Tag: internet explorer
Highcharts and HTML5: IE’s innerHTML unknown runtime error
Internet Explorer’s hoary old unknown runtime error comes back to haunt me in HTML5
Simply monstrous: web support at Monster
Online recruitment site Monster could use a lesson in technical support when answering bug reports.
jQuery .html() returns strange results in IE after other bindings
Sometimes we’re stuck with junk attributes in jQuery.html() for Internet Explorer.
IE7: worth the wait?
It’s been years since Microsoft released a new version of Internet Explorer. So should I get excited now?
Elsewhere on MikePadgett.com …
The last night of Hobson’s Choice
Treading the boards is John Savident as the cobbler who must tread carefully.
- Originally published: 3 Dec 2007 in Theatre
A certain thirtysomething
It feels no different to any other year now I’m turning thirty. Yet.
- Originally published: 29 Jun 2009 in Personalia
Gilda
A gorgeous Rita Hayworth totally owns this tight, noirish drama and you end up forgiving her for the silly happy ending.
- Originally published: 27 Sep 2007 in Film
SIaS! at the Southwark Rooms
Before this night, I hadn’t been dancing for a long time. Strange thing was, I knew practically everyone there.
- Originally published: 21 Sep 2005 in Concerts
A bit of Crupet
Looking for a way to enjoy the rest of the summer after our holiday, we began our Belgian weekend walking adventures here.
- Originally published: 17 Aug 2009 in Walking
Who you gonna call?
Hello you, I'm Mike Padgett. I'm not a Princeton curator, Knoxville mayoral candidate, Kentuckian pastor or Arizona journalist, I just share the same name. In fact, I am a consultant working in user experience and information design.
I also enjoy travel, concerts, films and walking.
I'm originally from Yorkshire, England but nowadays I live in Belgium. My current favourite Belgian beer is Black Albert.
Shameless self-promotion
Over a year in the making, Dopeology.org is my latest personal project: a topology of doping in thirty years of European pro road cycling.
I collected information from thousands of sources, then I modelled and published it via a lightweight user interface.
