Does Microsoft Internet Explorer really hate Google Chrome?

The other day I wanted to install Google Chrome browser on the nearby Windows PC.  Here is what I saw when I opened the download page in Microsoft Internet Explorer.

To help protect security, Internet Explorer blocked this site from downloading files to your computer.

I know, it’s probably a generic protection against downloading executable files, but it’s still funny.  Especially, the bit about MSIE protecting security by blocking Google Chrome.  Yeah, right.

Learn Chinese in 5 minutes

I’ve been looking for this for some time.  I only remembered “sum sing wong”, but I knew there were more.  Today, while on the corporate chat discussing what to order from Chinese for lunch, someone pasted the links to Part 1 and Part 2.  My favorite ones are below:

  • That’s not right : Sum Ting Wong
  • See me ASAP: Kum Hia Nao
  • I thought you were on a diet: Wai Yu Mun Ching
  • Our meeting is scheduled for next week: Wai Yu Kum Nao
  • Give me the money! : Pei Nau
  • Where’s the restroom: Ai Pe Nau
  • Your price is too high: Ai No Bai Dam Ting
  • I am not guilty: Wai Hang Mi
  • Having an early orgasm: Kum Tu Suun
  • Now I understand: Ai See Nau

Share yours in the comments!

P.S.: And if you want to continue along the same line but with pictures, make sure to check out Engrish.

Amazon Bloopers : The end of printed media

Disclaimer: before you read any further, I want to you know that’s it nothing more than an obvious bug in a very large and complex system called Amazon.  A friend just pointed it out to me while it was happening.  And not just somewhere, but in my own Amazon Wishlist!

Amazon is one of the largest online shops, if not the largest.  And while they do sell a large variety of products, they started as and they will always be a book shop.  Back when they started, digital books, even though existed, were more of a distant future dream.  These days they are a reality.  But given that printed and digital books co-exist in the same world, how do they affect each other?  One way to look at that would be to compare prices for the same books in printed versus digital formats.  Here is an example: A Practical Guide to Designing for the Web | Five Simple Steps.

You can buy this book in several digital formats for as low as 12 British Pounds (GBP).  How much money would you have to part with if you insisted on the version with nostalgic smell of printed pages and no search functionality?  According to the Amazon itself, you’d have to pay up  815.74 GBP!

With prices like that, I think we can safely assume that the era of printed media is over.  All hail digital!