- @johnpmayer I'm skeptical about things like lawpivot too. Most answers are vague, include a 'call me' closing. Who's being helped? #
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The 6th incarnation of Elmer's blog
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Ohio Bar Examination: Essay Questions and Selected Answers, containing twelve essay questions and two multistate performance test (MPT) items from the July 2011 bar exam, along with actual applicant answers to each question, is now available online. According to the Ohio Supreme Court’s news release : “…the published answers should not be considered model answers. They are not necessarily complete or correct in every aspect. The published answers merely represent above-average performance by applicants who passed the July 2011 bar exam.”
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Internet Explorer 6 — long a thorn in the side of many web developers because of its quirks, limited feature support, and cockroach-like resistance to extinction —is finally on its last legs in the United States. And Microsoft is celebrating. In a post on the Windows Team blog, Roger Capriotti, Director of Internet Explorer Marketing, writes that Internet Explorer 6 is now down to less than 1% market share in the United States according to the most recent data from Net Applications. It’s far from the first country to reach that milestone — Austria, Poland, Sweden, Denmark, Finland, and Norway have done it already — but it also had far more Internet users to convert. Alongside the US, Microsoft also notes that the Czech Republic, Mexico, Ukraine, Portugal and the Philippines have all dipped below the 1% mark as well.
And while it might sound a bit odd to hear about Microsoft celebrating the demise of software it built long ago, this isn’t a change of heart for the tech giant — the company has been doing its part to help IE6 die for quite a while.