Why are people still talking about web browsers like it’s 1995? The EU wants to force Microsoft to include competing browsers with Windows. It came up on the last episode of Cranky Geeks and
As I’m sure you’re aware, in Mustapha v. Culligan of Canada the plaintiff had a mental breakdown after seeing a fly in bottle of water he had purchased from the defendant. The Supreme
Formula for an episode of Restaurant Makeover Chef and designer make fun of restaurant Meet the owner, the owner is either: Proud, or Improbably accepting of criticism Money exchanges hands
There was a recent discussion on Security Now about how nice it would be to have a Yubikey-like device that uses public key encryption to sign a provided string of text and thereby provide strong
Gmail has finally added support for Google Gears. This is great if you feel the urge to type an email or need to look something up while stuck in the Moot Court Room. Or if you’re annoyed by
It has now been a few months since I switched to Gmail. Here is what I’ve learned. Extensions There are two Firefox extensions that are absolutely great: Better Gmail 2 is a collection of
I think people enjoy naming things. That’s why we create distinctions even when they don’t seem to serve a practical purpose; it gives us more things to name. Unilateral and bilateral
When this post on social networking was published by Rex Shoyama at IP Osgoode I tried a few times to write a comment on it, but each comment turned into a thoroughly rambling essay (to borrow a
I just thought this was an interesting set of suggestions by Facebook. I wonder what algorithm decided “Geoge” was a more likely name than
Backstory I used to run my own Courier/Postfix mailserver to manage my family’s email (technically, I still do, but more later). Of late, I’ve been finding this to be a little bit of a
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