2007 Mar 21, 5:18Get a Chinese propaganda poster personalized with your face in place of the face of someone on the poster.
art poster propaganda painting vintage humor china chinese 2007 Mar 21, 12:38NFL sends take down notice to person posting a video on youtube who turns out to be "law professor by day, is also staff attorney for the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) by night and founder of
Chilling Effects, a web site dedicated to educating the
article cool copyright eff ip legal law rights news fairuse dmca nfl youtube 2007 Mar 9, 1:54An invention that creates and recycles dishes for you.
fabrication food design art neat-fp tool video 2007 Feb 20, 12:32My IE blog post on IPv6 URI support in IE7.
ie ie7 blog ipv6 ip uri browser reference me neat-fp 2007 Feb 12, 9:59My blog post on international mailto URIs in IE7
windows ie microsoft ie7 browser internet uri blog me mailto 2006 Dec 21, 3:21Cool photos of miniatures, toys, postcards or photos held up over their real world counterparts. Some look pretty cool.
humor photos blog gallery 2006 Dec 6, 10:47The blog post I wrote on file URIs in IE7. If you have questions or comments please post them in the comments section of the post. Thanks!
windows ie microsoft ie7 browser internet file uri blog me 2006 Dec 6, 6:18I got another blog entry on the
IE Blog! I wrote about
file URIs in
IE. Lots of fun right? Woo for file URIs! I
added the post to del.icio.us and saw that it had already been added 6 times
previous. This compared to
my previous IE Blog post which was
added to del.icio.us a total of 1 time(s) by y.t. I guess people are more interested in blog posts that have 'URI' in the title than they
are about blog posts whose title references
Dijkstra. Coming soon (or later) to the IE Blog: a post on international mailto URIs. Hooray!
blog ie7 file uri delicious 2006 Dec 5, 12:27This post has a bunch of links to the various new WPF offerings including Jolt which is WPF on the go available as a control for website developers.
blog wpf jolt wpf-e microsoft api programming free 2006 Nov 6, 6:51I've updated my webpage some more. I now have the onmouseover on the thumbnails in my photos section. So that's fun. I'm using the
flickr badge
script and then including a javascript file I made that finds the flickr imgs in my page and adds in onmouseover and onmouseout events. I've also got the whole thing validating on
W3C's HTML validator and
W3C's CSS validator.
The one thing I'd like to fix is the comments for my blog posts. They aren't included in the RSS feed. I'm shopping for a blog site that supports
comment counts in the RSS feed at least. If possible I'd like the actual comments to appear in
the feed but I doubt anyone does that.
css html script validator homepage flickr 2006 Sep 14, 12:19This is the blog post I wrote about CreateURLMoniker. Windows application developers take note: Don't use CreateURLMoniker!
ie microsoft blog uri urlmon createurlmoniker api programming me ie7 2005 Oct 13, 11:13Multipart/form-data mimetype. Potentially used in HTML posts
rfc reference internet mime html 2005 Mar 27, 5:41The Bad Boys of Punctuation return to help post about Halo 2
comic penny-arcade punctuation humor 2004 Apr 22, 3:52I actually have something to say which I thought would be appropriate for the LiveJournal format. Why I haven't posted to the LiveJournal for such a great length of time can be saved for later. I
spent Easter weekend and the Monday following, in Washington, the state. Microsoft paid for me to fly up and stay in Washington so I could do the technical portion of the interview with them. I hung
out with my friend Jeannie and she showed me all around Seattle on Saturday and Sunday. Each night we had somewhat expensive dinners, all paid for by Microsoft. It was cool. On Sunday I stayed at a
nice hotel in Redmond and the next morning I spent just short of eight hours being interviewed by five different people from different groups within Microsoft. Each sub interview consisted of two
portions. First there was the general portion where they would ask me why I wanted to work there, ask about my previous experience, and those sort of non technical questions. The second portion would
take the majority of the time and it would be me trying to solve some technical problem they'd present. By the end of the interview my hands were gray with dry erase marker ink because apparently
everybody's got a whiteboard and they all want me to write code on them. I have to go to class soon and I might post some more stories related to this trip, but mostly I wanted to say that last week
I received a great offer from them and I'll probably be moving up to Washington sometime (weeks or months?) after graduation. Also, I've changed my AIM name from SequelGuy to SequelDave. My email
address will also have to change soon, but I don't know to what it will change.