontier.
June 12th, 2005 by Franki
The GIMP (GNU Image Manipulation Program) is one of the many high visibility Open Source programs and is included with nearly all Linux distributions. It has also been ported to Windows and is available for free to anyone with the desire to download it. Some believe that the GIMP suffers from usability problems and isn’t quite at the same level as Adobe Photoshop or Paint Shop Pro, however that is a matter of much debate.
In an effort to remove at least one of those complaints, one enterprising developer took it upon himself to make Adobe Photoshop users feel at home with the GIMP by re-arranging the menus and naming conventions to match Photoshop as much as possible. The result is GIMPshop and thus far the only complaint related to the work seems to be the desire that the official GIMP follow the same conventions.
GIMPshop was written initially for the Macintosh architecture, but has since been ported to both Linux and Windows.
If you are an old Photoshop hand, but don’t have the money or desire to purchase a new copy, or you might just be somebody looking for a powerful free Image editing program, you could do worse then to try GIMPshop, (Or the official GIMP if you are not fussed with the Photoshop related changes).
Comments Off on The GIMP gets a facelifted fork.
June 12th, 2005 by Franki
It’s been official for a while now, but for anyone that hasn’t already heard, ICANN (Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers) has approved the .xxx TLD (Top Level Domain) for online porn sites. The problem is that it isn’t obligatory that such sites use only .xxx domains so the result will be that many of the sites will buy their xxx domain and keep their existing domains as well. The porn industry seems to rely to some degree or another on the “impulse buy” where people find them without meaning to and decide to have a closer look. If all porn was under a xxx domain the days of finding yourself at such a site by accident would be long behind us. Since that is likely to significantly hit the profit margins of such sites, they will fight tooth and nail, any move to make xxx the only domain porn sites are able to use. Since xxx is useless as a filter of un-requested porn unless it’s uniformly used and enforced, this raises the question: What good is it then?
On the upside, a certain movie series that initially starred Vin Diesel would be able to register xxx.xxx for their next release. 🙂
Comments Off on Is the new .xxx Top Level Domain worth the effort?
June 12th, 2005 by Franki
The Sunday Times have an article about the forthcoming new Office release from Microsoft and talk about the level of software bloat that plagues Office now. They also discuss alternative software like OpenOffice.org and Mellel and how Microsoft’s software loses with regards to startup speed by significant margins. Well worth the read.
Comments Off on Alternatives to MS Office.