Programming Fonts, Tricks of the Trade

Wednesday August 25, 2004

I’ve started visiting kottke.org as part of my morning sites to visit session. I’ve come across some great links there, among them:

Programmer fonts. Anyone who writes a lot of code (HTML or real code) might have noticed that the default fonts used in Windows are a pain in the ass to code with. Courier New and System are just plain ugly if you ask me. The first few links on that page are really handy, and I’ve been using Sheldon myself for my programming purposes. Works like a charm.

Tricks of the Trade. I like this one:

Graphic Designer

If you have a client who is unable to approve a proposed design without putting her stamp on it, just put an obvious error in the proposal: a logo that’s too large, a font that’s too small, or a few judiciously seeded typos. The client requests the change and feels she’s done her part, and your design, which was perfect all along, sails through to approval.

More Vonnegut

Tuesday August 17, 2004

Following up on commencement speeches (A bit late, I know), but I ran into Kurt Vonnegut’s speech to Agnes Scott College in 1999. Agnes is a women’s college, so obviously the speech is directed towards women. Excellent quotes though:

A computer teaches a child what a computer can become.

An educated human being teaches a child what a child can become.

Some of you may know that I am a Humanist, not a Christian. But I say of Jesus, as all Humanists do, ”If what he said was good and so much of it is absolutely beautiful, what can it matter if he was God or not?”

If Christ hadn’t delivered the Sermon on the Mount, with its message of mercy and pity, I wouldn’t want to be a human being.

I would just as soon be a rattlesnake.

Now this part here illustrated the genius of Vonnegut. At the beginning of the speech, he brings up this excellent quote about what we can all hope to contribute to this world:

”A woman’s reach should exceed her grasp, or what’s a heaven for?”

And of course the original ”A man’s reach should exceed his grasp, or what’s a heaven for?”

Then later on, he talks about children and becoming teachers to teach children:

A child’s reach should exceed its grasp, or what’s a heaven for?

His beliefs about Christianity and Jesus Christ are something I strongly believe in myself. His philosophy on revenge is something that we should all adhere to, but we all know that’s a tough one to pull off.

Remind me to write an entry about how I’ve gone from Atheism to Agnosticism sometime.

about

Eric Lim smells like noodles; enjoys driving in traffic in the Los Angeles area; is scared of girls; tries to make people feel bad; is allergic to hot wings; is (almost) undefeated Go Fish Champion; is the destroyer of toasters; is a self-qualified CSS Ninja; wants to learn to ride a unicycle just so he can call himself "GizmoDuck"; and is an aspiring writer who doesn't write.

He is eagerly awaiting the revolution.

Reach him at
eric at pres.umptuo.us