Introducing Chrome Shorts →
Ah, man. I don’t know; why make a video about a browser so… weird? It’ll be exciting to see what the next ones bring.
(Via the Official Google Blog.)
Ah, man. I don’t know; why make a video about a browser so… weird? It’ll be exciting to see what the next ones bring.
(Via the Official Google Blog.)
Oliver Reichenstein reaching the conclusion that blog comments don’t work.
The problem is, I have a hard time seeing exactly how using Twitter is going to fix this. I have eased on my earlier stance on Twitter, and I now actually use it rather passionately; still, however, I do not think brevity of the comment is going to solve it — as I said, I think not getting a proper environment to answer in is the real problem. Hence, trackback is in my opinion the real solution.
For the sake of completion, the A List Apart (which Pilgrim mockingly puts in air quotes) article that spurred Mark Pilgrim’s outrage.
Man, this rapid linking to related resources sees me turning into Gruber slowly…
Seems like a potentially useful resource for when font embedding really takes off.
(Via aforementioned article by Mark Pilgrim.)
Great article — though a bit more rant-y than is his usual style — from the inimitable Mark on what’s the problem with font embedding, and what we can do to get around the issue. (The article is titled ‘Fuck the Foundries’, so you take a wild guess as to what his suggestion is.)
It’s nice to see that even Comic Sans’ creator doesn’t like the font. This, however, is great:
“If you love it, you don’t know much about typography,” Mr. Connare says. But, he adds, “if you hate it, you really don’t know much about typography, either, and you should get another hobby.”
(Via Khoi Vinh.)
I just spent [[80 DKK]] on buying April March‘s Chick Habit album, although I could have purchased the songs one by one, and only having had to pay [[56 DKK]], because I already have the Chick Habit song.
But then, the real stupid in this is obviously me, because I didn’t look properly into this. But still. (It’s a great album, though.)
Decent, although very basic, guide on how to set your website up respecting common typographic guidelines by Antonio Carusone.
Thoughtful — and very long, as is his style — essay from Steve Yegge on the subject of legalising marihuana.
Steve makes a very good argument for his cause — ‘it’s hard’ — but I find it a little odd, and he seems to say there’s something unique about marihuana in this sense; which is obviously ridiculous. Making any kind of law is hard, and saying it only applies to marihuana is a little weird.
But it might be useful in the future for people who believe it’s be possible to legalise (or indeed, prohibit), and be over with it. That’s just not how it works.
While the execution is very great, I really think it’s too close to being a scam along the lines of those fake virus protection things. I can’t endorse it, because it just doesn’t feel right. Imitating browser ui seems bad karma, no matter how or why you do it.
(Via For a Beautiful Web.)
This is Simply Jonathan, a blog written by Jonathan Holst. It's mostly about technical topics (and mainly the Web at that), but an occasional post on clothing, sports, and general personal life topics can be found.
Jonathan Holst is a programmer, language enthusiast, sports fan, and appreciator of good design, living in Copenhagen, Denmark, Europe. He is also someone pretentious enough to call himself the 'author' of a blog. And talk about himself in the third person.