Using the Monaco font in gvim on Linux

I wrote a previous tip about how to use Monaco while running an xterm on OSX’s X server. Here’s a similar tip, except running on Linux this time. I like Monaco for it’s legibility at small screen sizes, so I wanted to use it in my gvim session. The first step is to copy the […]

My First Flash Applet

I finally got around to teaching myself a little Macromedia Flash. Here is my first result. The more flash I learn, the more I find it is a superior platform for doing graphic design on the web. It has much more precise layout mechanism, and it appears to completely solve the font problem. I haven’t […]

Back to IE7 for a while

As much as I dislike IE7, Firefox go ing her ky jer ky on me eve ry hour I use it, re qui ring me to re sta rt it drives me even more nuts (and at least 4 of my colleagues have verified that I’m not the only one who hits this bug). So […]

Microsoft doesn't understand Web Compatibility issues

Microsoft has a pretty strong reputation for maintaining backwards compatibility for applications that run on their platform. They have to, since the continued operation of many thousands of critical applications depends on them doing so. Microsoft understands this special position and responsibility, and has put an amazing amount of work into keeping old program working. […]

Itching for a Mac again…

Well it’s been about four months since I sold the Powerbook. I had all types of reasons to get rid of it, but now I find myself looking at macs again. What’s changed? Well there are a few specific things: Mac performance got a lot better. The PPC to Intel jump was huge, and even […]

Notes on Google Indexing

I got a sudden spike in my regular daily traffic last week, and it’s all from Google, and all for an article that I wrote quite a while ago. After googling a bit, I discovered that Google apparently does a full rebuild of their indexes approximately once a month. That means that even if it […]

Paying Others to Pick the Good Stuff

One of the reasons I built a PC this time around was the price. The machine I built cost $1300 or so. The Mac Pro I could have bought would have cost at least $2000 (though with better specs). But if you have the similar specs, the price ends up being pretty similar. Sure, I […]

Using Proggy fonts in Ubuntu Gnome

I’m a fan of Proggy Programming Fonts for terminal use. But they don’t work out of the box on my Ubuntu machine. The reason seems to have something to do with my display’s DPI setting, in combination with the fact that the TTF versions of these fonts are not real embedded bitmap fonts. Actually, let […]