How do you get columns to stretch the length of the page in CSS? There are many ways I'm sure, but the one I use most often is using background images to give the appearance of columns. There is a new article about this on Macromedia's site and also the article I originally learned the technique from at A List Apart.
ThinkMac updated the NewsMac Pro news aggregator to version 1.0.2. This aggregator has a real slick interface and allows for syncing with Palm Pilots (via iSiloX). I tried it out, but didn't see enough to encourage me to switch from NetNewsWire. Perhaps it's in there, but it was frustrating that in order to read news I had to go through each news "channel" individually. I couldn't say "just give me all unread news regardless of channel (subscription)"
Here's some commercials for Firefox that a french advertising firm put together. Part of goal was to create commercials usable interntaionally -- thus the lack of dialog in any of them.
h2. One: AJAX
Stands for “Asynchronous JavaScript and XML” PanicGoods Google Maps “GTDTiddlyWiki”:shared.snapgrid.com/gtd_tiddl…" (based on “TiddlyWiki”:tiddlywiki.com) h2. Two: Color Sites
“ColourLovers”:colourlovers.com “Color Schemer Online”:www.colorschemer.com/online.ht… “Color Scheme Generator”:wellstyled.com/tools/col… “ColorCombos”:www.colorcombos.com “I Like Your Colors”:www.redalt.com/Tools/ily… “ColorMatch 5K”:www.colormatch.dk “Adam Polselli”:www.adampolselli.com (I can’t find the site that I mentioned that allows you to upload a photo and get a scheme from it) h2. Three: Micro-Content Driven Web
“j3t05082005.mp3”:www.brianfitz.net/j3t050820…
I was reading through my aggregator this morning and came across some postings that didn't really have anything to do with things that I subscribe to. This didn't bother me as I find some of the most interesting things through these types of posts, but I did wonder where they came from. I looked at the source and it was the Macromedia aggregator. This particular news feed is one of those I am aggregating from a source that is already an aggregation.
Firefox engineer comments on Apple/KHTML: Lead Firefox engineer Ben Goodger has spoken out in defense of Apple over the company's suggestion that the existing KHTML rendering engine be replaced by its own-developed derivative rendering engine (WebCore) for Safari, reports Macworld UK... This story interested me because my first reaction when I saw that Apple would like to drop KHTML and go forward with webcore as a independent web renderer was a negative one.
If you care about education and the internet and how it's being used in schools with students, you really need to be reading Will's continuing discussion about blogging vs journaling...
Macworld: U of Maine to require iBooks for teachers-to-be: The University of Maine College of Education and Human Development has announced plans to require students working towards Maine teacher certification to have Apple iBooks. The program dovetails with the state of Maine?s own Learning Technology Initiative, where all students and teachers in seventh and eighth grades in Maine public schools also have iBooks.
From jeffcoughlin.com: Simon gave a great overview of his presentation on "Design Patterns and CFML" and Tim spoke quickly about his favorite new features introduced in Coldfusion MX 7. Simon's full presentation can be seen at the upcoming CFUNITED conference next month. To view today's recorded Breezo go to http://macromedia.breezecentral.com/p14693917/.
Flex is Macromedia's solution (expensive solution) to allow normal object-minded programmers to create flash applications (RIAs). For examples of Flex applications, see Flex Authority.