May 2003

Harvard study of Gator

An interesting on-going study of Gator by Ben Edelman at Harvard has gathered much interest lately. Today it appears that the pop-up ads provider Gator is fighting against the study of its software and advertisement placement. On the Greplaw blog Ben writes about Gator blocking access for his test servers, now he is looking for proxys to use for his study.

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E Ink and Phillips with paper-like display

InfoSync World has an article about Philips E Ink technology. E Ink, Philips show paper-like display Philips and E Ink have unveiled a new paper-like display prorotype at the Society for Information Display (SID) show, boasting higher resolution than anything seen before. […] The display features a resolution at 160 pixels per inch (ppi), which is significantly higher than anything demonstrated previously. Enabled by continued improvement in E Ink’s electronic ink display material and Philips’ custom designed thin-film-transistor (TFT) backplane and driver electronics, the new displays are a result of

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GoogleGuy Says

This is very interesting: A blog with quotes from Google staff’s Usenet postings. Instead of having to keep updated on various Usenet groups and Google staffs postings there, all I have to do is add GoogleGuy Says to my blog-reader and I’m automatically updated on postings. Just wish I could put more blogs than Evan’s to the list of Google staff blogging. BTW: If you want to keep updated on new results for searches in Google, then you might want to check out the excelent e-mail service from Google Alert

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Online file-trading saves the day for the record companies

According to a new report most record company executives probably would rather have not been published, the download of music files online is actually benefiting the record companies, rather than being damaging to them and their sales. Stereophile Magazine : The Downloading Myth Several studies also suggest that in light of the deterioration of radio in the US, unauthorized online file trading may be one of the few promotional avenues that actually lead to authorized purchases. New research from Nielsen//NetRatings reinforces this idea, finding that for several key youth-oriented music

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BrowserHistory Class relocated

Its the sad story of the web, resources come and go. Not too long ago I got this e-mail from a fellow in Germany: Hello Jarle, any idea about where Kenny Bunch and his URLS got lost to…? It’s the browserHistoryClass you mentioned that I am interested in. Keep up the good reviewing and evaluationg work that you are known for. I enjoy coming back to read exciting news every time… Kind Regards from Frankfurt Philip Lynch (Ok, so I should have left out the last part — but I

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More about Opera

No, I am not paid by Opera, but I thought this article in The Register was fun reading. You can’t trust a mother when she praises her child, but you can trust dear old Mum’s recommendation for a new piece of technology. The latest instance of approval from the matriarch followed her installation of the Opera browser. It seems with version 7.1 of Opera for Windows, a bunch of Norwegian programmers have done what Microsoft still can’t – make a browser that puts loads of good features right at any

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Unbelievable effort to support tags in IE ;-)

This is a funny bug found in Internet Explorer (and all other software where the HTML rendering libraries are used, such as Outlook and co.). By including &ltinput type crash> in your HTML code, it is actually possible to get Internet Explorer & co to crash! Talk about compliance. Check out the bug report: Secunia – Advisories – Microsoft Shell Light-Weight Utility Library Denial of Service Reportedly, the vulnerability can be exploited to crash the following applications: – Windows Explorer – Internet Explorer – Outlook – Outlook Express – Frontpage

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SharpMT – Offline windows editor for MT

This looks like a very interesting project. Randy Rants’s SharpMT is a Windows offline editor for MovableType. It is using XML-RPC to post to MovableType, and is quite handy if you aren’t always online, but still want the ability to work on blog postings. The project is in a very active phase right now, with new builds being released almost every day. Its still in Beta, so if you start using it – you might find yourself updating quite often. It requires the Microsoft .NET Framework. Things to (possibly) come

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