Posts in: CSS
- Open-thread: Must have HTML, CSS and JavaScript books?
- If you were going to help friend get started with front-end web development, where would you start? Which books (or Video tapes / DVDs) would you suggest they buy? Two of my picks: JavaScript: The Definitive Guide by David Flanagan and CSS: The Definitive Guide by Eric Meyer. And you? [22 Jun 2007]
- Recommended: “Safari 3.0 Windows”
- PPK gave the Safari 3.0 beta a test drive on Windows. In this article, he outlines some of what’s changed. May I also suggest giving Shiira a whirl? Built on WebKit — the same rendering engine behind Safari — but with some nifty features. Related: Thoughts on Safari 3 for Windows [12 Jun 2007]
- Links for 2007-06-08
- Know your Enemy: Web Application Threats Is It A Racist, Sexist World In Wikipedia? Google PageRank: What Do We Know About It? LitePacific CSS Hack for Internet Explorer 6 & 7 plus Safari Who’s Got Style? First Look: Google Gears Camino 1.5: New Features And More Speed (I’m currently giving Shiira a test drive.) [8 Jun 2007]
- CSS Off: Show your mad CSS n1nja sK1LLz
- CSS Off First contest: June 1, 2007. One web design. 24 hours to mark it up to the best of your ability using (x)HTML and CSS (and JavaScript if need be). $30 prize (or a $50 donation to a charity of your choice). But most importantly, the right to call yourself “l337 css-0r.” [17 May 2007]
- Review: WorkSpace
- What would you expect from a basic text editor? Let’s create a list of features: Support for plain text Syntax highlighting for HTML, JavaScript, CSS, PHP, SQL, Java, and Perl. Limited auto-complete Ability to connect to multiple FTP servers at once Ability to upload, download, rename and delete [...] [15 May 2007]
- Reebok’s Run Easy
- A pretty cool piece of technical work: strictly an (x)HTML, CSS and JavaScript front-end — no Flash necessary: Run Easy. I’m interested to know the firm behind the site. UPDATE: As Paul Irish posted in the comments, Boston-based web firm Molecular developed the site. [7 May 2007]