After John Dvorak accused Vivek Kundra of being a phony, Tim Oreilly shortly afterward tweeted a link to a youtube video of John "explaining how he lies to get controversy" http://twitter.com/timoreilly/status/3271565056 and later stating that he is "trolling for traffic" http://twitter.com/timoreilly/status/3272103221 Dvorak responded that this was an ad hominem attack http://twitter.com/THErealDVORAK/status/3280289449 The question is still bugging me, Is he a professional troll?
Some virology podcasters were recently irked that he uses a podcast with a big audience to spread H1N1 hysteria.
Full podcast episode: http://www.twiv.tv/2009/08/09/twiv-44-no-hysteria/
Dvorak clip: snippet: http://susdomestica.posterous.com/no-agenda-equals-no-knowledge
(I debated whether this is Hacker News worthy but decided to submit for discussion either way as up/down votes will answer this question)
http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,1987181,00.asp
My favourite quote: "The first problem is the idea of "cascading." It means what it says: falling—as in falling apart. You set a parameter for a style element, and that setting falls to the next element unless you provide it with a different element definition. This sounds like a great idea until you try to deconstruct the sheet. You need a road map. One element cascades from here, another from there. One wrong change and all hell breaks loose. If your Internet connection happens to lose a bit of CSS data, you get a mess on your screen."