CSS Naked Day 2008

I read about this in someone else’s blog and the first thing that floated in my mind was the word “NAKED”. I did not even pay attention to the word before it, CSS. I only realized after I read the whole article regarding CSS Naked Day when the article was already talking about showing off your <body>. I was like… the whut?!? Body with < and > ? Duh… html haha! Based on the website that hosts this event, “the idea behind is to promote Web Standards. Plain and simple. This includes proper use of (x)html, semantic markup, a good hierarchy structure, and of course, a good ‘ol play on words. It’s time to show off your <body>.”

It’s on April 9, 2008 and a few hours from my timezone. If you’re in the western part of the world, then you have lots of time to tinker your site and strip all its CSS script. If you want to sign up and join this event, click here. I’ll see if I’ll have time because I am still new to Blogger and I am not quite familiar with the internals of it. If not, then I’ll just strip my own personal site for the whole world to see.

Again, the link of CSS Naked Day 2008 and how to join.

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ASP? PHP? JSP? What-Else-P?

These 3 technologies are the most famous these days in the web programming world. Sometimes you’d ask yourself, which of these 3 is the best? The answer, there’s none. It really depends on a lot of factors to decide which technology is best to use. In my experience, these are the following…

In the case of server setup, ASP would be easiest as installing IIS (Internet Information Server) is very easy. Just add this under add/remove programs, add/remove windows components and check the checkbox of Internet Information Services (IIS). Once the server installed, you can then place all your ASP pages under it default working directory c:\inetpub\wwwroot. I said ASP is easiest because you do not need to download the IIS installer. It is part of your OS installer so you can install it anytime. With JSP, you can download Apache Tomcat which is free. Installation is not a hassle and you then place all your JSP files right away under the server’s default webapp directory. Mostly when developers work with JSP, they are usually packaged as a web application archive file (.war). As for PHP, it’s the most hassle. There are so many things to configure before you can get PHP running. I use Apache HTTP Server for PHP but you would have to download PHP and configure its plugin to be used by the server to interpret PHP code.

In the case of language experience, if you already know VB/VBScript, quickest would be to go for ASP since it supports VBScript. If you know Java, then you go for JSP. If you know C, then PHP is for you. If you have patience to learn all of them, this is the order in which I rate each technology according to easiness: ASP/PHP (tie), JSP.

In the case of performance issues, there is really no clear winner for me. I’ve read a lot of articles that often compares the performance between these technologies. The secret for good performance is how well you design your system. If you messed it up real good, then good luck with your web application. And of course, you would have to have a fast server in order to process transactions efficiently, else the good design solution would be useless.

As far as I know, Servers for PHP do not have database pooling. As do ASP. If there are any now, please let me know. I’m pretty sure JSP’s server like Apache Tomcat supports database pooling because I have tried using it. I searched the same thing for PHP but could not find any in Google. Database pooling gives you a huge advantage on resource management. Click here to read more about it.

There may be other issues that need to be put into consideration when comparing these 3. For me though, these are it.

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Japanese phone company testing scent downloads

This is something new. And I’m impressed.

From CNN:
Japanese cell phone users will test a new service that allows them to download fragrances, major telecommunications company NTT Communications Corp. said Monday.

A downloaded fragrance will be sent from a user’s cell phone to a base station that will emit the scent.

Twenty participants using “Mobile Fragrance Communications” can download files of specific scents accompanied by music or video clips, the company said in a statement.

Scent playlists can be downloaded from “i-mode” mobile Web site run by the company’s affiliate, NTT DoCoMo.

The service uses a handset’s infrared port to transfer the “fragrance data” to a dedicated device similar to a plug-in air freshener that is loaded with a cartridge of base fragrances. The device then mixes them to create the chosen smell, which it then wafts out.

The service is a cell phone version of an existing fragrance download service for scent users’ homes and offices. Trials will run for 10 days beginning Thursday.

The company is also testing a device that can be connected to the Internet so that a user can remotely program a scent from a mobile phone.
The company in 2005 launched a similar service for Japanese homes, allowing users to download different programs to emit smells from a 73,500 yen (US$720; euro460) machine.

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Is Yahoo Playing Hard To Get With Microsoft?

The way I see it, Yahoo’s playing hard to get with Microsoft because it wants to get a bigger deal than the first offer that was given to them. When Yahoo declined Microsoft’s first offer, the next offer went lower. And now Yahoo wants Microsoft to higher the ante. At the rate they’re going, if Microsoft uses a brute force approach to take over Yahoo, it could buy it out at a smaller price than what was originally offered and what Yahoo was expecting. As much as I like Google, it’s always best that a competitor exists to keep things in check. That way, monopolization will not exist. Is it pride? or greed. I do hope the outcome for this would be good.

News about Yahoo’s answer to Microsoft’s 2nd offer can be found here.

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