Sunday, June 28, 2009

Thumbs up for Incheon Intl. Airport, Big Boo for Google's Language Auto-Detection

[My return flight will be departing in about 1.5 hours. Not surprisingly, there're some time to spend on, and here're the outcome...]

:)
There's a free wifi in the airport. It's one of the few airports with such a service. Most airports I've visited provides only paid wifi.


X(
Google's language auto-detect sucks.

Oh well, to clarify (now I'm a bit calmer), the idea is good. But, the execution is not perfect.

See the following screenshot. The blogger.com by default displays Korean characters. There's absolutely no clue for a layman on how to change the displayed language to English.


After a-couple-of-second's screaming within my head, I somehow became curious enough to click the top-right drop-down box. Luckily, it was what I looked for.

Btw., notice how the Flash ads are still in English?

Monday, June 1, 2009

Idealism vs Realism

Sometimes, just sometimes, idealism must give ways to realism.

As much as I like the idealism of KHTML, I've to be realistic that many Javascript-heavy websites such as “fb.c” work better with Webkit. Well, it shouldn't be surprising since Webkit (which is a derivative of KHTML) is THE engine that powers up Apple's Safari and Google's Chrome. Therefore, it's expected to have a better compatibility with many websites out there.

And the combination of Konqueror+Webkit in KDE-4.3 (beta-1) seems promising enough --- apart from the occasional benign crashes due to “nsplugginwrapper”. In KDE-4.2 (or before), I didn't use this combo because (i) it's unstable, and (ii) Webkit ignored all my settings particularly the font size.

Still, it shows that idealism is not for nothing. In fact, it arguably occupies a significant place in society & history. Without KHTML, would Safari and Chrome be born? In a way, this reminds me to scientific research, where theories and their applications can be separated by decades.