So the folks that develop tomcat have released another version - and it seems to be for the same reasons they released the last one. It's only been two weeks! I know the feeling when you think you've fixed a bug, you release, and you find it's still there. I just hope Tomcat doesn't start getting a bad reputation with all of these vulnerabilities.
I did a bunch of work this morning to eliminate any and all javascript errors on the editor UI and also some XHTML-compliance stuff:
- Now you should get focus set on the first form element in each form - a nice usability enhancement.
- I adjusted the stylesheet for the editor UI to color links that had been visited from purple to a faded blue - looks a little better.
- I changed the editor menu (the part with the blue background) to not change colors for links that had already been visited. I did this because these are the links you will visit all the time, and why change their color? It looks better this way, at least I think so.
- Updated the div id's used to render the expandable folders feature - so validation now succeeds.
- Updated the index.jsp (list of user site's) page to be sortable. Good ol' display tag library has this built in!
Found via The FuzzyBlog!:
A few years later the core of Generation X--the 40 million
Americans born between 1966 and 1975--found themselves riding the wildest
economic bull ever. Salesclerks became programmers; coffee slingers morphed
into experts in Java (computerese, that is)--all flush with stock options
and eye-popping salaries. Now that the thrill ride is over, Gen X's plight
seems particularly bruising. No generation since the Depression has been set up for failure like this.
Everything the dot-com boom delivered has been taken away--and then some.
Real wages are falling, wealth continues to shift from younger to older,
and education costs are surging. Worse yet, for some Gen Xers, their peak
earning years are behind them. Buried in college and credit card debt, a
lot of them won't be able to catch up as they approach their prime spending
years.
(Scott added the bold). This very much rings true for many folks I know. My wife and I (as Gen Xers) have gotten lucky since we've maintained employment, for the most part, through the last couple of years. I did have a couple months last year without a client, but I used this time to get my MCSE/MCDBA 2000, SCWCD and WebLogic certifications - so it was probably better than having a client.
How did I get started in this wacky industry? I'm glad you asked. I graduated from DU--with three degrees (Russian, International Business and Finance)--had created many web pages in college, and found that there weren't many jobs in my degree's industries. So I audited some computer classes my senior year - and whalla - got a job with MCI Systemhouse. That's where I met my wife and the rest is history. To peak your interest for my next background story - didja know I grew up in a log cabin in Montana with no electricity and no running water? For the first 16 years of my life...