Items tagged with microsoft

Link // 10.29.2008 // 10:07 AM // 0 CommentsMicrosoft: I’m a PC, and I’m Creepy as Hell

Sometimes I wonder how Microsoft is so incredibly bad at “getting it.” Visit site »

Link // 09.28.2008 // 2:52 PM // 0 CommentsjQuery finds its way into Microsoft and Nokia stacks

Wow. Big win for jQuery. Microsoft is apparently planning to distribute the JavaScript library with Visual Studio, and make it the sort-of go-to library for .NET development. I’m still of the mind that backend development frameworks like .NET (and Django, and Rails, and Cake, and Java…) shouldn’t be in the business of “preferring” a particular front-end library, but you can’t really deny that this is a Really Big Deal™ for the jQuery project. Visit site »

Link // 09.16.2008 // 7:59 AM // 0 CommentsIEBlog: Microsoft CSS Vendor Extensions

Microsoft is moving all their proprietary CSS extensions to the -ms- namespace for IE8. Glad to hear it! Visit site »

Link // 08.17.2008 // 8:39 AM // 0 CommentsCounterNotions: Why Apple doesn’t do “Concept Products”

A really nice piece on “concept” products, such as those we see all the time from car companies, Nokia, Microsoft, and the like:

It turns out that when capable designers are given real constraints for real products they can end up creating great results. In Apple’s case, groundbreaking products like the iMac, the iPod and the iPhone. Constraints have a wonderful way of focusing the mind on the fundamentals, whereas concept products can often have the opposite affect.

Design is all about constraints, and concept products inherently remove most of them. Apple seems to spend most of its time focusing on products I can build today (or in the near future), rather than on what might be possible 10 years from now. Visit site »

Link // 06.27.2008 // 12:55 PM // 0 CommentsBill Gates: top ten greatest hits (and misses), the Microsoft years

Even ignoring all the charitable work he’s done and focusing solely on his tenure at Microsoft, it’s hard to deny that Bill Gates has had an incredible career full of hit products. People love to make light of the misses (Vista, BOB, Windows ME, Zune) and ignore some of the truly outstanding products the company has put out under Gates’ watch (XBox, Visual Basic, Windows Mobile, Microsoft Mouse, Windows Media Center). Love him or hate him, it’s hard to deny his impact. So long, Bill. The industry will definitely miss you being a part on a day-to-day basis. Visit site »

Link // 04.28.2008 // 2:52 PM // 0 CommentsIf Microsoft goes fully hostile on Yahoo

Marc Andreessen in plain English on the various possible outcomes of the MS/Yahoo situation. Visit site »

Link // 04.16.2008 // 12:45 PM // 0 CommentsInternal Microsoft Vista SP1 promo: “Rockin’ Our Sales”

Wow. This is just unbelievably horrible. I don’t know what more to say. Wow. Visit site »

Link // 04.16.2008 // 12:45 PM // 0 CommentsInternal Microsoft Vista SP1 promo: “Rockin’ Our Sales”

Wow. This is just unbelievably horrible. I don’t know what more to say. Wow. Visit site »

Link // 03.05.2008 // 11:27 AM // 0 CommentsInternet Explorer 8 Readiness Toolkit

Chris Wilson and his team at Microsoft release a “readiness toolkit,” for IE 8, which includes (among other things), a beta of the application and a new debugging tool long the lines of Firebug. Nice.

As of today, the Web Standards movement is over. We won. Visit site »

Link // 03.03.2008 // 3:55 PM // 2 CommentsMicrosoft changes stance on version targeting default behavior

We’ve decided that IE8 will, by default, interpret web content in the most standards compliant way it can.”

So there you have it. This should make a lot of standards-oriented developers happy, as it makes out jobs easier. I think this is the right move by Microsoft, although I never could quite figure out very firmly where I stood on the whole topic. At the very least, it prove MS is listening to the developers, and that can only be a good thing. Visit site »

Link // 02.21.2008 // 2:39 AM // 0 CommentsEric Meyer: Almost Target

Eric shares a story about a time in his days at Mozilla when they were faced with a similar situation to that which led Microsoft towards version targeting.

I feel sorry for the guys on the IE team. Having talked to a few of them personally about this, I know they’re smart people who want to do the right thing for the web. But the right thing, for Microsoft, is not necessarily the same as the right thing for the web. They’re stuck between a rock and a hard place, and they’re trying to make the best of it. Debate the pros and cons of Microsoft’s version targeting proposal all you want, but do keep in mind that these are genuinely good people, working hard at bringing IE up-to-par with web standards (no easy task, as far behind as it had gotten). They’re not the evil Microsoft borg — they’re regular people. They’re doing the best they can in a no-win situation — give them a bit of a break. Visit site »

Link // 02.19.2008 // 11:54 PM // 4 CommentsThe B-List: X-UA-8-Ball

James Bennett talks again about X-UA-Compatible (Microsoft’s IE8 version targeting mechanisim). This one is funny, and probably accurate — but it still doesn’t make me get that up in arms over the fact that I have to add a meta tag to my documents. Even if I have to do something similar again in a few years with MS releases IE9, I’m not that upset about it. Why? One, because getting up set isn’t going to change anything, and two, because in the time it takes people to write ALA articles about this stuff, I could re-jigger 150 sites for IE8 and move on with my life. To put it bluntly: I disagree with with MS is doing, here, but not passionately enough for me to spend a lot of time fretting over it. Visit site »

Link // 02.19.2008 // 9:08 AM // 5 CommentsA List Apart: Version targeting, take two

Jeremy and Jeffrey have a bit of a shoot-out regarding the IE version targeting mechanism in the latest ALA. For what it’s worth, I come drown more on Jeremy’s side of this one — the version targeting was a good idea; defaulting to the IE7 rendering engine was not. But, I also think this is ultimately not that big a deal. All we have to do is add a single meta tag to our documents, and all is well. No, we shouldn’t have to, but we do, and it will take us no time at all to do it. I just don’t see this as the end of the world. The only part I disagree with Jeremy on is that MS’s plan is “doomed to fail.” It’s not. Yes, people will object to adding the meta tag, but they’ll do it anyway, because the alternative is writing pages for the IE7 rendering engine. Visit site »

Photo // 02.04.2008 // 5:13 PM // 0 Comments // Whistler, British Columbia
Stickel
Stickel
Event // 01.29.2008 // 1:34 AMTypeCon 2007

August 1st, 2007–August 5th, 2007 in Seattle, WA

Event // 01.29.2008 // 1:33 AMHappy Hour Sponsored by Microsoft Expression Studio

March 11th, 2007, 5:30 PM in Austin, TX

Link // 01.28.2008 // 10:05 PM // 2 CommentsThe B-List: X-No-Thanks

For anyone trying to make sense out of the whole IE8 X-UA-Compatible nonsense, James Bennet's explanation is almost certainly the most well-thought out and easy-to-understand one you're going to find. I now have an opinion on this matter. I'm with James: X-No-Thanks.

But even though I have an opinion, it’s not a very strong one. Why? Because, quite frankly, I’m just not that interested. If X-UA-Compatible lands in IE8, I'll suck it up and spend 20 minutes putting the tag in all my sites, toss a few more curse words Microsoft's way, and move the fuck on. Ultimately, for those of us doing standards-based work, this isn't that big a deal. If we're doing things right, and this actually happens, it means we have to put one measly meta tag in our code form now on. Big f’ing deal.

Here’s hoping it doesn’t ever happen, though. Visit site »

Link // 01.07.2008 // 9:41 AM // 0 CommentsThis Video Makes Bill Gates Look Cooler Than Steve Jobs

Bill Gates has been pretty hard not to love the past couple of years. The sound on this video is bad, but if you can get past that, it’s quite amusing. (Anyone have a link to a copy with clean sound?) Visit site »

Link // 12.19.2007 // 3:35 PM // 1 CommentIEBlog : Internet Explorer 8 passes Acid2

Wow, very nice. This is impressive. It also makes Opera look very, very silly. So now that all the majors can claim reasonable standard compliancy, can we please get those browser wars started again? :)

Congrats, IE8 team! Visit site »