This page may (or rather, probably will) look bad using some Netscape 4.x and Internet Explorer browsers because of limited support for XHTML, CSS2, etc. I suggest the standards-compliant Firefox, Galeon, or Konqueror browsers. There's also Safari and Camino for the Mac (based on the Konqueror and Mozilla rendering engines, respectively), as well as Netscape 6 or 7 or whatever they're on right now. I'm too lazy to put the hyperlinks on those last things I mentioned, but you can easily google for them.
I try my best to keep these pages in conformance with the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) standards for accessibility and interoperability. These pages should look pretty good not just in the usual graphical browsers, but in text-based browsers, on PDAs, cell phones, aural browsers for the blind, et cetera. (If it doesn't, email me and tell me about it.) You can validate my main page or read about the "Viewable with Any Browser" campaign by clicking on the buttons below:
I do intend these pages to look okay in any standards-compliant browser, but I must admit I am particularly fond of
I've recently re-done most of the pages using CSS2 more extensively. I shamelessly lifted ideas from some guy named Jason Hoffman, A List Apart, List-o-Matic, and BlueRobot -- and others, see my CSS file for comments. And probably others that I can't think of at the moment. I still don't have a very good separation of content and presentation, but it's better. It's also well-nigh unreadable in older browsers, but I've grown tired of pandering to the lowest common denominator.
My email address is obfuscated using Javascript; it uses RSA encryption! I got the code from http://www.jracademy.com/~jtucek/email. The only downfall is that you cannot (in Firefox, anyway) right-click on a link and select "Copy Email address". But you can select the text or click the mailto: link.
I am eagerly awaiting widespread adoption of the MathML standard as well as a quality LaTeX-to-MathML converter. Then I can post mathematical documents as regular web pages instead of PDFs. Right now it's too much of a pain to take well-written LaTeX (especially if you use the amsmath extensions a lot) and convert it to MathML. When it's as simple as "pdflatex foo.tex", you'll see MathML stuff here. I think/hope that will be Real Soon Now.
These pages are written exclusively with the Vim text editor, which everyone agrees is the
best editor in the world. 