Posts Tagged ‘internet’

Project Gotham Racing: London

Wednesday, September 12th, 2007

I’ve just stumbled across google’s embeddable maps feature - so I have to give it a go

View Larger Map

Connection issues

Monday, July 2nd, 2007

My blog seems to have developed a cold - I keep getting the following message - and I have no idea how to cure it.

CCGI Error: Execution of this script not permitted


Execution of (blog) is not permitted for the following reason:
Script is not a regular file
Server Data:
Server Administrator/Contact: support@plus.net
Server Name: www.stevebosman.co.uk
Server Port: 80
Server Protocol: HTTP/1.1
Virtual Host: www.stevebosman.co.uk
Request Data:
User Agent/Browser: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; en) AppleWebKit/522.12.1 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/3.0.1 Safari/522.12.2
Request Method: GET
Remote Address: 217.206.91.162
Remote Port: 30741
Extra Path Info: /index.php

As a result of the above I upgraded the blog last night, and the problem is still there, but it is intermittent - with enough refreshes it goes away for a bit.

Thoughts on Safari for Windows

Wednesday, June 13th, 2007

Well, I’ve installed Safari for Windows and I thought I might as well record my thoughts. As Joel Spolsky says, it does seem to take a while for the application to initially load and the fonts do at first seem blurry, but loading times do get better and being a font whore (ever since reading Donald Knuth’s MetaFont book back in the summer of 1990) I think I approve of the reasons why the fonts look the way they do and could easily get used to it.

It is a bit odd that like a Windows 95 application it installs straight into the root of the “All Programs” folder and not as per current windows style guidelines into a sub directory (e.g. “Apple Safari”) - even Microsoft Office now does this correctly - and the fact that I’m now running something with a UI that looks extremely Mac-like is particularly odd (the only obvious difference I can see from a mac is the menu bar is within the app). So far (and I’ve only used it for an hour or so) there is one feature which other browsers should (ahem, cough) borrow and that is all text areas are resizeable - quite frankly brilliant. I’m also fairly impressed that, with the exception of a popup calendar, the web application I work on works (yay! for attempting to be standards compliant).

Safari for Windows

Tuesday, June 12th, 2007

The announcement of Safari for Windows is something I wasn’t expecting and I can’t work out if it is a good thing or not. I dislike Internet Explorer and am happy about the inroads that Firefox has made into marketshare, but can’t help feeling that without a huge advertising campaign another browser is just going to occupy the same kind of niche position opera or, even worse, flock (a browser I like, but with a core which will always be playing catchup with firefox) has.

I guess if one good thing comes out of it (and assuming it has the same rendering engine) people might actually test their websites on it and keep Mac users happy.

Countries I have visited

Wednesday, January 31st, 2007

A map of the countries I have visited - unfortunately some are so large it gives a disproportionate effect, and others I no longer remember since I was too young.

create your own visited countries map or vertaling Duits Nederlands

Flickr/Yahoo

Wednesday, January 31st, 2007

After last year’s takeover it was obvious that it would happen one day. I got an email telling me that from mid March I have to sign into flickr using a yahoo id. I know I should have one, but I haven’t used it in years and I can’t remember the password so I’ve created a new one using an underscore where normally I’d put nothing.

PlusNet - Broadband Bandwidth Usage

Tuesday, July 25th, 2006

PlusNet sent me an email about improvements to its customer services, the email also contains a link to graphs of broadband bandwidth usage which I think is extremely informative. I knew peer-to-peer usage was high, but didn’t realise quite how unrelenting the usage is.I also, perhaps naïvely, assumed that web usage would show a significant peak in the evening when in fact that is fairly static from 9am to midnight.