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8 months ago
in Change.Gov - Miguel de Icaza on Miguel de Icaza's blog
Lots of great photos here:
http://flickr.com/photos/barackobamadotcom
The Seattle PI's cover after election day was amazing:
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/frontpage/SPI-200...
http://flickr.com/photos/barackobamadotcom
The Seattle PI's cover after election day was amazing:
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/frontpage/SPI-200...
10 months ago
in Interactive C# Shell - Miguel de Icaza on Miguel de Icaza's blog
Very cool!
I use booish and booi all the time, this will be another great tool for debugging.
I use booish and booi all the time, this will be another great tool for debugging.
4 years ago
in Spread firefox? How about Spread IE 6.0 Service Pack 2! on Elliott Back's Blog
First of all, Taskbar Grouping is NOT even REMOTELY the same as tabbed browsing. With tabbed browsing you can open several windows, say one for each task you are working on, and open several tabs with information on each task - it is extremely efficiant and effective. Taskbar grouping just doesnt cut it.
It's not fair for you to read off the feature list and say "IE had this 6 years ago". Firefox has been under development for not much more than a year now and isnt even at a final release yet. And of course they are going to list "obvious" features on the site - that's what most users want to see!
Regarding RSS - RSS is now probabaly the top use for XML on the web today. The Firefox developers saw this and added addional support basic but usefull support for it, while microsoft has just sat on their asses not adding any new features.
The last thing I will comment on is installation where you totally missed the point. Firefox is as easy to install as possible for a program that Microsoft didnt bundle with the operating system.
It's not fair for you to read off the feature list and say "IE had this 6 years ago". Firefox has been under development for not much more than a year now and isnt even at a final release yet. And of course they are going to list "obvious" features on the site - that's what most users want to see!
Regarding RSS - RSS is now probabaly the top use for XML on the web today. The Firefox developers saw this and added addional support basic but usefull support for it, while microsoft has just sat on their asses not adding any new features.
The last thing I will comment on is installation where you totally missed the point. Firefox is as easy to install as possible for a program that Microsoft didnt bundle with the operating system.