Jason Kottke : Hello, hexagonal iMac-inspired goodness.
For a counter-point to this thought, take a stroll to your local library or magazine store and pick up the current issue of Harpers. They've reprinted a convocation speech delivered by
Mark Kingwell. Smooth things, he argues, are tools of The Man and will only lead us down the road to greater homogenization and servitude. He also recently wrote a piece for Saturday Night extolling the virtues of concrete, unfinished of course. Unfortunately, SN has revamped their website
without first finishing the archiving system.
Hrvoje Niksic : htmlize.el
"To use, just switch to a buffer you want HTML-ized, and type `M-x htmlize-buffer'. After that, you should find yourself in an HTML buffer, which you can save. Alternatively, `M-x htmlize-file' will find a file, font-lockify the buffer, and save the HTML version, all before you blink. Even more alternatively, `M-x htmlize-many-files' will prompt you for a slew of files to undergo the same treatment. `M-x htmlize-many-files-dired' will do the same for the files marked by dired." If I could be any computer program, I think I'd like to be emacs.
DHTML Lab : Where does the tummy-rumbling come from?
I had no idea that "The string argument of document.write() is exported as a text file to [Navigator's] cache on your hard disk. The text file is read back and the contained HTML rendered in the layer." and that consequently "Navigator can handle thousands of layers in a single page with no problem, but may choke with too many document.write's."
Monkey Radio
"Grooving sexy beats" ( streaming mp3 )