Archive for May, 2007

Delphi for PHP 2007

Wednesday, May 9th, 2007
Title: Delphi for PHP 2007
Reviewer: Sabine Rothe
Category: Development tools
Publisher: Borland, CodeGear
Summary: German translation of the Delphi for PHP review by Manuel Lemos submitted by Sabine Rothe, Partnermanager at CodeGear from Borland.
Delphi for PHP 2007

Easy Ajax with jQuery

Monday, May 7th, 2007

Ajax is changing web applications, giving them a responsiveness that’s unheard of beyond the desktop. As Akash shows in this hands-on tutorial, jQuery makes it easy to integrate Ajax into your web applications.

NFO Viewer 1.0 Released

Friday, May 4th, 2007


I’ve released Version 1.0 of my NFO Viewer. NFO files are ‘information’ files, made infamous during the cracking / demoscene of the early 90s, often featuring extremely clever artwork considering the images are made of nothing but extended ASCII characters. This script will parse and display an NFO file using a custom font that ensures the extended character set is displayed accurately.
Continue reading “NFO Viewer 1.0 Released”

Learning from Digg (DeCSS 2.0)

Wednesday, May 2nd, 2007

As I write this, Digg is offline after being overrun with stories about the HD DVD key that was recently leaked.

Why are such stories so popular? Primarily because the original story about the leak was removed, which itself was a reaction to recent threats by AACS LA, and these events have garnered widespread attention. Jay Adelson briefly explains the situation and asks for some cooperation:

We all need to work together to protect Digg from exposure to lawsuits that could very quickly shut us down.

Slashdot’s story is unlikely to suffer the same fate, so many Digg users are questioning Digg’s stance on this issue. To be fair, this has very little to do with Digg specifically, and I wish them the best of luck addressing the current situation.

The real issue is that the traditional notion of damage control doesn’t really work in a world where information spreads so quickly. I have previously expressed concerns about mob mentality, and this situation is another lesson. Prior to the recent threats, most people didn’t care whether they could write their own software to watch movies. (The key was leaked months ago.) This wasn’t big news.

Now it’s everywhere.

Is it just me, or is this DeCSS 2.0?

Posted Wed, 02 May 2007 06:50:43 GMT in Chris Shiflett’s Blog