--- title: "It's a Weblog Entry!" date: 2005-01-08 02:48 status: published description: > What - the title isn't descriptive enough? tags: university, Mozilla, York, web browsers, the Web, software, Opera, Internet Explorer links: - url: http://www-users.york.ac.uk/~gkn500/ title: "Mooquackwooftweetmeow B" description: "My university webspace, to which I have access when at uni" rel: related type: text/html - url: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/4122067.stm title: "Dome hosts homeless for Christmas (BBC News)" rel: related type: text/html - url: http://getfirefox.com title: "Get Firefox" rel: related type: text/html - url: http://getthunderbird.com title: "Get Thunderbird" rel: related type: text/html - url: http://snapshot.opera.com/ title: "Opera (8.0) Beta" description: "It can talk Americanly!" rel: related type: text/html ---
OK, so the normal service has been a bit thin on the ground. Aaanyway... I'm back off to university tomorrow (Sunday); any new text and/or other whatnot will appear at Mooquackwooftweetmeow B, my university webspace.
It took them four years, but this Christmas the people in charge finally cottoned on to the idea of putting two and two together, where the first “two” is a lot of homeless people in London and the second “two” is an empty Millennium Dome.
Some guys decided to call Firefox “1.0” for a change. It seems to have worked. Then some other guys did the same with Thunderbird; that also worked reasonably well. And then roughly 20 million people downloaded them and they saw that they were good. And they divided the Firefox and the Thunderbird from the other applications; the Firefox and the Thunderbird they called “cool!” and the other applications they called “less so”. And lo Internet Explorer became without form and void, and darkness was upon the face of its developers. And Bill said “let there be users” but there were no users, for they saw that it was bad. And the grace of web standards be with us all. Amen.
Or something like that.
They made a browser that can talk like an American, but it still insists on trying to sell me things I don't want, and I can't stop the browser or webpages from doing it. I guess they're firmly targetting users who can't see.
It's 2005, you know - happy new year to everyone.