Browsers and hyphens. IE5 on Windows and Mac interprets the-hyphenated-word-thing as four separate words and wraps accordingly. The Gecko engine (Mozilla, Netscape 6) and KDE's Konqueror (a browser popular on Linux installations) interprets hyphenated words as one word and will-not-wrap-this-phrase.
Update: I don't have an opinion on which behavior is better. Just happened to notice.
"Millionaire" throws a question with no right answer at Gladys Knight: I thought so. And there goes any shred of credibility I once had by including a post about...that show. It's just - I felt for Gladys when I surfed through and saw the question and thought to myself, "No way..."
I think my next little side web project should be a free online XSL Debugger using Microsoft's MSXML2.DOMDocument object. Again, something that's mainly for me that I've realized perhaps others could use. However if you desire a Win32 client and need special modifications why not consider writing your own XML composer in Visual Basic? Source code online.
OS bigotry makes me chuckle. I showed the above link to some Unix developing co-workers who were amazed that any Microsoft-technology-using programmer would publish their source code. (Giggle.) What were they thinking?
Of course, because of my exposure to Microsoft products in my job and at home, I've found myself wanting to stifle competition and destroy innovation that doesn't directly aid Microsoft. I think there must be a neurotoxin on the license agreement...