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Computing General Web Development

Internet Explorer 8: Stay away, don’t believe the hype, aaaaaaaaaaargh!

I was stupid enough to believe all the offhand mentions like on the Wall Street Journal that said that Internet Explorer 8’s beta actually worked nice. So much so that having not been burnt by installing Chrome, I felt bandwagonesque enough to also install IE 8.

First, IE 8 *overwrites* and *replaces* IE 7. That is as uncool and unacceptable as it gets. You (Microsoft) are replacing a WORKING, STABLE program with a BETA in an all-or-nothing move without too much warning. That’s a load of crap. Suppose you have so much faith in it that you are fine with that.

Next, Security so high it is outrageously stupid. File again, under ‘unacceptable’: on my Windows XP machine, IE 8’s default setting disable JavaScript *ENTIRELY*. I repeat, no f-n JavaScript. Never mind Flash, but you know, it 2008. JavaScript is an unproven, new tool, yup yup. Fail fail fail. Anyway, they tell you that your add-ons are disabled. You click the link to the add-on manager and lo-and-behold, ALL OF THEM APPEAR ENABLED. WTF?

add-ons

So how do you solve this? According to Microsoft’s support, it is as simple as changing an f-n REGISTRY KEY?! As user friendly as entering a class id to the registry. ARE THEY NUTS? DO THEY EVEN CARE?! Is it possible to goof off even more?! A beta means ‘on the verge of release’. This is plain dreadful, Microsoft. Look in the f-n mirror and like, think again. I am so selling my miserable 10 stocks of yours. You suck beyond belief. Really. Done. Indefensible.

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General Web Development

Yahoo! Zimbra Desktop or why Google has nothing to worry about

Yahoo! is the, if not one of, provider of email to the world.
They also have a pretty good calendar and not so bad contact management. A lot of it has to do with people sticking by them because Yahoo! was there early on despite the lack of true innovation in those applications. Now Yahoo! has a chance to do great things and sadly misses the boat.

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General

Microsoft LiveMeeting gets a D

My company is evaluating Microsoft LiveMeeting as an alternative to Adobe Acrobat Connect (formerly known as Macromedia Breeze). The installation of the plugin is clunky – a plain old download and installation from Firefox, though without a browser restart. The layout is even more confusing than that’s of Acrobat Connect, with menus that open but do not really close, and menu items that are not really descriptive. Not sure if it was our fault but image quality was just awful. So it works – you can see what the presenter wants you to see, but other than that, it is no fun.

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