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Mozilla, baby!

antville.org
 Donnerstag, 29. März 2001 

Katz und (Max) Goldt. Samt kleiner Tex Rubinowitz-Enklave. Nicolas Mahler of Flaschko-Fame ist auch vertreten. Aber jetzt schaut euch erst mal die Katz und Goldt-Sachen an.

Es ist wieder soweit: Die Telekom Austria droht, die Helma-Standleitung in die Alpenmilchzentrale zu kappen. Heute noch. Wegen ausständiger Zahlungen. Fragt sich nur, wie man Rechnungen bezahlen soll, die nicht gestellt werden, bzw. die einen nicht erreichen? Update:Unser Provider, Internet Aktiv, hat alles in letzter Minute geregelt: die Rechnung bezahlt und den Zahlungsbeleg an die entsprechende Person bei der Telekom geschickt. Merci bien, you rock!

Und: einer der Helma-Mailserver macht wieder Kaschperln. Schluckt Mails. Natürlich der, der unter Windows NT rennt.

Graham Glass: How SOAP works. *slap forehead* Of course now I know who Graham Glass (the author of GLUE to which Chris pointed a couple of days ago) is. He used to be co-founder and CTO of ObjectSpace, a company that started as a developer shop with great free libraries like JGL, but turned towards big-Dollar enterprise solutions more and more (reaching 100% a few years ago). It's funny: In 1996 the ObjectSpace website was much rougher and less designed than the Mind Electrict site is today.

The place to be for me in the last few days has been the Soapbuilders list. Everybody's meeting there that should have been meeting a long time ago, before the crime referred to as "SOAP spec" was committed: XML-RPC implementors like Fredrik Lundh, Ken MacLeod, Eric Kidd along with all the independent SOAP implementors, IBM-Apache SOAP folks and product managers from the variuos Microsoft .Net teams. Thanks to Dave Winer for making this happen. I do believe that something good and important may come out of this list.

Jake's SOAP Journal comments the proceedings on the list from Userland's point of view.

Scott Rosenberg: Microsoft storm warning: »But once all that data is sitting on Microsoft's servers, the company will face a powerful temptation to tinker with the fine print and "monetize" your data in aggressive ways.«


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