Craigslist Thieves Caught
The two who posted a Craiglist ad saying that anyone could take what they wanted from a home in Oregon have been tracked down and arrested by following their IP address. The stunt was a diversion to steal two horses.

It’s nice to see that internet crime doesn’t pay. Unfortunately, it’s also troubling to read this article and realize that had this couple simply used an anonymizing service, a proxy chain, an internet cafe, or a TOR node, there would have been no way to catch them from what they posted on Craigslist.
Wordpress.org 2.5 Redesign
With the release of their latest version of Wordpress, 2.5, the official Wordpress site has undergone a redesign by Happy Cog studios:

The main page has been refreshed in boring, pastel colours, and prominent links to their Wordpress for Dummies book via Amazon affiliate link and their hosting affiliate suggestions have been added. I’m honestly not impressed with the redesign, which has included work on the administrative interface:

It’s as if they took the strong ideas and colors of Wordpress past, watered them down, spaced them out, and made sure everything looks sufficiently web 2.0 without actually adding a substantial improvement. Every administrative screen now looks different and inconsistent with the others. If I upgrade, I’m definitely going to miss the old theme. On the other hand, no work had been done since Wordpress 1.5 on the administrative look and feel, so any work, regardless of how it feels, is welcome. Perhaps this is just a stepping stone to a truly better admin panel?
The WP 2.5 release notes blog post indicates some other nice changes:
- Multi-file upload with progress bar
- EXIF extraction (the photobloggers will love this)
- Password strength meter
- Few-click plugin upgrades (I am expecting some 0day exploits here)
- Built-in galleries
- A new Shortcode API (Isn’t this just BBCode ripped off?)
I’ll probably end up installing this with the next release of my own blogs and themes, as the features look promising.
FCC Definition for Broadband now 768Kbps
According to the FCC, the term “broadband” now means 768Kbps, up from the previous definition of 200Kbps. Under the new definition, “basic broadband” defines download speeds between 768Kbps and 1.5Mbps. Other changes in how subscribers are reported includes a breakdown of upload and download speed and additional gradations of speed. News dot COM notes that “ISPs will not have to report the prices they charge, yet.”
For comparison’s sake, an average movie download is 700 MB (5872025600 bits), and would take 8.16 hours to download under the old broadband definition at 200Kbps. However, at the new faster rate of 768Kbps, an American with basic broadband will be able to download a movie in just 2.12 hours.
Broadband reporting is a problem for America, because up till now we could only point to useless studies indicating that 12.5% of internet users are still on 56.6k or worse speeds. Once politicians and the industry realizes how bad broadband penetration in the US really is, we’ll see better internet service and connectivity.
Aviary Web 2.0 Toolkit
Aviary, aka a.viary, a suite of Web 2.0 office and graphic design products, has the most beautiful front page that I’ve seen in a very long time. It features a simple flash panel with overlapping layers that zoom in perspective with the motion of your mouse. You absolutely need to see it if you already haven’t:
Here is a little sample of the kind of “photoshops” their editor can do:

For those of you new to this blog, this was not created in Photoshop. It was created in Aviary, a suite of online web applications.
For more, you should check out their blog, which features additional demos. The company is in direct competition with Google, Microsoft, and Yahoo online applications, Adobe, the makers of Photoshop, Flash, Flex and other web and image editing software, as well as Apple’s video editing software and other startups in the web application toolkits game, like the infamous Zoho.
IE8 Standards Compliant, Finally
Today the IE blog made the most important announcement of its life with Microsoft’s Interoperability Principles and IE8, saying:
We’ve decided that IE8 will, by default, interpret web content in the most standards compliant way it can. This decision is a change from what we’ve posted previously. Microsoft recently published a set of Interoperability Principles. Thinking about IE8’s behavior with these principles in mind, interpreting web content in the most standards compliant way possible is a better thing to do.

Already, web designers are calling this the “holy grail” of Internet Explorer web development, and possibly the best suggestion the Microsoft IE team has ever made. Here’s a choice quote from Eric Meyer:
I’m glad that IE will act as browsers have always done, and default to the latest and greatest in the absence of any explicit direction to the contrary. I’m doubly glad that the IE team is willing to do that, even knowing what they have to handle. And I’m triply glad that the proposal was made in public ahead of time, with plenty of opportunity for debate, so that we could have a chance to weigh in and affect the browser’s behavior.
Broken Links is saying “I am very pleasantly surprised; this is a very wise decision.” Robert McLaws thinks, “This is great news for the web standards community… but not-so-great news for the billions of web pages out there.”


