Monthly Archives: September 2004

Car Service Means No Mac

This morning, I took my car in for a service. I thought it would just be a simple service — they’d change the oil, check the tires, clean the window, or whatever else they do for a normal service. But NO! It turns out I’ve blown the head gasket! I don’t really know what that is, but apparently it very serious, and caused oil to leak somewhere it shouldn’t have) I got a call from them letting me know how bad it was, and that it was going to cost anywhere from $800 to $1500 AUD, which is quite a bit more expensive than the $90 service I was expecting. But what else should I expect when I’m driving around in an old Hyundai Excel (1992 model). I know. They don’t really excel at anything, but that’s what they’re called.

I had been saving up for, and planning to buy my first Mac soon. I was considering getting one of those new iMacs, but now I have to continue using this old, slow and insecure Windows machine. I really wanted to get one — Macs seem to be the preferred system among web developers, and I really need access to Safari so I can develop websites to work with it.

So, I had a big decision to make. Either I risk leaving the car until I can get back to Parkes where my brother can fix it for less (It’s very handy having a mechanic in the family); or I get it done here in Sydney, even though it may cost more but is probably better for the car. Either way, getting a Mac would have to wait till I can save up again, so I figured the risk wasn’t worth it and decided to get it fixed here. Oh well, I guess I’ll just have to wait another few months before I get a Mac. Unless I get lucky and my boss decides to give a bonus for turning up to work on time. ?

Atom Feeds

I have finally got around to setting up the atom feeds correctly for both of my blogs. I’ve gone for a while without any feeds available, which probably means I’ve lost out on quite a few subscribers. Well, for those of you, if any, who’ve been visiting the blogs regularly, I’m happy to say the feeds are now available, and set up for auto discovery. The feeds are just the Atom feeds that blogger provides. As I said, The feeds are available for Lachy’s Log and Net Twits.

I was considering setting up an RSS feed as well, but having read the disasterous RSS 2.0 spec today, and Mark Pilgrim‘s myth of RSS compatibility, I have decided that RSS has been created as a mess of proprietary extensions worse than the HTML extensions created during the browser wars. For starters, there’s not even an agreed upon expansion for the acronym. It started out as RDF Site Summary, which was later chagned to Rich Site Summary, and finally to Really Simple Syndication. That was confusing enough, and now to see that not one is really compatible with any other, I’d rather just steer clear of the whole mess if I can.

The Great Browser Switch

The day we, as web developers, have been looking forward to for years may finally be upon us sooner than we think. Many of us have known for years about the many flaws in Internet Explorer with regard to standards, security and even usability features compared with other alternatives such as Mozilla, Firefox, Opera, Safari, OmniWeb, Konqueror, Camino, iCab and many more. We’ve dreamed of the day when we can cease supporting Internet Explorer with the many CSS hacks required for a standards compliant layout to render correctly; and the day we can finally fully adopt XHTML, although IE isn’t the only user agent holding us back on that point.

The campaigns have started with the momentum of a freight train. There have been many positive news reports that favourably mention alternative browsers, and recommend switching from IE. The Mozilla Foundation have started a 10 week marketing campaign to coincide with the release of Firefox 1.0 due on September 14th. WaSP are sponsoring the Browse Happy campaign incorporating the four major browsers. Some individuals are taking action, such as Jakob Perry who has started switch2firefox.com. Although the site would qualify as a pirated site for copying the Apple Switch campaign, let’s not discredit someone who’s doing something really positive. Thousands of websites have joined in the action by adding Get Firefox and Browse Happy buttons — it just goes to show how much we, as a community, can do to Lead the Web to it Full Potential. I urge you to get on board and help out.

So what more can be done? How can you get involved? Well, if you haven’t already, choose from one of those browsers I listed above and switch to it. Then, visit some of those campaign websites and see what they’re asking for — help them out in any way you can, but don’t stop there. There’s no reason the campaign has to be kept on the Internet…

Let your friends and family know there are alternatives, buy a t-shirt, or Firefox plush-toy for your child. Join the marketing public mailing list. Approach your school and let them know why all students should be using a better browser in classes. Approach your work place and let your system administrator know how switching can seriously improve security. Let them know about Thunderbird while your at it — the vast majority of e-mail viruses, worms and trojan horses only propagate through Microsoft Outlook’s many security holes. If you’re really keen, you could even suggest they switch from Windows to Mac or Linux, however simply switching browser and e-mail clients can close many security holes. Take part in this weeks College Campaign — design a poster, join the steering time, become a college rep or simply share your ideas with the community.

If you have any access to publications in Newspapers, Magazines or even Television, get in contact with in contact with Blake Ross and see what you can do. If you’re an e-mail spammer, we don’t want to hear from you — it will only serve to alienate people. However, even advertising on your blog, or your corporate website will help. Approach your boss, and see if they’ll allow you to add a Firefox or Browse Happy button to the site. If they’re technically inclined, I’m sure they’ll see the benefit straight away. The problem is getting the idea past the marketing minds of the business people that actually run the business. I know this is a problem — the boss where I work is, AFAIK, still using IE 5.5; and our system administrator won’t do a thing about it! However, I think he’s a twit anyway — he didn’t want me using Mozilla, Firefox or Thunderbird for security reasons! ?

Even if you only get one person to switch, it’s still worth it — every little bit counts. Of course we’d appreciate a lot more, but if it’s all you can do then that’s ok. We’ve come a long way, and we’ve got a lot longer to go. So, do what you can, and just help out!