3/11/2023 0 Comments Omniweb navegador![]() ![]() Our friend Tantek, father of the Tasman rendering engine, contributor to the CSS and HTML working groups, and inventor of the Box Model Hack, describes how he found out the product he gave three years of his life to had been cancelled. Spiderweb Studios offers a small but nice collection of downloadable desktop backgrounds. (People can be so cruel.) Inspired by ours, Andy King launches a banner campaign on behalf of his superb book, Speed Up Your Site. Linked from everywhere else, but you may have missed it anyway: Martha’s New Digs. CreativePro’s Chuck Wegner explains how fonts really work in Mac OS X. SimpleBits offers yet another take on the quest to replace 10K of junk code and GIF fragments with a few lines of structured markup and CSS: its CSS Mini Tabs are sweet.Īsterisk has launched a conversation about the use of weblogs for marketing and PR. Swedish pop bands will bring tears to your eyes.Įmilio Vanni’s JnkMail is a well designed personal blog and portfolio. Design Matters discusses the virtues of white space and the basics of fonts, color, and alignment – and unlike some online design tutorials, Design Matters’s stuff looks as good as it reads. Pixeltable Studios has redesigned beautifully in CSS. Typorganism presents a series of creatively engaging visual experiments designed in Flash: check “Visual Composer” and “Good News, Bad News.” XPAIDER offers free bitmap fonts in a clean-edged presentation from the same stylistic school as K10k and GUI Galaxy, but with its own sharp charm. Download the markup validation service source code or the CSS validation service source code and be part of the solution. If you want to do something for web standards, and you have the time and technical knowledge, you can help the W3C improve these free, essential products. ![]() The markup validator is crafted in Perl by three underappreciated volunteers: Terje Bless, Nick Kew, and Ville Skytta. The CSS validator is developed in Java it is handled by one W3C member (Phillippe Le Hegaret) and one volunteer (Sijtsche de Jong). Our pals Olivier Thereaux and Karl Dubost at W3C tell us that lack of manpower is the single greatest impediment to improving the W3C validation services. (We also wrote to the group responsible for the development of these services although their resources are few, they welcome and encourage your comments.) All of this will be fixed soon.Ī few days back, The Daily Report commented on the unhelpful error message language of the W3C’s free online CSS and Markup validation services. The old design is tired and unattractive, and less usable than it ought to be, in part because the old architecture points to the wrong things and does not point to the right things. It will do so as soon as we finish redesigning the site. Many have asked when ALA will provide an RSS feed. In “Accesskeys: Unlocking Hidden Navigation,” Stuart Robertson unlocks the secret of providing visible accesskey shortcuts. Unfortunately, almost no designer uses accesskeys, because, unless they View Source, most visitors can’t tell that you’ve put these nifty navigational shortcuts to work on your site. Accesskeys make sites more accessible for people who cannot use a mouse. So can your site, thanks to the XHTML accesskey attribute. 158 of A List Apart, For People Who Make Websites: All your favorite applications have shortcut keys. The Daily Report 16 June 2003 ::: 3 pm | 11 am est ALA 158: Accesskeys – Unlocking Hidden Navigation ![]()
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