Monthly Archives: September 2006

IE Has Trouble Displaying Some .png Images

One of the things that can drive you crazy is aiming for cross-browser compatibility. Usually the problem is that things look wrong.

But sometimes the problem is that something you can see fine in one browser is simply invisible in the next. Looking at source confirms that both browsers are seeing the same code — one is just not doing anything with it. Drives me nuts.

So it’s very good to at last have an answer that I’ve found a known bug: IE just can’t handle some .png images. It was hard to debug because it can handle others. But IE cannot handle all .png images. Sometimes IE does not display .png images at all. Yes, there is a bug in Internet Explorer and it does not display some .png (‘portable network graphics’) files.

(I’m saying this very pedantically so that the next poor guy who has to hunt for this on Google has an easier time of it.)

Posted in Software | Comments Off on IE Has Trouble Displaying Some .png Images

Torture Is a Moral Issue

Someone gets it: The National Council of Churches takes out a big ad in the New York Times to say that Torture is a Moral Issue. President Carter is one of the signatories.

Amazing that it needs saying.

Even more amazing that a House committee just voted (on second try) to authorize the government to torture away…

And spot all the euphemisms running around: “harsh interrogation techniques,” “enhanced questioning” or “aggressive methods”. It is nothing less than horrible.

Posted in Torture | 5 Comments

Well Versed in Law

Board Games and Gaming Blog from Jerusalem, Israel – Yehuda presents …the U.S. Patent Code … in verse.

And if that’s not enough, how about the U.S. Copyright code, in verse.

Posted in Law: Copyright and DMCA | 2 Comments

Progress in Iraq

The war may not be going well, but the scapegoating exercise just took a major leap forward.

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Blogging the Coup In Thailand

Jim Moore’s free world politics and policy carries a local account of the coup in Thailand:

I know that “coup d’etat” sounds dramatic and makes Thailand appear a banana republic (or, as my political scientist friend calls Thailand, a banana monarchy), but in fact Bangkok is a very firt-world city, and this coup seemingly a very white-collar maneuver. Sure, it’s no surprise that a lot of the politicians are corrupt, and that there’s dissent in the ranks, but the issues have been playing out more on the stock exchange and Op-Ed page than the streets — that the military has taken control seems a bizarre response to the situation. It would be as if Enron middle-management had staged a coup.

The wild card, of course, is the king. The general who’s taken over doesn’t really want to retain power for himself and has declared his allegience to the king; even the tanks circling Government House are wearing yellow ribbons, the symbol of the monarchy.

But, the king isn’t a substitute for a prime minister, and he isn’t a replacement for Thaksin. A few months ago, when the dubiously-called elections were found to be dubiously-monitored and Thaksin the dubious winner, some of the opposition asked the king to intervene and appoint a prime minister. The king went on national television and scolded them: this is a democracy, he said, and a democracy holds elections. (To that point, Thaksin has been legitimately elected twice by an overwhelming majority.)

It seems to me with this coup that the general is now forcing the king’s hand, making him intervene and perhaps appoint someone else. Or, declare his support for Thaksin, which may be in the best interest of democracy but does not seem to be in keeping with the king’s personal taste.

It’s a curious kind of coup that a) declares allegience to someone else; b) puts that someone else in an impossible position; c) justifies itself by saying the country is too divided under the current leader, and a coup is therefore required to restore harmony; d) apologizes to the citizens for the inconvenience.

Posted in Politics: International | 2 Comments

I Love This Cartoon


Which reminds me. Miriam Cherry asked recently “Where’s the Elephant in Your Law School?, which she defined as “A problem that is so common that no one talks about or discusses it.” The answers were not pretty.

Posted in Completely Different, Law School | Comments Off on I Love This Cartoon