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GUI

Firefox To Replace Menus With Office Ribbon 1124

Barence writes "Mozilla has announced that its plans to bring Office 2007's Ribbon interface to Firefox, as it looks to tidy up its 'dated' browser. 'Starting with Vista, and continuing with Windows 7, the menu bar is going away,' notes Mozilla in its plans for revamping the Firefox user interface. '[It will] be replaced with things like the Windows Explorer contextual strip, or the Office Ribbon, [which is] now in Paint and WordPad, too.' The change will also bring Windows' Aero Glass effects to the browser." Update: 09/24 05:01 GMT by T : It's not quite so simple, says Alexander Limi, who works on the Firefox user experience. "We are not putting the Ribbon UI on Firefox. The article PCpro quotes talks about Windows applications in general, not Firefox." So while the currently proposed direction for Firefox 3.7 involves some substantial visual updates for Windows users (including a menu bar hidden by default, and integration of Aero-styled visual elements), it's not actually a ribbon interface. Limi notes, too, that Linux and Mac versions are unaffected by the change.
Games

Cops Play Wii During Undercover Drug Raid 251

An anonymous reader writes "Guns drawn, cops busted down the door of a suspected south Florida drug dealer, then proceeded to kick some ass on Wii bowling. A security cam captured some playing video games while others searched for drugs and weapons. Clearly they just misunderstood when they were told to search the house for Weed."

Comment Walk, your shares aren't worth much (Score 1) 315

Your consultancy won't go public, absent another dot-com boom. Recent history is littered with consultancies (Scient, Viant, Sapient, MarchFirst, Lante, iXL, Razorfish, Proxicom, Organic, etc.) who all went public then tanked (or at least, seriously underperformed the market) when the bubble burst.

Why not? General IT consultancies are a poor investment - they tend to have little in the way of proprietary IP or hard assets, so they're only worth as much as their employee/client base. Even that's fickle - if new management/owners make changes that alienate either of those constituencies, that value can evaporate overnight.

There's the possibility you could get bought, but you'd have to be in a high-value product/client space for this to make much sense. It also depends on the attitudes of majority owners, who are probably far too accustomed to running an independent business to want to sell out to someone else, even in response to offers you might consider very good.

Should you get bought, it's likely the new owners will make senior management (including you?) sign agreements to stay on and/or not flip their shares for a set period. You already sound like you're itching to leave - are you sure you'd want to stay on longer than five years?

You won't be in much position to see any return on your shares absent a sale or public offering - foregoing warnings about dilution, Hollywood accounting, different share classes etc. all apply. (Possible out: google "Rule 144" regarding sale of closely held stock after two years. Good luck finding a buyer though.)

My opinion: walk; your sanity is worth far more than the meager chance of a payout.

Disclaimer: used to work for an IT consultancy; spent good money for shares of closely-held stock, on which I'm now unlikely to see any return. Now an independent contractor; too happy to be bitter.

Comment Re:Microwave (Score 1) 1008

Why do all microwaves beep at ear-piercing volume every time you press a key?

The fact that the display changed is enough evidence that you registered my keypress; you don't need to emit a beep that my grandma could hear without her hearing aid (and she's dead).

Microwave manufacturers of the world, please build something that will let me nuke a light dinner at 11:30 PM without waking up the rest of the house. Cheers.

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