The Good Life... a weblog about life, technology, and the Opera web browser

Posts from October 2001

Date

I just went for a

I just went for a short run. I only did a little over half a mile, but it still felt good. I'm not sure how to really explain why I needed to do that, but it was definitely healthy for me.

I'm not really sure how to explain much of what's been going on lately. I can't do anything I want to. I have no motivation. Things are completely out of my control, yet it seems like that's how it's supposed to be (God's supposed to be in control, isn't He?).

I just don't really understand this world and most of the people that live here. Everyone seems so focused on things that have so little relevance to anything. It's all just really silly.

I'm holding on to a past that is dead and gone. I need to move on and just get over it. It's like I'm waiting for God to show me what's supposed to happen, but He's not going to. I want to know His plan, but I think part of His plan is for me to not know His plan. And I'm cool with that, it's just frustrating.

I want to get past this so badly, it hurts. I don't want to forget appointments. I don't want to lack motivation. I don't want to dwell on a relationship where I'm the only one that seems to want the relationship. It's all so meaningless and stupid. This isn't what God desires for me; it can't be. It can't be.

Don't mind me. I get like this every once in a while. I'll get over it.

*cough* OK, so I really

*cough* OK, so I really only made it to about 7:15am before I went to bed. I got an hour and a half of sleep, I'm going to skip my first class, and I'm going to finish my assignment.

The sun's rising. It's been

The sun's rising. It's been a long time since I've seen that happen. Didn't think I'd stay up this long, did you? This'll be my first all-nighter. I figure that's pretty good, considering I'm in my junior year of college.

Cool Things People Say

Sometimes it's just cool to talk to really encouraging people:

Just because you may have done something wrong in the past doesn't mean it should have bearing on your present personality. Since that situation happened, you have been constantly working to better yourself...you've done better than most people would have. And I didn't know you then. I cannot judge you on something in the past....I deal with you in the present, and what I know now is [that you are] a great person. That is also why I like to see you smile. Because I know [you are] a great person...not a person I think is bad because he may have had one mishap before. And great people should smile. :-)

It's definitely 4:30am, I'm eating

It's definitely 4:30am, I'm eating frosted flakes, and I don't think I'm going to bed tonight.

It's strange how all of

It's strange how all of a sudden it gets dark at like 5pm. It's like it's getting dark in the middle of the afternoon instead of the evening. It's just totally throwing me off.

Intriguing RFCs

In a recent search for an RFC, I came across a rather odd RFC outlining a MIME type to facilitate the wider interoperation of electronic mail messages that include entire sentient life forms, such as human beings. After commenting on this intriguing find on a mailing list, others alerted me to the existence of the Hyper Text Coffee Pot Control Protocol (HTCPCP/1.0) and Standard for the Transmission of IP Datagrams on Avian Carriers RFCs. I find this to be sufficient proof that geeks do have a sense of humor, thankyouverymuch.

Inadvertent puns are sometimes the

Inadvertent puns are sometimes the best kind:

I was going to sing, but I refrained.

My Fifteen Minutes

From Salon.com (over the AP Wire):

Microsoft shuts out alternative browsers

By Anick Jesdanun

Oct. 26, 2001 | NEW YORK (AP) --

Microsoft's premiere Web portal, MSN.com, denied entry to millions of people who use alternative browser software such as Opera and told them to get Microsoft's products instead.

The decision led to complaints from the small but loyal Opera community that Microsoft Corp. was abusing its status as the Internet's browser leader. Microsoft later backed off and said Friday it would support the other browsers after all.

Browser products affected included Opera, Mozilla and Amaya, said Kevin Reichard, editorial manager for Internet.com's BrowserWatch site.

He said version 4.7 of Netscape's browser worked.

Although a Microsoft spokeswoman said MSN supports all recent Netscape browsers, the site blocked visitors using the most-recent version, 6.1, from opening the My MSN customized version of the site, citing unspecified possible data security issues.

Instead, the page encourages visitors to use versions of Netscape browser that are at least a year old, or to switch to Microsoft's own browser.

And despite Microsoft's promises to revise its MSN pages, some Opera users were still having trouble late Friday.

Opera is the Internet's No. 3 browser software, with more than 2 million active users, though it's dwarfed by its competitors. It uses less memory and less disk space than Microsoft's and Netscape's browsers, and Opera users say they can surf the Web faster.

Opera users complained that Microsoft's tactics reduced choice.

It shows that Microsoft unfortunately has a stranglehold on the Internet community, where they can force users to use their browser, said Tim Altman, a Lynchburg College student who uses Opera.

Mike Pettit, president of ProComp, an anti-Microsoft group, urged state and federal investigators to look into the matter as part of their ongoing lawsuit accusing Microsoft of anticompetitive practices.

Jon S. von Tetzchner, chief executive of Opera Software, said he first heard from Opera users Thursday that they were being shut out of MSN.com after the Web site underwent a face-lift.

The blockage coincided with Microsoft 's showcase launch of its Windows XP operating system. Instead of getting MSN's news, games and shopping features, Opera users were given links to download Microsoft's browsers.

Tetzchner said Microsoft originally offered the excuse that Opera did not support the latest standards from the World Wide Web Consortium, or W3C, an independent standards body. But he insisted that Opera supported the standards better than Microsoft did.

A Microsoft spokeswoman said no one was immediately available for an interview. In a statement, MSN marketing director Bob Visse said Microsoft wanted to maximize the user experience.

If customers choose to use a browser that does not tightly support W3C standards then they may encounter a less then optimal experience on MSN, Visse said. However, we still welcome them to enjoy our services at whatever level available.

The statement did not address claims that Microsoft's own pages do not comply with the standards, and a check of some MSN pages through W3C's validator feature returned examples of coding noncompliance.

Tetzchner called the Microsoft move a likely acknowledgment of his 6-year-old company's higher profile in the Internet business world.

Most of the players in the Internet world know who we are and are taking us seriously and I think this incident shows that Microsoft is one of those players, Tetzchner said.

Tetzchner said Opera recently reached a major deal with Symbian, a partnership that includes Nokia and Ericsson, to be the default browser on a number of wireless devices that connect to the Internet.

According to WebSideStory's StatMarket, Microsoft's Internet Explorer is the leading browser, used by nearly 87 percent of the U.S. online population. Netscape had 13 percent, while Opera had less than 1 percent.

Mosaic last night was cool.

Mosaic last night was cool. I've missed the experience of gathering with a group of believers to praise God. Intervarsity conferences are always such a blast and I have this wonderful spiritual high afterwards. Even a small gathering like Mosaic brought back some of those memories and feelings.

One of the coordinators of Mosaic asked me to work on the Mosaic web site over Christmas break. Hopefully I'll have time to do something worthwhile with it.