I took these and uploaded them to Zooomr this morning, but I didn’t get round to blogging it! The cause? A combination of still having to go to college, having a powercut which brought down the internet which then refused to come back up even after the power came back on, and then wondering why the LAN wouldn’t work because of an unplugged cable (wired LANs rule and suck at the same time). Don’t even ask.
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Why Firefox isn’t more than 11% yet
Firefox has taken off on home computers as the second most popular browser, and it’s looking very promising for open source, Mozilla and, more widely, non-MS software.
In fact, it supposedly has around an 11% global market share now, which is great news.
The next thing that needs to be tackled, however, is getting Firefox into the enterprise sector, and getting more and more businesses to roll it out. And before that can happen, Firefox needs:
- An MSI installer for Windows, to make it easy for Windows administrators to roll it out across all desktops instead of running exes manually on each workstation.
- Integration with Microsoft Active Directory, and respect for AD policies, like IE has now. It’s far too much to configure hundreds of installations of Firefox manually. Many corporate environments utilise proxy servers and other network setups, and there needs to be a way to get this configured centrally via AD or similar and rolled out to all FF installations.
If this happens, sysadmins are much more likely to choose Firefox for security reasons, and if it becomes as easy to manage remotely as IE is now, Firefox 3.0 will hopefully be a winner.
I’m not saying the personal sector isn’t important though – we still need to keep pushing Firefox to the average PC user and marketing it.
The success of Firefox could also prove vital for FOSS becoming mainstream in the future. If people use Firefox and have a good experience with it, they then associate open source with good user experience and being a good product. If that happens, we’re much more likely to see FOSS becoming more mainstream, which is good. Best of all, it keeps the traditional software companies on their toes and making good, well-priced products. 🙂
More adventures from Windows 95 VM land
I got IE3 under Windows 95 to display my site. But I didn’t stop there.
After a quick trip around the web to find a copy of IE 5.5 SP2 (the last IE for Windows 95), I manage to grab it and get it installed on Windows 95. Not only does this modernise the browser a touch, but it also installs various DLLs we’ll need to run a much better browser. 🙂
Thumbnails are clickable to enlarge, by the way.
Now we have IE 5.5, albeit at a rather bad 16 colours (not 16-bit colour, 16 different colours).
After an install of VMware Tools, we have the drivers to ramp up the colour depth to a respectable 65,536 different colours (that’s 16-bit colour).
A quick run of Windows Update to apply some security updates from, hmmm, looks like 1999. 😀
And finally, we install Firefox 1.5.0.9 (it crashes on first run, but a reboot and relaunch and it works perfectly). Finally, a decent browser.
Unfortunately, Firefox 2.0.x apparently doesn’t want to work with Windows 95 anymore.
Great fun – and I couldn’t have done it without this guide.
No, this site does not work in IE3
Oh the joys of VMware and a copy of Windows 95. The picture says it all.
Linux Genuine Advantage
A nice spoof of Windows Genuine Advantage:
Linux Genuine Advantageâ„¢ is an exciting and mandatory new way for you to place your computer under the remote control of an untrusted third party!
…we have created a new program available as a required free download: Linux Genuine Advantageâ„¢!
UPDATE: don’t actually download and install the software on that site, apparently it actually works and will lock you out of logging in in 30 days.
WPGet 0.7 Developer Preview 1
I’ve just released WPGet 0.7 Developer Preview 1. I’ve just taken the code in its current state and put it out here, so anyone interested can give the new features a try. In fact, it should in theory be fairly usable on a production site, but don’t trust me on that – I can’t guarantee it will work.
Here’s the changelog of things that are supposed to make it to the final release:
- New support for WordPress author – you can see who published which post in WPGet’s output
- Category support is now fully working, cleaned up massively and is now out of beta
- Ajax comments system – have your comments available with one click from outside the actual WordPress page
- Line breaks in WordPress posts are now honoured in WPGet’s output
- Single post – output only one, static post from outside WordPress (but keeping it up-to-date with WP’s copy)
- New query wrapper function for more centralisation
- WPGet will surpress PHP’s errors if a query fails, and display its own (friendlier) message and email detailed error reports if that’s enabled
- Style support – includes a new style engine making it easier to integrate WPGet with your site’s individual style
- General speed enhancements and code cleanup
- Brand new WPGet Installer (née Config Tool)
Not everything there is done in this copy, though, that’s just a list of stuff that will be confirmed to work by the time it goes final. The main thing missing from a feature perspective is styles (the ability is there but there are no styles yet) and not all the query infrastructure is updated to the new wrapper function. Oh, and it’s all not tested (not yet even tried with PHP 4 yet, so be warned).
Still, have a play around and tell me about bugs if you find them. 😀
Download .zip
Download .tar.bz2
Download .tar.gz
Your chance to stop the BBC using Microsoft-only technology
I’ve just completed an online consultation/questionnaire for the BBC Trust about the proposed upcoming BBC video-on-demand service, and there’s quite an important question posed if, like me, you want open standards and not to be locked in to Microsoft technology.
How important is it that the proposed seven-day catch-up service over the internet is available to consumers who are not using Microsoft software?
It’s vitally important that if you live in the UK (or otherwise pay the licence fee) and you don’t want MS lock-in, to go onto this questionnaire and submit your views. We need everyone possible to tell the BBC to not do it in a Microsoft locked-in way, so please go and complete this.
The more people that do this, the better chance of getting our way!
Take the consulation/questionnaire
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Full text feed
Sorry, everyone. My last post was published with a more link in the feed version instead of having the full content in the feed.
Apparently it’s a new ‘feature’ in WordPress 2.1 – thankfully there’s a plugin that can fix it that’s now installed. It shouldn’t happen again.
Three good and three bad things about Vista
So, Vista hit the shelves yesterday. Now, anyone that knows me even a little bit will know that I sometimes indulge in a little healthy Microsoft bashing now and then, but today I’m going to try and be balanced.
I could rant on and on about how Vista is good, and at the same time how it’s bad, but for now I’m just going to share with you three of the things I like and three things I don’t like about Microsoft’s new release. Bear in mind that the last version I used was Release Candidate 1 and not the final version, so some of what I say might be out-of-date or based on the pre-release version.
Animation well done
This must have taken ages to animate, but it’s absolutely brilliant. Serious props to the creator of this.
Feed reader people, click through for a YouTube embed.