RT @amanda_lam: @NokiaDeveloper & @selop: I wonder why developers are the VERY LAST ones to get #Lumia 800, after bloggers, celebrities & lucky draw winners
RT @KaiserKuo: Tomorrow @goldkorn and I record the Sinica Podcast with LA TImes' David Pierson and Arthur Kroeber on the resurgent China bears. Out Friday!
"A linchpin, also spelled linch pin, lynchpin, or lynch pin, is a fastener used to prevent a wheel or other rotating part from sliding off the axle it is riding on. The word is first attested in the 14th century and derives from Middle English elements meaning "axletree pin""
- τorƍue
They're wrong. *Typing* two spaces should be the rule. Sentence boundaries are incredibly useful semantic information that should be preserved in the underlying data even if it's not being displayed to humans. *Displaying* two spaces is the problem. The problem is software that displays two spaces when you type two. Get better software.
- Amit Patel
Typing two spaces seems like a very inefficient means of accomplishing the semantic markup you're lookig for, Amit. It's difficult to tell if you've actually done it, leading to dirty data. It's certainly not universal, and likely to become less-so, and algorithmic solutions for distinguishing mid-sentence punctuation from sentence ends seems to be getting better, and there's a continual incentive for improvement due to auto-capitalization on mobile platforms. The number of times it's important to me-the-author to give the computer a specific sentence divider more specific than a period is vanishingly small, and it seems uneven to make sure every platform displays only one space instead of two, when almost no platform recognizes two spaces as semantically significant.
- Kevin Fox
It's much easier to read text when the spacing between sentences is larger than the spacing between words. This is the default in TeX.
- David desJardins