TopCoder: Интернет-сообщество Анонимных Алгоголиков
UPD: Cтопкоживаюсь? ;)
2007-02-03
Windows - Must live OS
Well, after some investigations, I've concluded that XP SP2 is a "Must Live" OS example. You have to care about it, or it will die.
I've stumbled upon several tools for keeping Windows on our dark side:
- antivirus: Comodo | avast!
- firewall: Comodo | Sunbelt/Kerio
2007-02-02
NameSpace Monkey
What do I Put at the End of a Namespace URI?
Nothing! Ok, so this isn't really helpful. The problem here is that humans see a URL, so they want to point their Web browser at it to see what they get. This is a purely human thing, and is a consequence of the decision to standardise URIs for namespaces. To quote Claude L. Bullard (from the XML-Dev email list):
© XML Namespaces Explained, sitepoint.com
The flaw is the conflation of name, location and identity, but that flaw is the basic feature by which the WWW runs, so we are stuck there. All the handwaving about URN/URI/URL doesn't avoid the simple fact that if one puts http:// anywhere in browser display space, the system colors it blue and puts up a finger.
The monkey expects a resource and when it doesn't get one, this shocks the monkey. Monkeys don't read specs to find out why they shouldn't be shocked. They turn red and put up a finger.What many people do to avoid this "shock" factor is post a document that describes the namespace to the errant viewer. A new idea that builds on this approach, and is now emerging from XML-dev, is RDDL (the Resource Directory Description Language).
© XML Namespaces Explained, sitepoint.com
Labels:
humor,
patterns,
web.development
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