This is the moment, Caroline. Seize it! And Barack, if you’re reading this, you probably know that she is far too humble and decent to nominate herself. So step up and surprise us again. Step up and be different than every politician we have witnessed in our lifetime. Keep the passion burning amongst the young people and others who have been energized by your unexpected, unpredicted, against-all-odds candidacy that has ignited and inspired a nation. Do it for all those reasons. Make Caroline Kennedy your VP. “Obama-Kennedy.” Wow, does that sound so cool.—Caroline: Pull a Cheney!
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Surprisingly for a political party that typically promotes “market-based solutions,” the bill introduces a complex regulatory framework for everyday consumer activities and represents an unprecedented incursion into the property rights of millions of Canadians… The bill prohibits transferring a copy of most commercial DVDs to a portable video player. It blocks parents from creating backup copies of their toddler’s DVDs.—Your PVR might make you an outlaw
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Aucun des noms ne me fait vraiment tripper mais quand même une couple de bonnes options à Trouve mon nom, le site de vote pour nommer le projet Montréalais de type Vélib.
Harper coupe encore dans la culture
Harper coupe encore dans la culture et cette fois ça touche un morceau important de la scène web/techno (et plus) à Montréal, en effet ces coupes vont causer un manque à gagner de 400K à 900K$ pour la SAT. Est-ce que cette décision peut être changée? Est-ce que le gouvernement Québécois va ramasser la balle? Est-ce que les gens de la SAT vont trouver d’autre financement? Peut-être une campagne de financement en cours d’année? C’est quand les élections Mr. Dion?
Firefox, We’re Almost There
It’s only one source and browser stats commonly vary quite a bit site to site but still, in terms of trends these numbers are interesting. Webmonkey reports that for W3Schools, Firefox is at 42.6% market share, within striking distance of IE. Actually, it’s the leading browser by quite a margin if you take versions separately, IE leads when 6 and 7 are taken together. Sometime around mid 2009 we should see IE6 below 10% and maybe drop it for good at the end of the same year. At that point we’ll have fully adopted modern browsers. Now if only they’d keep advancing with CSS version implementations…
