June 7th, 2007 by Gabriel

After reading an article from A List Apart about the 12 Lessons for Those Afraid of CSS and Standards by Ben Henick, I wonder if bloggers, especially those using standalone installations, are beginning to appreciate the power of CSS and Web standards. Despite all the fuss about content being king and content management systems becoming easier to use, do bloggers even care to click on their Valid XHTML and Valid CSS footer links? What does content really mean to them?
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Posted in Journal, Web Design | 3 Comments »
June 7th, 2007 by Gabriel

It took me three weeks to code Project Afterlight Burnt Edition. In the first week, I made sure that my design displayed properly in Firefox 2. Luckily, it did. However, I wouldn’t want my Web pages to be viewable only in Firefox. What about in different versions of Internet Explorer? What about Opera, Safari and Konqueror? Without support for these browsers, I’ll surely lose 70% of my readership. So in the second week, I began altering my CSS code to accommodate Opera 9.21 Web browsers. A few minor adjustments here and there, then it was fixed. Little did I know that my ordeal has just begun.
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Posted in Web Design | 27 Comments »
June 6th, 2007 by Gabriel
It all began when WordPress 2.2 was released. I was overly excited to upgrade, so I fired up my development server and updated my installation as per the instructions in the WordPress Codex. I was so sure I properly followed the steps, only to see later that the whole installation got messed up. I got database errors, memory usage inconsistencies, layout issues and a few more. Overall, it was a frustrating experience. Thank God, I was only doing it on my development machine. Then I thought of upgrading my live WordPress installation with a new design. I figured that it would be a better way for me to have some practice.
Now I present to you, Project Afterlight Burnt Edition.

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Posted in Web Design | 1 Comment »
June 5th, 2007 by Gabriel
Last year it was Novell. Now it’s Linux desktop and server provider, Xandros. In relation to the previous article entitled, Microsoft Wants FOSS Users to Pay Royalties, Microsoft has once again signed a deal with Xandros in which the terms were similar to that of the Novell deal, according to Yahoo! News. Furthermore, Microsoft said in a statement:
"These covenants… will provide customers with confidence that the Xandros technologies they use and deploy in their environments are compliant with Microsoft’s intellectual property."

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Posted in Software | 1 Comment »
June 5th, 2007 by Gabriel

As of June 4, 2007, Secunia reported a new vulnerability in WordPress regarding exposure of sensitive information from a remote source. Here’s the description from Secunia:
The security issue is caused due to WordPress using predictable cookies to identify the author of a comment. This can be exploited to view unmoderated comments by guessing and then faking the cookies sent to the original author.
Successful exploitation requires knowledge of the original author’s name and email address.
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Posted in Web News | 2 Comments »
June 4th, 2007 by Gabriel
High definition has been making big waves since last year. Both the HD-DVD and Blu-ray disc formats have been gaining huge sales in the movie industry. In light of these recent developments, I began to wonder if consumers are ready to make 1:1 copies of their hard earned BD’s and HD-DVD’s.

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Posted in Hardware | 2 Comments »
June 2nd, 2007 by Gabriel

After watching a Buzz Report from CNET TV regarding the new feature of Google Maps which is Street View, I was a bit intrigued by Brian Cooley’s claims that the street level view is cool and invasive. It’s cool in a sense that you won’t be seeing the same old rooftops or anything from a satellite’s perspective anymore. In Street View, you’ll be able to see actual streets complete with cars, trucks, establishments and people. Now many believe this is invasive. As Brian said in the video,
You’ll be able to walk up and down the street, zoom in… recognize faces… And it’s really interesting when you search a residential address… zoom in, see the house number, what car they own and maybe even read the license plate? You can basically reverse engineer the kind of license plate address lookup that most states require a court order to do.
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Posted in Web News | 5 Comments »