Category ‘XHTML & CSS’

Blog Archives

  1. 9-slice scaling in HTML

    May 15th 2008, 16:59

    9-slice scaling is a technique from Adobe’s Flash product line and has been adapted into Fireworks. It is used to scale certain parts of a symbol different from others when resizing the symbol (i.e. not scaling the corners at all) to make corners and borders look the same at every size of the symbol. With a little CSS and HTML this can be done in browsers, too.

  2. I have a dream…

    Mar 31st 2008, 23:16

    Ads - That’s how you make money on the Internet. And since everybody wants money ads are spilled all over the Internet. What if…

  3. Webmail done right

    Feb 22nd 2008, 19:25

    I recently bought a (gs) shared hosting package at mediatemple.net. I’m not going to talk about their system now, but about their webmail client, which is provided by @Mail, their mail[]

  4. GeSHify: a GeSHi syntax highlighting extension for Expression Engine

    Jan 30th 2008, 21:51

    I recently wanted to post some source code on this Expression Engine-powered blog - I thought about some syntax highlighting to improve readability. However, after asking Google and the Expression Engine forums search it turned out there had been several attempts to integrate a syntax highlighter into Expression Engine, but these plugins or extensions were either outdated or not available anymore. *sigh*

  5. Forms with WuFoo

    Dec 20th 2007, 22:08

    Do you create web forms a lot? Doing a lot of copy and paste on this task?
  6. Google announces OpenSocial API

    Nov 4th 2007, 14:06

    Are you a Facebook member? Did you join MySpace for some of your friends don’t have Facebook accounts? There’s a solution, and it’s called OpenSocial.

  7. Experiences with ClipShare Pro 2.0

    Oct 14th 2007, 14:48

    There’s quite a market for YouTube clones, it seems. I’ve been recently working with three of these scripts, namely the commercial ClipShare Pro 2.0, the free PHPmotion and the Real Estate Video Upload Software I wrote a while ago. My experiences with these scripts are quite mixed, though.