Why tables for layout is stupid: problems defined, solutions offered.
The Elements of Meaningful XHTML
WIPO
overheard at SXSW
“no woman who knows that much about CSS should be that good looking”
Girl 1: because I want to make out with you…but I’m not gay.
Girl 2: you’re not?
Girl 1: not gay…but gay enough.
flickr tags
useful flickr tagging suggestions.
music for march and early april
all shows are in San Francisco, except when otherwise noted:
3/20 Libbie Schrader @ Red Devil Lounge
3/24 Tiffany Joy and Iari @ Camera 12 (San José)
3/25 Tegan and Sara @ The Independent
3/26 Iari @ Cafecito (San José)
3/28 Julia Lau @ Biscuits and Blues
3/30 Steve Poltz @ 12 Galaxies
3/31 Steve Poltz @ Starry Plough
3/31 Melissa Ferrick and Garrison Starr @ The Independent
4/2 Tristan Prettyman @ Café du Nord
bash 201
cool tips for using bash productively.
NDAs are a civil matter
Molly has a really good explanation of the legal issues involved in the Apple-vs-web sites (not really “bloggers”) suits:
The violation of non-disclosure agreements (NDAs) is – read this carefully – not a criminal act. This is why comparing the actions of those who might have violated a NDA and those who published the information to murderers and thieves is erroneous by the standards of U.S. law.
What may exist if a NDA is proven to have been breached is what is known as a tortious interference with business. Breach of a NDA may result in fines, or other civil ramifications, but most decidedly not criminal ones.
You see, here in the U.S. we aren’t supposed to mix our business interests (which are heavily regulated by the government already) with those civil liberties granted us via the Constitution and its amendments.
free US online tax filing
you can file your US federal taxes for free on the turbotax site. states may or not be free. california was not. it was $24.95.
fake news
no, not the daily show. the times has picked up on the bush administration’s practice of making fake news reports with fake reporters and passing them off as real:
To a viewer, each report looked like any other 90-second segment on the local news. In fact, the federal government produced all three. The report from Kansas City was made by the State Department. The “reporter” covering airport safety was actually a public relations professional working under a false name for the Transportation Security Administration. The farming segment was done by the Agriculture Department’s office of communications.