Too much focus seems to be spent on some binary yes/no vote for a codec of choice, when the subject is the HTML Language. For HTML 5 to evolve with forward momentum, I think it needs to increase support for the objects it models...
LSL, the Linden Scripting Language used in Second Life, greatly impressed me by how it structures the language very closely to the models it controls. As an object branches into a hierarchy of model elements, the methods controlling those elements follows much the same hierarchy.
HTML currently treats video, and thus codeces, with utter agnosticism... Something of a certain size fits the page, and its function is ignored. If the language, however, were crafted to fit the model of video frames and their playback functions over time, there could be far more interactivity programmed in HTML. More importantly, "HTML 6" or later progeny could heap on more methods for human input to interact with video output... or even other input/output combinations. (If the CANVAS tag in HTML can read 3D gestures like a Wii controller, why not webcam gestures?)
In order for HTML documents to properly support the use of the data, I think it ought to provide some support for its standard formats. The result should allow greater interactivity, and I find that a high priority.
What I got from the first commercial was:
Jerry represents a brainless Microsoft customer who is destined to take first place in the Darwin Awards. His head is so full of idiotic ideas that when Bill Gates wants to sell him a "sweet and chewy" PC, he's first in line to break his teeth.
The second commercial seemed well summed up by this article. A cost/benefit analysis of a Seinfeld/Gates stay is like my experience installing XP: You can explicitly tell them twice to stay off the internet and use an assigned address, but they have no respect for social mores. They will fill your resources with their aging disfunctional bloat.
Claudio Santambrogio writes:
Opera runs beautifully on it. The machine is not really the fastest, but Opera's performance is excellent — the browsing experience is beautifully smooth: all sites load fine and quickly, and even complex DHTML pages with heavy animations do not suffer
Out of the blue i got the following email. I can only guess he either read this journal or some similare aspect of my website.
craig pribil wrote:
This Slashdot Article already picked the amazingly shocking line for its inline:
If voting could really change things, it would be illegal.
There's little about the Bush administration that bugs me more than its broad and deep affiliation with crime. The more a company violates federal law, the more our current administration seems to reward it with government contracts. While Bush's selfish misdirection of federal spending into his own investments bugs me nearly as much, you occassionally catch some news that says there may still be hope.
This Story on C-Net news is one of the better pieces I've seen for summarizing the issues at the crux of the SCO v. IBM lawsuit. IBM's counterclaims, and C-Net, help detail the nature of the contracts in question.
The best SCO could do in response is call the claims of IBM, and Red Hat, "groundless." Yet what is groundless about objecting to what SCO has been saying publicly?
While this link might possibly be nearly as debatable as other SCO originated statements, it bears further examination. It was pointed out by "Bobcat" in this ZDnet post.
Points of interest are:
Philosophers of Ancient Greece would often take discussion of morals to the marketplace... After all, how many other places demonstrate such great need?
The marketplace is a unique place set apart for men to decieve each other.
To Red Hat's new charges, SCO has responded with their usual defensive doubletalk and unsubstantiated attacks.
Earlier today, Red Hat has stormed the news with two significant announcements, regarding the SCO v. IBM contraversy, both rolled into a single press release. It was news I wasn't expecting.... but it is better news than I could have anticipated.
Another speech from George W. Bush, another case of him trying to recreate the Universe in his own distorted image.
A few months ago, I filled out a survey for Microsoft on the condition that they'd repay me with a product of my choice. Sounds like a cushy deal... have them produce and deliver a potentially expensive item to me, at the minor cost of my time as an IT Professional. I completed the survey and requested Microsoft Windows XP Professional. Within four weeks, give or take, it arrived at my door.
If all else fails, lower your standards.