Monday, March 21st, 2005
Nifty Corners
Rounded corners via CSS+js. I don’t like the extra moving part myself… prefer to stick to weird nests of divs.
Perpetual nodesign in process…
the cobbler's shoes and all that.
Nifty Corners
Rounded corners via CSS+js. I don’t like the extra moving part myself… prefer to stick to weird nests of divs.
Build Web Pages for Search Engines (Bowdoin)
I quickly outline what a good web page built for search engines is about. Visit most pages on the web site to find out, especially in the News section.
Building a high result web page is not difficult. You can not however obtain search results for content that does not [...]
photojunkie zine : Fun with MT Photogallery
In a previous weblog design I had a photolog and did it with another blog that simply wrote out an include. It wasn’t rocket science and didn’t involve a lot of work.
To make a pure photoblog requires some more work. We have a few going on campus built with [...]
Pagerank Explained Correctly with Examples
Still accurate? There’s no date associated with the content!!! That freaks me out. And Ian has been known to do “Jive Dancing”…
Microsoft Internet Explorer 7.0 Details Begin to Leak
Partner sources say Microsoft is wavering on the extent to which it plans to support CSS2 with IE 7.0. Developers have been clamoring for Microsoft to update its CSS support to support the latest W3C standards for years. But Microsoft is leaning toward adding some additional CSS2 support [...]
Metamark – Shorten long web addresses
Another link shortening service. Wonder if this is prior to tinyurl…
Nice bit here is they have a Services Menu widget for OSX.
The Selfish Class
This paper takes a code%u2019s-eye view of software reuse and evolution. A code-level artifact must be able to attract programmers in order to survive and flourish. The paper addresses the question of what an object might do to encourage programmers to (re-)use it, as opposed to using some other object, or building new [...]
Designers Toolbox
Weird — online tool box that replaces some of the stand alone tools. Will they sell enough ads to make up the cost?
Screenfont.ca: All about fonts for captioning and subtitling (2005.02.16)
Screenfont.ca is part of an upcoming project to research and develop a set of standards for captioning, audio description, subtitling, and dubbing.
A first look at Google Scholar: What’s included and what’s not
Tina sent the link to this nice summary of Google Scholar.
VRMAG – DANISH ROYAL WEDDING SHOT BY HANS NYBERG
Hans Nyberg of panoramas.dk [ed. and http://qtvr.dk/index_en.html] was chosen to capture the recent Danish Royal Wedding and is likely the first panoramic photographer to be hired for such an event. Hans was hired by the national Danish Radio and Television based upon his website panos and was [...]