2061 Jibbering Musings » Travel

Archive for the 'Travel' Category

It’s alive! Scuttering again…

Saturday, August 23rd, 2003

I made a couple of changes to my scutter, that basically broke under the weight of foaf. I got rid of the 2 table provenance system that let me remove duplicate triples from the main store, this dramatically slowed queries (the store is more than double the size if you don’t remove duplicates). It made it at least work for scuttering, but is too slow to be used for live querying now. A shame, but it was never meant to be robust, or scalable, just a boot-strap to get foafnaut running.

One good thing I added was smushing based on schema reading, so it reads the FOAF schema queries which are owl:inverseFunctionalProperties and smushes on these - it would smush on any others in any vocab it found, but it didn’t find any.

I also created a list of foaf docs in error and a list of foaf wild properties that aren’t really in the schema. Hopefully people will start to fix both, maybe we should have a Clean your FOAF day…

Do webbrowser stats lie?

Friday, July 4th, 2003

Why webbrowser statistics lie is an article by Björn Jacke which gives some reasons why web-server logs are unreliable, this isn’t news to many of us Jeffrey Golberg had a good rant on the subject 8 years ago.

Unfortunately the new article contains some misleading information, and what could’ve been a useful article is made to look like an anti-IE rant, rather than a use the information wisely rant. For example, it says that you can’t disable images in IE, not only can you in all versions (even pocketIE) there was even the Toggle Images power toy, to make it a simple one click operation long before mozilla was on the scene.

It also has an intriguing little fact that IE splits requests for documents into multiple byte range requests to speed loading, I can’t see any other indication of this, none of my logs (on servers which support range getting) show the behaviour, and it surprises me since all MS installations I’ve seen have been strict on the HTTP/1.1 two connections limit (unless you hack the registry)

The favicon part is also misleading, as IE only requests the icon if the site is boomarked, (or a link stored elsewhere in the filesystem), so the actual number of extra IE connections would not be as high as suggested.

There’s also a strange attack on the users of IE as a browser (suggesting it’s used by the thick, and naive internet user) and that these people spend all their time on web-discussion boards, which would skew the statistics. It ignores the fact it would only skew the statistics of those web-discussion board sites, not any others.

Then there’s a proxy argument, that the more advanced user is more likely to come through a proxy, I find this surprising if the thick users use IE, since the most aggressive users of caches are the big ISPs targetting the naive user. Also, I’d’ve thought the more experienced user is likely to have a better connection and therefore be less likely to be using a proxy.

that is not a joke, this can be proven from httpd log entries

Is a quote from the document, the think that can be proven is that IE users don’t know what they’re looking for and spend a lot more time wandering around a site aimlessly. I can’t actually see how this could be proven. (a person with a proxy cache in use for example would never be seen despite going over the same page 10 times in a row looking for something…) Also if it is the case, it shows that us web-developers have a lot bigger problem than accessible authoring, if we can’t even get our users to the content.

It’s a shame, the conclusions of the article are noble, and completely correct, but the anti-IE rant helps no-one, and devalues the message.

JPEG baby

202e Saturday, May 24th, 2003

JPEG baby is a love song to a jpeg baby from the strange Australian chap Tim Ireland who’s presumably bored of attacking Tony Blair with pornography, and now want’s to change the government with dodgy Flash graphics.

Actually of course it’s another of his “can weblogs …”, or more generally simply improving his exposure to the good linkage karma on the web, for the more professional side of his life.

JPEG baby is of course only available in flash, he should do a version in SVG of course, not because the tech would be superior - althought it could do everything in the flash just as well, and maybe better - but simply because the comparison between the two methods would get him a lot of exposure on the web.

Gazelles

Wednesday, May 14th, 2003

If you’re looking for a picture of a Gerenuk, you can get one Page on Gerenuk’s

foafnaut offline

Thursday, November 28th, 2002

I’ve updated foafnaut so that maintaining the offline foafnaut version is easier, if you want to work on the interface independantly - feel free to download and play.

Over a month…

Monday, November 25th, 2002

Over a month since I’ve written here, that’s very naughty of me, my memory will now be shot for the month… ho hum, it’ll be like the rest of my life.

A close race!

Tuesday, October 22nd, 2002

Your running along in a 100 mile race, you’ve been going nearly 11 and half hours, and the 300 metres to go, and what happens? Some guy romps passed to win and take the glory.

Ramona, of my Running club was also running in the “race”, she only did 92 miles though (what a wimp :-) and what did I do on sunday - well I ran 10, so not completely lazy!

Three!

Tuesday, October 8th, 2002

Ben Hammersley tells us about Three and gives us the url www.three.com - a great url for a mobile technology firm - it’s got a single frame and then it relies on flash, and has the normal incompetent script to try and detect if the (Netscape or IE) browser has it available - of course visit in anything a mobile device might have, and you get _nothing_ at all, if anyone is going to have a mobile audience - it’s them.

Of course even if it does detect you’ve not got flash, you then go to a no flash page where it doesn’t even set the background colour (fortunately my background colour is yellow, so the grey text is readable, I wonder what the default NN4 user might get though..), has loads of text in an image - lets hope they can run a 3G service better than they can author websites.

IPR

Friday, September 13th, 2002

THE public will learn that patents are artificial stimuli to improvident exertions; that they cheat people by promising what they cannot perform; that they rarely give security to really good inventions, and elevate into importance a number of trifles…no possible good can ever come of a Patent Law, however admirably it may be framed

That was from the Economist in 1851. It’s a shame we’re still elevating the trifles to importance in the software world. Economist comment on patents

Monster Raving Loony Party becomes even more Global

Wednesday, August 21st, 2002

Yep, the lucky people of New Jersey can vote for a loony candidate from the US Monster Raving Loony Party.

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