29 November 2004

Where are your manners?!

[Big Tangent ]

Julian Baggini pleads for some degree of civility, advice which would make Manchester at least the tiniest bit more bearable (e.g. on the tram).

(Also worth reading his books, or checking out his other pieces. Alternatively, you could just go to the source.)

Posted by Ade at 09:05 PM | Reply

19 November 2004

Smart eBay bidding

[Big Tangent ]

Some concise tips for successful bidding on eBay, to help you avoid winning a secondhand broken toilet brush that cost £500 and wasn't even shipped before the seller disappeared with your money.

Posted by Ade at 11:09 AM | Reply

18 November 2004

CSI: My Emmy

[Big Tangent ]

This Slashdot posting neatly summarises one of the main shortcomings of "CSI: Miami", although it fails to mention the David Caruso school of acting (remove shades; look around and narrow eyes as 500 megawatts of Florida sunshine burns through your retinas; replace shades; repeat in every scene), the overly-solicitous pathologist who tries to bond with every corpse and the ballistics expert who probably couldn't say "calibre" without making it sound like the next move at the local square dance.

Posted by Ade at 08:01 PM | Reply

United against football

[Big Words ]

BB looks forward to the day when racism is successfully eradicated from football, since that implies a lot less football players, managers and above all fans, thus reducing the game to a minority sport, at which point the government can ban it for causing cancer or something. But the behaviour of the Spanish fans at last night's match was shocking, simply shocking. OK, we might have the odd racist amongst the English fanbase but at least they're our racists and not some bunch of greasy, castanata-clicking dagos foreigners!

Posted by Ade at 04:28 PM | Reply

Admire my impressive extensions

[Big Job ]

In case you still use IE (and you've been living in a cave for the last year, which seems a likely combination of circumstances), why not get Firefox before you experience one of those "I'll get me coat" moments in polite company? It's only a 5Mb download. It's faster than IE, has more features (e.g. tabbing), doesn't carry a huge "Hack me" sign, highlights bullshit in huge orange letters and ... it's extensible ... extendable ... expandable. Whichever.

Previously, I was using Mozilla with Multizilla and I was very happy with it. But Firefox includes a built-in RSS reader, the one standard that until now still didn't have an acceptable cross-platform client implementation. Hence my quest to make Firefox behave exactly like Multizilla (in lieu of a Firefox-compatible release of the latter, which is under development). It turns out to be mostly achievable if you download another hundred or so extensions from obscure corners of the Internet. Yes, I've successfully spent hours replicating something I already had in the name of running with the crowd - who says Open Source people can't market?! In the process, I came across a few other useful extensions so here's my current list of killer XPIs:

Sage
Extends RSS features, mainly by displaying all feed items within a normal page. This finally gives you a half-decent RSS reader. (In BB's Techno-utopia, everyone who creates "cool" new standards will be forced to supply at least one usable implementation.)
Tabbrowser Preferences
Extends tabbing capabilities so that you force all popups to load in new tabs, etc.
Adblock
Very popular extension that I didn't see much use for until I realised you can use it so block Flash ads and those additional frames that ISPs sometimes add to home pages to ensure that no content goes unmolested by adverts.
Tab X
Adds a close button to every tab. Inconsequential but useful little extra that suggests the Firefox people are taking the extensibility thing to extremes.
Toolbar extensions
Adds most of the remaining Multizilla toolbar functions.
SessionSaver
Saves and restores open tabs and windows on restart. Something else that you might have thought would be in the base release.
Diggler
Miscellaneous URL functions, including changing image or popup blocking options.

Web developers and administrators will also find these useful:

View Cookies
Adds a Cookies tab to the Page Info dialog. (On a WebSphere-based site, this allows you to work out which application server you're on by viewing the clone ID in the JSESSIONID cookie.)
Web Developer
All kinds of evil content manipulations bar fixing marketing write-ups so that they make sense.
Posted by Ade at 03:47 PM | Reply