I'll be the one to remark on what a shame it is that Douglas Adams left us in such an untimely manner, since no one else has done so yet. I'd love to read his point of view on how things are evolving now, in another five years, or in a few decades.
Pardon this off-topic comment but would anyone happen to know why on pages like this I see unusual characters in place of punctuation? Screenshots: http://s3.amazonaws.com/2009/safari.pnghttp://s3.amazonaws.com/2009/firefox.png. It doesn't matter which browser I use or what user account I'm logged in as, my Mac chokes on certain web pages - the linked article being an example.
The page is character encoded in ISO-8859-1, but the web server is reporting it as UTF-8. (Probably because the web page was written before Unicode became a common concern of webmasters, it dates back to 1999.)
In Firefox, select View->Character Encoding->Western (ISO-8859-1). In Safari, select View->Text Encoding->Western European.
(FYI, this shows up this way on Windows systems too. It's not MacRoman or Windows-1252 to blame this time.)
EDIT: Dang, took too long to write this message to be technically accurate; several others posted before I did. People who complain about spelling errors and minor inaccuracies in web posts should be shot...
Joel Spolsky wrote a post called "The Absolute Minimum Every Software Developer Absolutely, Positively Must Know About Unicode and Character Sets (No Excuses!)" and the title is true. Especially for those of us that are unfortunate enough to live in countries with strange squigglies that the Internet doesn't quite think belongs there.
I'll be the one to remark on what a shame it is that Douglas Adams left us in such an untimely manner, since no one else has done so yet. I'd love to read his point of view on how things are evolving now, in another five years, or in a few decades.