# Friday, December 15, 2006

Rockville in the Hizzy, Y'all

Did I mention I love where I live?

Yalda and about 50 other Wootton students were on an unusual field trip that took them to Washington National Cathedral, the Islamic Mosque and Cultural Center and the synagogue. They marveled at stained glass and gothic arches, watched Muslim men perform noon prayers and heard about the history of the Jewish community in Washington, all in an effort become familiar with religious traditions many had never seen up close.

[ A Window On Religion And Tolerance - washingtonpost.com ]

Not just every school system would allow for a field trip like this. Seriously cool, IMHO.

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# Wednesday, December 13, 2006

Food Find

I loves me some Indian food, but it can be expensive to eat out all of the time. My latest food find is well on it's way to fixing that for me. Sure I could get cookbooks, and learn how to make Indian food, but then who work all of my jobs for me? Enter easy-prep, mostly ready to eat, Indian cuisine from Deep:

Deep Foods is one of the leading manufacturers of Indian foods. Since 1977, it has been tantalizing the taste buds of Indian food lovers. Using authentic recipes, Deep Foods offers delicious snacks, frozen meals, ice creams and other specialities. These delicious, all- natural products are prepared to satisfy the most dedicated culinary aficionados of Indian cuisine.

Deep Foods ]

I've tried their Naan, Samosas, and Mutter Paneer and all are tops. They are rather affordable, and soooo many varieties are available at my local hindimart Shah & Patel Grocery, but if there isn't a Hindustani Purveyor of Fine Goods near you, you can get this stuff online as well.

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# Thursday, December 07, 2006

Missed the Marathon?

...missed out on the first 10 episodes of NBC's Heroes...

[ david kearns dot com ]

NBC put the first season up for everyone!

Props to N8

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# Monday, December 04, 2006

Microsoft buys another gem

The Sysinternals web site was created in 1996 by Mark Russinovich and Bryce Cogswell to host their advanced system utilities and technical information. Microsoft acquired Sysinternals in July, 2006. Whether you’re an IT Pro or a developer, you’ll find Sysinternals utilities to help you manage, troubleshoot and diagnose your Windows systems and applications. If you have a question about a tool or how to use them, please visit the Sysinternals Forum for answers and help from other users and our moderators.

[ Microsoft TechNet: Windows Sysinternals ]

Here's hoping that Microsoft doesn't:

  1. Kill any of these great tools
  2. Charge for any of these great tools

'cause I loves me some Sysinternals. And yes I know that you brought these to my attention, many people did, and no I don't remember who was first (though if I had to guess I'd say it was Gruska).

The two that I just had to reinstall 'cause I can't imagine my Lappy without them?

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# Thursday, November 30, 2006

Warm Fuzzies

We just moved to the City of Rockville, MD, and the city built us a website:

Dear New Rockville Resident,

On behalf of the more than 57,000 residents of Rockville, we want to welcome you to our City.

You have arrived in Rockville at quite an exciting time. Rockville’s proud history dates back more than 250 years, and its future promises to build upon all of the character that led to Rockville being ranked No. 26 by Money Magazine on its 2006 list of “Best Places to Live in the U.S.”

You will quickly learn that Rockville is second to none when it comes to providing basic services and access to those special things you sought when deciding where to make your next home. Almost every residence in the City is within a five-minute walk of a park. Cultural and recreational opportunities abound in Rockville. Our special events attract notice around the Washington Beltway. And in 2007, Rockville unveils the start of its downtown revitalization as the first phase opens in the new Rockville Town Center.

You likely already have noticed that the City Web site has massive amounts of information, some of which is not traditionally available on local government Web sites. It reflects our mission to promote openness in government. This “Online Welcome Kit” was designed to help our newest residents easily find information they might need.

And whenever you have a concern or question that you cannot find on our Web site, the staff working under City Manager Scott Ullery is there to help. The main number to City Hall is 240-314-5000.

We again welcome you to Rockville. We know you will love living here.

Sincerely,

Mayor Larry Giammo
Councilmember Bob Dorsey
Councilmember Susan Hoffmann
Councilmember Phyllis Marcuccio
Councilmember Anne Robbins

[ New Resident Information ]

Thanks, City of Rockville. Bawk bawk!

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# Wednesday, November 29, 2006

Microsoft is too freaking big

The right thumb doesn't know what the right index finger is doing, much left the left hand.

Witness my frustration with bulleted lists on webpages. A bulleted list on a web page should be done with a <UL> and a bunch of <LI>'s like so:

<UL>
<LI>List Item A</LI>
<LI>List Item B</LI>
<LI>List Item C</LI>
</UL>

Which should look like this:

  • List Item A
  • List Item B
  • List Item C

However many people use Microsoft's Word product to create their copy, and then just copy and paste into a WYSIWYG jobby and post it. The Word team doesn't like the <UL> tag, or it just doesn't suit their needs or some such nonsense. So what they create for a list looks more like this:

<p class="MsoNormal"><!--[if !supportLists]--><span style="font-family: Symbol">·        </span><!--[endif]--> List Item A</p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><!--[if !supportLists]--><span style="font-family: Symbol">·        </span><!--[endif]--> List Item A</p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><!--[if !supportLists]--><span style="font-family: Symbol">·        </span><!--[endif]--> List Item A</p>

What's that? Conditional comments? Microsoft invented those, right? So they'll work flawlessly with my Microsoft products, right? Check again. MS explains 3 types of conditional comments:

Comment Type

Syntax or Possible Value

standard HTML comment

<!-- Comment content -->

downlevel-hidden

<!--[if expression]> HTML <![endif]-->

downlevel-revealed

<![if expression]> HTML <![endif]>

Wait, the conditional comments that were created above don't match any of the MS recommendations, but I'm sure that's an oversight on the part of the specification writers, and none of Microsoft's' programs will choke, right?

Wrong.

I created a bit of test HTML:

<P><!--[if !supportLists]-->&middot; <!--[endif]--> List Item "wrong"</P>
<P><!--[if !supportLists]>&middot; <![endif]--> List Item "downlevel-hidden"</P>
<P><![if !supportLists]>&middot; <![endif]> List Item "downlevel-revealed"</P>

This should work flawlessly in all Microsoft products, and might cause a hiccup in a non-Microsoft product would be anyone's best guess, I suppose. Let's test it:

IE 6:

ConditionalCommentsIE6.png

IE 7:

FF 1.5:

ConditionalCommentsFF1.5.png

FF 2:

Feel free to use my simple test page to see how your browser stacks up.

Now for the whole truth, the IE HTML that is above wasn't created by me, that's because my Word doesn't seem to write HTML like that. I'm guessing that it is a previous version of Word that is writing the "bad" comments, but I'm still going to fault Microsoft. Why is this particularly irritating to me? Some people use Word to author their emails, and now that I have IE7 installed, that's the engine that my Outlook uses to render HTML emails. Therefore anyone with some certain installation of Microsoft products on their Microsoft OS will always show the stupid "should always be hidden" comments in my Microsoft products on my Microsoft OS, and there is nobody outside Microsoft that can be to blame.

Will this stop me from using Microsoft products, or get on the great anti-Microsoft bandwagon? Nope. But it won't help to convince me that Microsoft is the end-all be-all either. I'm still stuck happily in between the two camps where I can happily complain about both sides.

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# Tuesday, November 28, 2006

Save the Cheerleader...

...Save the world

[ SCI FI | Heroes ]

Haven't a clue? Then you missed out on the first 10 episodes of NBC's Heroes. Since I'm officially addicted to it, it is high time I sucked everyone else in as well. If you do want to catch up, now is the time:

Heroes Marathon TiVoDude.gif

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# Tuesday, November 21, 2006

I lie like a dog...

Nifty. I'll wait for the report before I sign up, though.

[ KooshMoose : Kaboodle for Christmas ]

OK, perhaps it wasn't a lie, but a gross underestimation of how I'd be sucked in. I've signed up for the Kaboodle, ported my amazon.com wish list, and added it to my navigation on the left, as well as farther down I put their little badge thing. So far it's pretty cool.

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# Wednesday, November 15, 2006

My appologies

U.S. game magazine (EGM, Games For Windows) and website (1UP.com) firm the Ziff Davis Game Group has announced that it will discontinue publication of the Official U.S. PlayStation Magazine after the January 2007 issue.

[ Gamasutra - Ziff Davis To Discontinue U.S. Official PlayStation Magazine ]

You can blame me, I just emailed OPM and told them I didn't wish to auto-renew my subscription at the end of it's term. I don't plan on getting a PS3 until the PSThree comes out, so the demo discs seemed pointless. And I'm sure no one reads OPM for the articles...

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