stargeek
PHP news website logo.
home    PHP scripts    articles    seo tools    links    search    contact    shop    realtors


Params-Style-0.04







Params-Style-0.04

Params-Style-0.04 12/08/2003 12:03 AM




This is a GrokNews Entry: (what is grok?)





Similar Items

Params-Style-0.04

Grok Headline matches for Params-Style-0.04

Params-Style-0.03


Params-Style-0.03 12/05/2003 06:39 PM

Params-Smart-0.01


Params-Smart-0.01 04/15/2005 08:19 PM

Params-Smart-0.02


Params-Smart-0.02 04/15/2005 11:11 PM

Params-Validate-0.71


Params-Validate-0.71 12/03/2003 05:11 AM

Params-Check-0.05


Params-Check-0.05 02/10/2004 06:48 PM

Params-Validate-0.72


Params-Validate-0.72 12/03/2003 05:11 AM

Params-Check-0.20


Params-Check-0.20 06/17/2004 05:50 PM

Params-Validate-0.69


Params-Validate-0.69 11/03/2003 05:54 PM

Params-Check-0.21


Params-Check-0.21 06/18/2004 05:26 PM

Params-Smart-0.03


Params-Smart-0.03 04/16/2005 09:44 PM

Params-CallbackRequest-1.13


Params-CallbackRequest-1.13 04/20/2004 04:45 PM

SIGNATURE STYLE Goody Steinberg Letting
in the light Silicon Valley homes
exhibit modern style tailored to fit


SIGNATURE STYLE Goody Steinberg Letting
in the light Silicon Valley homes
exhibit modern style tailored to fit
05/01/2004 06:27 AM
San Francisco Chronicle May 1 2004 10:24AM GMT

THINK
GLOBAL, ACT LOCAL: PETER SINGER'S
ONE
WORLD


THINK
GLOBAL, ACT LOCAL: PETER SINGER'S
ONE
WORLD
04/23/2004 09:24 AM
one worldIf you're a regular reader of this blog, you probably know that I'm opposed to unregulated 'free' trade, very worried about the extraterritoriality of the WTO, NAFTA, Davos and other corporatist captives, strongly opposed to domestic corporations 'offshoring' jobs, using influence with the Bush regime and other right-wing governments to circumvent social and environmental laws and responsibilities, and a great believer in taking the pledge to buy local, and in community self-sufficiency.

At the same time, I'm a strong supporter of the UN and other multi-lateral NGOs, and I believe that we each have a responsibility for the well-being of all the people and creatures of this world. Some readers have said this view is inconsistent, and I wasn't quite sure how to respond to such charges. Fortunately, Peter Singer, in his recent book on global ethics, One World: The Ethics of Globalization, has come to my rescue. Singer sees no inconsistency between strong local autonomy, community, and self-sufficient economies on the one hand, and global responsibility on the other. The book is based on the Dwight Terry lectures at Yale in 2000, but has been updated to incorporate reflection on the events of 9/11 and the appalling Bush social, environmental and economic record.

I'll have more to say next week about Bush's fraudulent and despicable Earth Day media blitz, and the major media's shameless lack of critical evaluation of the utter nonsense that his propaganda machine has been churning out this week on the environment -- newspeak of Orwellian proportions. The first part of Singer's book deals with environmental responsibility, and his prescription for increasing it -- immediate ratification of Kyoto by the US and other holdout countries, and introduction of an emissions trading mechanism to make the realization of Kyoto feasible (subject to the need for some oversight on the disposition of the proceeds of such trading when it involves autocratic governments).

The second part of the book deals with the global economy, and Singer adroitly tears apart the Economist's (and other neocons') naive assertion that economic globalization somehow benefits both rich and poor countries. He then goes on to prescribe a substantial reform of the WTO and the GATT, which could actually lead to more equitable distribution of wealth and more efficient production of economic goods, while safeguarding human rights, labour and the environment. Unfortunately, the multi-national corporations and corporatists who hold sway in the WTO would never tolerate Singer's prescription, since it would entirely divert the benefits of economic globalization from their pockets to those of the world's poor.

The third part of the book deals with international law, and Singer lashes out at Bush for his unconscionable refusal to ratify the International Court of Justice, and for the UN's continued hesitancy to accept a duty (not a right) to intervene in situations of genocide and other humanitarian crises, even within a single nation. Singer is sanguine about the limitations and dangers of 'global government', but supports strengthening the UN to enable it to act as a 'protector of last resort', and including in its mandate the responsibility to supervise elections in all member nations.

The fourth and final part goes back to ethical principles and proposes that countries must, in this world where national boundaries no longer have any logistic meaning, set aside national interest and embrace, once and for all, global interest, impartially. That does not mean cultural homogenization, but imposes a responsibility for the reduction of inequality, both of economic resources and personal rights and freedoms.

Always the pragmatist, Singer concludes by worrying out loud about how the responsibility for a global ethic could be managed:

It is widely believed that a world government would be, at best, an unchecked bureaucratic behemoth that would make the bureaucracy of the EU look lean and efficient. At worst, it would become a global tyranny, unchecked and unchallengeable. These thoughts have to be taken seriously. How to prevent global bodies becoming either dangerous tyrannies or self-aggrandizing bureaucracies, and instead make them effective and responsive to the people whose lives they affect? It is a challenge that should not be beyond the best minds in the fields of political science and public administration.

I'd like to believe that this was possible, because if it isn't, we're in serious trouble. We cannot expect national governments to set aside parochial interests, especially when this entails accepting a responsibility that would, for the richer nations, inevitably lead to a drastic redistribution of wealth to poorer nations and hence a sudden and sharp reduction in, at least, economic living standards (if not necessarily well-being). But as John Ralston Saul has so eloquently argued, larger organizations and institutions, whether public or private, are almost always, and inherently, less efficient, less agile, more resistant to change, more hierarchic, and less transparent than smaller organizations. So the challenge is to achieve the best of both worlds, having organizations of global scope and authority and responsibility, but broken up into sufficiently small, autonomous and dynamic units that they are sensitive, resilient, responsible and responsive to the people and communities they serve. We can only hope that "the best minds in the fields of political science and public administration", wherever they are, are up to the task.

Style XP 2.11


Style XP 2.11 07/17/2004 04:33 PM
Techzonez Jul 17 2004 8:13PM GMT

Sex and Style and Wow


Sex and Style and Wow 03/06/2004 01:55 AM
Comparing members of the iPod family, Stephen Williams writes in Newsday, “The difference in price is $50; the trade-off — sex and style and wow, for more data storage in the more expensive large ’Pod — is your choice to make. Of course, I’ll choose the Mini. For cachet, it’s without peer, the Louis Vuitton of portable audio. Sonically, it’s a match for anything else MP3-ish on the market.” [Mar 1]

Style One


Style One 06/25/2004 06:54 AM
More self-improvement mumbo-jumbo. Whether this is accurate or not... Well. I'll let you be the judges of that :-)

Style One has a chief characteristic of trying to make everything better. When they are healthy, they are morally heroic, making sacrifices for the greater good, balanced in their judgments, uncompromising in their principles. They are concerned about what is right in morals, sometimes in esthetics, and sometimes in other things like literary or movie criticism or even manners. They are objective in their judgments and utterly clear about what is right and wrong. They are prophets and reformers.

If they become unhealthy, the vision narrows and their concerns diminish. They begin to moralize, they can get picky about little rules and they always go by the book regardless of consequence or circumstance. They develop either/or thinking and pay little attention to anyone's emotions.

Ones you may know: Judge Judy on TV, Laura Schlesinger (Dr. Laura on talk radio), Hilary Clinton, Ross Perot, Ralph Nadar, St Paul, Martin Luther, Harrison Ford, Tom Brokaw, Pope John Paul II, The Lone Ranger, Martha Stewart and Miss Manners.

What is your enneagram?

(Via Marju t.)


A style revolution


A style revolution 09/10/2004 12:30 PM

Direct and Related Links for 'A style revolution'

“Our retro computers will dramatically alter the way you see your computer. No more unsightly beige boxes; Facade Computer aims to provide you with antique, high-quality cases. Our creations are not only stylish, but affordable, packing solid performance that won’t break the bank. We are currently accepting orders. Click here. Please note that our products do not come with mice, keyboards, or monitors. We recommend Swedx for retro-themed peripherals….

Use DOM to implement style changes


Use DOM to implement style changes 08/02/2004 11:43 AM
CNET Aug 2 2004 3:03PM GMT

alpha 2.x-Style-2


alpha 2.x-Style-2 07/10/2004 10:11 AM
A theme that is easy on the eyes, featuring an original background.

Solar Style


Solar Style 12/22/2004 01:36 AM

solar_style.jpg imageI was writing a column this month and mentioned the upsweep of
solar-powered gear the last few months and my editor's editor (why do I love blogging again?) was all huh?. And yes, okay, solar power isn't anything new, but the new high-efficiency panels are really starting to happen, like this entire new 'Solar Style' line of gear called the 'PV Solar Chargers." You've got yer solar bag, yer flip-out notebook charger, ya gotcher cell phone case with a charger—this stuff is taking off.

The Solar style gear doesn't seem to be quite ready for retail yet, but you can order a 'sample kit' for 200 bucks, which I'm guessing includes a few different units to try out. The press release lists my arch-enemy AirWater Corporation, though, so these might be a force for evil. Be careful. (Thanks, Kelly!)

Press Release [Yahoo]


Elements of Style


Elements of Style 03/08/2004 11:23 PM
A Google search failed to turn up information on these women and their healthy bodies, but whoever you are, a tip of the blood-orange cloche to you: Please ...

Server Style


Server Style 01/17/2004 10:45 PM
Always dream of running your own server? Now is a great time with free offers and free content management software!

Launch your own site and become master of your own domain for next to nothing. Find out how in this week's episode of Freeloader Friday.

Like Pixels? Check out MacDesign

Style XP v2.0 Beta 3


Style XP v2.0 Beta 3 12/03/2003 01:49 AM
Style XP is not a skinning engine. It uses Microsoft's built-in visual style engine, but enhances it by providing many useful tools. Style XP can import, select, rotate, and manage themes, visual styles, wallpapers, and logons. Future versions may support sounds, cursors, screensavers, and packages of all the above. Instead of lines and gradients, the XP user interface natively supports the use of skinned bitmap controls (a visual style). This is Microsoft's own innovation. Style XP includes its own visual styles. [Shareware $19.95 8.12 MB]

Web Style Guide


Web Style Guide 09/05/2004 01:03 PM

Web Style Guide, 2nd Edition: I'm not totally sure, but I think this Web site is a complete reprint of this book. I enjoyed the first edition; haven't read the second.

Click here to comment on this entry


Lowercase style


Lowercase style 08/17/2004 05:39 PM

For years Wired Style was the guide for anyone writing about “new media.” In the early days of the internet the venerable Chicago Manual of Style and Strunk & White’s Elements of Style had nothing to say about new words and phrases like internet, World Wide Web, and email so Wired Style became the standard. Like thousands of others, I capitalized Web and Internet because Wired said that’s how to do it. (The current edition of The Chicago Manual of Style covers internet publishing extensively).

Today Wired News has decided that this is no longer to be done. They say that “a change in our house style was necessary to put into perspective what the internet is: another medium for delivering and receiving information. That it transformed human communication is beyond dispute. But no more so than moveable type did in its day. Or the radio. Or television.”

Just as I followed Wired Style, I shall follow this new style. Should you see me improperly capitalizing these words, please rap my knuckles with a yardstick.


All style and no substance


All style and no substance 03/14/2005 05:27 PM
Bloggers block prevents me from writing anything sensible. Which means I'm going to let my bloggers block do it's work, and refrain from posting filler content. Read why.

Gender and style


Gender and style 12/11/2003 11:53 PM
I rarely quote another blog's entry in its entirety, but this one needed to appear whole. It's from Dorothea Salo, reacting to Edd Dumbill's report, on XML.com, about something I said in my Tuesday keynote: ...

What You Get Is What You CSS, With Style
Master 4.0


What You Get Is What You CSS, With Style
Master 4.0
03/22/2005 04:59 PM
Matt Neuburg (~320 words)

Western Civilisation's flagship product, Style Master, is a CSS editor. You don't use it to create Web pages; you use it to create the look of Web pages - the font, size, color, and layout of the various elements that constitute your Web pages, as dictated though a CSS "style sheet." Style Master is my ideal of a program that knows a big complicated language so that you don't have to; you do see the actual CSS, but you can interact with it through pop-up menus and checkboxes that list the appropriate options and generate the correct syntax.


See Montreal in style


See Montreal in style 03/31/2005 03:25 AM
Usatoday.com - Tue Mar 29, 08:42 am GMT

A Samurai With Style


A Samurai With Style 03/17/2005 03:16 AM
Square Enix's cartoon-shaded samurai RPG is slickly rendered, but the gameplay isn't nearly as polished. Chris Kohler reviews Musashi: Samurai Legend.

iPod, HP style


iPod, HP style 08/28/2004 07:55 AM
HP is primed to introduce its version of the iPod as part of a push into the consumer electronics market. Will the "hPod" be enough to set them apart from Dell's and Gateway's offerings?

KM, Beeb style


KM, Beeb style 06/24/2005 09:58 PM
Inside Knowledge devotes 2,300 well-written words (by Sandra Higgison) to the work of Euan "The Obvious" Semple at the BBC. Euan has been leading the BBC down the social software path before software was called social. Meanwhile, I'm trying to wrestle my 75+ pages of notes on the Beeb's digital make-over into 2,500 words for Wired. More words! I need more words!...

FC Now: B Style for Sale


FC Now: B Style for Sale 09/14/2004 05:38 AM
David Carr writes in the New York Times today that American Express is publishing a no-name magazine that's sent out exclusively to Centurion cardholders. With...

Napkin-style UI


Napkin-style UI 06/02/2004 02:31 AM

Checkout the Napkin L&F (look and feel) for Java.  Interesting although the best way to use hand-drawn graphics is in contrasting combination with smooth lines and anti-aliased text.  They have to be rougher too.


Artistic Style


Artistic Style 05/24/2004 03:16 AM
Upcoming Astyle 1.17.0 under LGPL

Printing with style


Printing with style 05/23/2002 10:39 PM

The Substance of Style


The Substance of Style 10/30/2003 11:48 PM

Matrix style y0


Matrix style y0 10/29/2003 12:12 AM
Vesna is my hero. This memory is going to always make me laugh almost as hard as I did when...

Choppa Style


Choppa Style 06/18/2004 12:53 PM
choppastyleTN This photo is amazing. I wonder if that cord provides power for the "blades" to move in some way? Link (to higher res image) (Thanks, Carlo!)
Grok Description matches for Params-Style-0.04
GrokA matches for Params-Style-0.04

Params-Style-0.04

The following phrases have been identified by the grok system as matching this entry:

















Also check out:


Grok

Ipod Porn on the
Rise

Brief Abstract of
Wikipedia's
Mesothelioma Cancer
page

Get first aid
instructions in your
cell phone

IE is crap
JSPWiki gains
podcasting support

Dell Moves Some
Customer Service
Operations Back to
the U.S

Last-Minute Shipping
for Online Buyers

The Architect
Journal

Belgian Group Blog
PC Magazine's
Shel on Social
Software

Marc disagrees on
Group Blogging

NSW considering law
to ban juries using
net

JFox - J2EE
Application Server

Meeting Room Booking
System

Basho's
Oku-no-hosomichi

Dean Campaign and
Revival of Community

Sun sets up European
RFID test centre

Palestinians Work on
New Truce as Cairo
Talks Fail

China's Wen Warns
Taiwan Not to Misuse
Democracy

Putin Party Heads
for Triumph in
Russia Poll

NHS computer merger
blocked

The Taming of the
Internet

Police auction
property on Internet

The i-Duck
XMLTV 0.5.25
Autogg 0.4.2
irssistats 0.5
Liferea 0.4.5
CSSC 0.16alpha.pl0
Orpheus 1.4
Shut Down-O-Matik
0.1.2-beta

GNU Talk Filters 2.3
rb.log 1.0.2
rb.log 1.1.2
(Development)

Next generation of
DirectX previewed

EldoS KeyLord v4.0
Give credit where
it's deserved

Iran Cracks Down on
Balochs

Getting out of
trouble

ABF Outlook Backup
v2.11

folding laundry
Jennicam shuts down
for good

Standard Numerical
Library in C++

XWC-X
WinCommander-Interna
tional version

Crucial for
operators to create
a behaviour of heavy
data usage for 3G
success

Bruneis Big Leap
Into 3G Era Planned

Microsoft phones to
go clubbing

HP Procurve adds
Ethernet switches
and seeks to boost
number of VARs

Oracle reverses
decision on
decommissioning
Oracle 8i database

The top apps for
recovering data
after a crash

A big, beautiful LCD
monitor

We need a new
national
cybersecurity
plan--now

The 9-to-5 gift
guide: A holiday
wish list of
time-saving tech
tools

Why my address book
is spamming you

what is grok?