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Flickr/QOOP Fun

You can get your Flickr photos printed through QOOP, and one of the options is for a poster with all your photos, which is cool. Now, if you test out QOOP, and choose the poster option, you can choose to have them generate a thumbnail of what the poster will look like and email you when it’s ready. So I did…

Flickr Poster 2005-11-15

Neat! Of course you’ll then want to upload the results to Flickr

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ipLemonJuice

Apple cracked the whip and those iPodder Lemon guys changed the name to Juice. (Perhaps they should do a tie-in with those Mattel Juiceboxes.)

Of course I was smart enough to avoid name problems with renko, but if I were the iPodder Lemon, er, I mean Juice guys, I would have changed the name to ipLemon, which works on two levels…

But that’s just me…

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Sunbird 0.3a alpha1

Mozilla Sunbird is still pretty alpha, but 0.2a has been solid for me for a really long time. I did manage to break WebDAV on my server for a week and kept wondering what went wrong with Sunbird, but in the end I figured it out, fixed it, and made a note not to break my WebDAV server again…)

Anyway, the Sunbird 0.3 alpha1 Release Notes tell all about the latest version, which I’ll be installing shortly…

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JSP in XAMPP?

I’m loving XAMPP… Out of curiosity though, I thought I’d check on the possibility of Tomcat being part of XAMPP… The result is in German, but I translated below: What(s) about JSP support in XAMPP?

No, anyhow with largest probability not. XAMPP would increase thereby around approximately 42 MB on over 60 MB (38 MB for the Java 2 SDK and 4 MB for Tomcat). For the moment I am convinced of the fact that it is not worth that.

There ya go folks… I’m not really a Tomcat fan anyway, but it would have been nice to have an easy to install, fully configured Tomcat to deploy… Oh well…

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Warning: Objects Ahead!

With the imminent release of a Firefox that supports SVG, I wonder if we are going to see a lot more warnings… Warning you say? Yes warnings…

In December 2004 I wrote a post that included some SVG graphs. When I checked the RSS feed for validation I got a warning. (Acutally, at the time I think it was an error, but I’m not sure about that, should have blogged it I guess.) You can check this feed using the validator to see the warning, which points you to the foo should not contain object tag page.

So I’m wondering if we’re going to see more people using the object tag with SVG, and if so, what will that mean for RSS feeds, feed validators, feed readers, etc?