Mr Speaker

mrspeaker's head in a monitor You find yourself at the entrance to the Hompage of Mr Speaker. In a darkened corner sits a trunk containing HTML5 games and some JavaScript tidbits. Next to it you spy a mastodon account. Exits are North, East, and .

Binary on your digits

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Us humans are pretty handy with our beloved decimal systems, but computers just don't dig it. It doesn't compute. They love that ever-so-wacky binary system. They've got good reasons too - Why be a normal human, only able to count to five on one hand, when you can become a faux-cyborg with the ability to count to 31 with only your measly earthling fingers.

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Better living through Mr.T

Prey"Hey you, you with the teeth. Come here... That's better. Do you know me? Of course you do. That's because I'm famous."

Mr. T's Be somebody, or be somebody's fool takes the viewer on an emotional, philosophical and educational rollercoaster ride through space and time. It's solid variety-show-in-the-hood, featuring New Edition and vocal arrangements by Ice T. One can only assume it was made to fulfill some community service obligations.

Through song, verse and even soliloquy, Mr T lends his collected wisdom on a myriad of topics of top concern to the youth of the 80's. Much is still highly relevant today. Here's a summary, so you can refer to it daily.

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Getting a reference to cdoex.dll

monkey boy13 work-hours ago I needed to switch development machines, on which I had been developing a custom .net application for a remote Exchange server.

Reloading the project on the new machine broke references to the CDO for Exchange dll. I went to add it again, but this computer only had CDO for Windows (cdo.dll, or cdosys.dll) - no cdoex.dll. I embarked on a mission to find it...

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Graphic Design – by the book

Yesterday's Radar in The Sydney Morning Herald had a nice big ad, I mean, article about Channel 9's breakfast program Today. Channel 9 have launched a new print campaign for the show featuring the Today team on the front of a cereal box, along with a bunch of wacky news based cereal puns, and cereal based news puns.

I don't (and until my soul is crushed completely by full time employment, will never) work in advertising, so I couldn't tell you how much cash the designers of that hilarious campaign earned. But I betcha it was more than $100.

So I'm sure Channel 9 will be kicking themselves when they find out that they could have saved a bundle by doing what the designers did - purchase a copy of "How To Cheat In Photoshop" by Steve Caplin, and follow the 3 simple steps in Chapter 10's Building Boxes.

You don't even have to change the orange sunburst or anything. Just change that little black box on the side to the channel 9 logo, and hey presto - deadline met!

Terrorism: Are we paranoid enough?

adbusted channel 9

Channel 9 - No Fear, No Favour. Tonight - "Terrorism. Are we doing enough?"...For those not old enough to remember, the world at the beginning of the new millennium was a joyous, peaceful place. Children danced in the street singing and smiling. World leaders came together in harmony to organise tree planting operations and beach side barbeques. Big Brother delighted us all in it's first season.

Don't leave your...But all that was to change... forever. One sunny September day, I forget which one precisely, the metaphorical towers of global happiness and goodwill passed away and turned over it's inheritance to it's evil next-of-kin.

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Improving the user experience with the XmlHttpRequest

LoFi FonzWelcome to the second installment in this series of back-flipping articles regarding some pretty stupid uses of AJAX, and that ever-adorable XmlHttpRequest object. In part one - The Fonz uses XmlHttpRequest and AJAX to spy on you, we took a rather negative view of the "developer and AJAX sitting in a tree" love of remote scripting, and applied our paranoia to a simple text adventure application featuring Arthur 'Fonzie' Fonzarelli.

This time round, taking the results from The Fonz test, we will temporarily leave the dark side, and use the forces of remote scripting toward the purpose of enhancing the "user experience" by building a live help system.

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The Fonz uses XmlHttpRequest and AJAX to spy on you.

  

Everyone (who is a nerd) loves the XmlHTTPRequest. It's awesome is why. The web starts behaving like applications. Things work how they are supposed to, and mum and dad don't need to know anything about post-backs and submit buttons - "Submit? Submit to what?!"

There are a myriad of examples of Asynchronous Javascript and XML (errgh, ajax? I give it two thumbs down. But I'm too lazy to think of something better, so I'll shut up on that front) that show why it's the greatest thing since the 1 pixel gif. (Check out fiftyfoureleven.com. That's got some swanky stuff)

For all its goodness, however, something smells a little funny about this holy grail of web communication... like beer and chocolate before it, there is an evil side to what - on the surface - seems pure and innocent.

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The Offices

Tims and GarethsABBA recorded songs in 5 different languages. Although their songs would be classics in any language, by re-recording the songs in the native tongue of various countries they strengthened their fan base and spread their message effectively. NBC's comedy the office has taken a leaf out of the ABBA marketing guide and re-released BBC's The Office in American.

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Bill Gates and John Howard look for Venture Capital

take it away John“Longhorn” is the rather ridiculous name given to the next version of the Microsoft Windows operating system. It has been a long time coming. Frequent delays have forced Microsoft to omit various features that were going to make their debut in this release. But they have to get Longhorn out soon, ‘cause they need some more cash.

Pictures of the new version have been circulating, and a review of it can be found on the winsupersite site. I had a look around and noticed some pretty weird stuff about these leaked images...

the johnny filesThe most shocking discovery was that the screen shots appear to have come from a person who has a relationship of some description with the Prime Minister of Australia, John Howard. Could this be Bill Gates' machine, and if so, why does he have a "stack" (as it'll be called in Longhorn) of documents about our main man?

Mr Speaker is not one to speculate without valid sources, but it would most certainly seem that John Howard and Bill Gates are planning to create a small Internet start-up company that will sell "virtual-handicrafts".

More details as they come to hand.