It turns out that the inimitable Olav Junker Kjæer is now implementing Web Forms 2.0 together with three other heavy-weights of IE JavaScript manipulations. > We’ll be building things like the new date/time input controls, the datalist element, a range control (slider), well, all of it in fact. This is a very cool and welcome …
Tag Archives: olleolleolle
Charity Party
Get partying, come to Copenhagen, meet nice people. This is an order. **Henrik’s Charity Party** Entrance fee: 20 DKK 3rd of June 2005 Vestergade 3 (Det skandinaviske selskab)
The President’s Analyst (1967)
OK, this is a one-liner: I have to see The President’s Analyst (1967) before I die. James Coburn! In a wig! Take a look at that photo in the gallery.
Design book hints found in unusual places
Lars Pind is an entrepreneur in the Copenhagen Internet business climate. A force to reckon with, he founded the company Collaboraid, which won the Startup of the Year award at the conference reboot 6 in 2003. Their website’s jobs section has interesting literature tips: > These books are considered required reading, because they > explain …
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Riders!
My friend Jason writes about Riders of the Purple Sage, a 1912 book by prolific American Western writer Zane Grey. Full text at Gutenberg.
Name that!
Mike Clark’s Weblog tells about an article he wrote about creating good names for things in your code. Mike Clark is one of the Pragmatic Programmers. Read more here: **Tame the Name**
Victims of the trade
A young developer. A deal that seemed shaky. A shady business guy. The Truth Behind OSI Hosting Having to go abroad to be slammed like this, it’s plain horrible. I feel with the guy.
Great news
See Luisa’s blog. OK, I’ll say it: we are getting married.
Exploring with Wiki
Today I started reading a book (Extreme Programming Explained, by Kent Beck) that I borrowed from Brian (Kodehoved). It was inspirational. It brought a tear to me eye, literally. It makes me want to start the Test-driven development tomorrow. And I will. No procrastinating. And source code control. SVN > CVS, I think. But how …
Murphy’s Laws of Combat Operations
Eric Meyer tells about Murphy’s Laws of Combat Operations, which the wargamer in me (yeah, he is sort of small and does not come out much) thought was a gas. * If your attack is going really well, you’re in an ambush.