Shaun 的个人资料Shaun Trennery照片日志列表更多 工具 帮助
2007年5月

Moving to WordPress

I've decided to take the plunge and move my blog over to www.wordpress.com

I've been with spaces for a couple of years now and have always been frustrated with it's limited functionality. After really battling to add a simple tracker image and having to resort to a nasty solution, I've finally made up my mind and decided to move my blog.

Please update your bookmarks etc to http://strennery.wordpress.com
My feed can be found at http://strennery.wordpress.com/feed/

I hope to see you over there!
2007年5月

Prototype Video Training

I've just spent $9 for the "JavaScript with Prototype.js" training video from PeepCode. After I made the payment via PayPal, I was emailed the link to the +- 80mb zip file containing the video and some sample project files.

I've just started watching the 90 minute video and first impressions are good. I'm really enjoying how they use Firebug to demonstrate key JavaScript and Prototype features. This together with the great new online docs will hopefully make me a Prototype guru.

Be sure to watch the preview video for a good indication of what the training video is like.

Link

2007年5月

Whats going on at Digg today?

From a story on Webware

A story was posted that contained the hexadecimal decryption key that allows Linux users to decode and play HD-DVDs. The Digg staff received a request from the Advanced Access Content System License Administrator to remove the story, interpreting the request as following the law and as falling under Digg's pre-existing terms of use that prohibit the posting of infringing content. Jay Adelson explained this in his blog post at 1pm on May 1st.

The Digg user community was not to be silenced, and found a way to route around this censorship. Digg users posted links to hundreds of stories that contained the decryption key, and each one was Dugg up, until the entire site seemed to be nothing but a repository for this one string of hexadecimal digits. A few Digg users found their accounts suspended for misuse.

At 9pm, Kevin Rose reversed course, with another blog post: "...after seeing hundreds of stories and reading thousands of comments, you've made it clear. You'd rather see Digg go down fighting than bow down to a bigger company. We hear you, and effective immediately we won't delete stories or comments containing the code and will deal with whatever the consequences might be. If we lose, then what the hell, at least we died trying."

Link to Webware story
Link to TechCrunch: Digg Surrenders to Mob

Update:
The story has made it to the BBC. Link