I haven't spent any time looking at the Google Charts API, however this little class - which aims to provide a simple and lite charting solution in PHP - looks like a good place... Read more on Fiftyfoureleven | Go to the Link/Resource
The Official Google Webmaster Central Blog provides their list of things to do when moving a site to a new domain. If you ever have to take this up and are worried about How do... Read more on Fiftyfoureleven | Go to the Link/Resource
The title kinda says it all, but seriously head over to the site and check out the demo to see for yourself. A class that allows you to extract data from html by using an sql like... Read more on Fiftyfoureleven | Go to the Link/Resource
Our CMS handles Iñtërnâtiônàlizætiøn out of the box, or so I thought. Lately on one server I've noticed some issues which I'll have to dig into, and this brought me to the... Read more on Fiftyfoureleven | Go to the Link/Resource
Adam Audette provides an excellent post on building links, which he concludes with:
...what’s the most efficient method of building powerful backlinks?
The answer is simple,... Read more on Fiftyfoureleven | Go to the Link/Resource
Written by Major Hayden, a Rackspace employee, this blog is a great read for those of us who are managing a server for clients who have a dedicated or virtual dedicated server... Read more on Fiftyfoureleven | Go to the Link/Resource
An interesting looking light weight wysiwyg editor for jquery.
We haven't tested this yet but if it outputs decent markup and works across a decent range of browsers it will... Read more on Fiftyfoureleven | Go to the Link/Resource
Jquery's innovative what-you-mean text editor.
We like this editor in house, and as one may imagine have found it a bit too advanced for people who do not know html or who are... Read more on Fiftyfoureleven | Go to the Link/Resource
I haven't spent any time looking at the Google Charts API, however this little class - which aims to provide a simple and lite charting solution in PHP - looks like a good place... Read more on Fiftyfoureleven | Go to the Link/Resource
The Official Google Webmaster Central Blog provides their list of things to do when moving a site to a new domain. If you ever have to take this up and are worried about How do... Read more on Fiftyfoureleven | Go to the Link/Resource
The title kinda says it all, but seriously head over to the site and check out the demo to see for yourself. A class that allows you to extract data from html by using an sql like... Read more on Fiftyfoureleven | Go to the Link/Resource
Our CMS handles Iñtërnâtiônàlizætiøn out of the box, or so I thought. Lately on one server I've noticed some issues which I'll have to dig into, and this brought me to the... Read more on Fiftyfoureleven | Go to the Link/Resource
Adam Audette provides an excellent post on building links, which he concludes with:
...what’s the most efficient method of building powerful backlinks?
The answer is simple,... Read more on Fiftyfoureleven | Go to the Link/Resource
Written by Major Hayden, a Rackspace employee, this blog is a great read for those of us who are managing a server for clients who have a dedicated or virtual dedicated server... Read more on Fiftyfoureleven | Go to the Link/Resource
An interesting looking light weight wysiwyg editor for jquery.
We haven't tested this yet but if it outputs decent markup and works across a decent range of browsers it will... Read more on Fiftyfoureleven | Go to the Link/Resource
Jquery's innovative what-you-mean text editor.
We like this editor in house, and as one may imagine have found it a bit too advanced for people who do not know html or who are... Read more on Fiftyfoureleven | Go to the Link/Resource
I haven't spent any time looking at the Google Charts API, however this little class - which aims to provide a simple and lite charting solution in PHP - looks like a good place... Read more on Fiftyfoureleven | Go to the Link/Resource
The Official Google Webmaster Central Blog provides their list of things to do when moving a site to a new domain. If you ever have to take this up and are worried about How do... Read more on Fiftyfoureleven | Go to the Link/Resource
The title kinda says it all, but seriously head over to the site and check out the demo to see for yourself. A class that allows you to extract data from html by using an sql like... Read more on Fiftyfoureleven | Go to the Link/Resource
Our CMS handles Iñtërnâtiônàlizætiøn out of the box, or so I thought. Lately on one server I've noticed some issues which I'll have to dig into, and this brought me to the... Read more on Fiftyfoureleven | Go to the Link/Resource
Adam Audette provides an excellent post on building links, which he concludes with:
...what’s the most efficient method of building powerful backlinks?
The answer is simple,... Read more on Fiftyfoureleven | Go to the Link/Resource
Written by Major Hayden, a Rackspace employee, this blog is a great read for those of us who are managing a server for clients who have a dedicated or virtual dedicated server... Read more on Fiftyfoureleven | Go to the Link/Resource
An interesting looking light weight wysiwyg editor for jquery.
We haven't tested this yet but if it outputs decent markup and works across a decent range of browsers it will... Read more on Fiftyfoureleven | Go to the Link/Resource
Jquery's innovative what-you-mean text editor.
We like this editor in house, and as one may imagine have found it a bit too advanced for people who do not know html or who are... Read more on Fiftyfoureleven | Go to the Link/Resource
I haven't spent any time looking at the Google Charts API, however this little class - which aims to provide a simple and lite charting solution in PHP - looks like a good place... Read more on Fiftyfoureleven | Go to the Link/Resource
The Official Google Webmaster Central Blog provides their list of things to do when moving a site to a new domain. If you ever have to take this up and are worried about How do... Read more on Fiftyfoureleven | Go to the Link/Resource
The title kinda says it all, but seriously head over to the site and check out the demo to see for yourself. A class that allows you to extract data from html by using an sql like... Read more on Fiftyfoureleven | Go to the Link/Resource
Our CMS handles Iñtërnâtiônàlizætiøn out of the box, or so I thought. Lately on one server I've noticed some issues which I'll have to dig into, and this brought me to the... Read more on Fiftyfoureleven | Go to the Link/Resource
Adam Audette provides an excellent post on building links, which he concludes with:
...what’s the most efficient method of building powerful backlinks?
The answer is simple,... Read more on Fiftyfoureleven | Go to the Link/Resource
Written by Major Hayden, a Rackspace employee, this blog is a great read for those of us who are managing a server for clients who have a dedicated or virtual dedicated server... Read more on Fiftyfoureleven | Go to the Link/Resource
An interesting looking light weight wysiwyg editor for jquery.
We haven't tested this yet but if it outputs decent markup and works across a decent range of browsers it will... Read more on Fiftyfoureleven | Go to the Link/Resource
Jquery's innovative what-you-mean text editor.
We like this editor in house, and as one may imagine have found it a bit too advanced for people who do not know html or who are... Read more on Fiftyfoureleven | Go to the Link/Resource
The BBC's dropping of hCalendar because of accessibility and usability concerns demonstrates that we have pushed the semantic capability of HTML far beyond what it can handle. The need to clearly and unambiguously add rich, meaningful semantics to markup is a driving goal of the HTML 5 project. Yet HTML 5 has two problems: it is not backward compatible because its semantic elements will not work in 75% of our browsers; and it is not forward compatible because its semantics are not extensible. If "making up new elements" isn't the solution, what is?
The BBC's dropping of hCalendar because of accessibility and usability concerns demonstrates that we have pushed the semantic capability of HTML far beyond what it can handle. The need to clearly and unambiguously add rich, meaningful semantics to markup is a driving goal of the HTML 5 project. Yet HTML 5 has two problems: it is not backward compatible because its semantic elements will not work in 75% of our browsers; and it is not forward compatible because its semantics are not extensible. If "making up new elements" isn't the solution, what is?
At least 10% of your visitors access your site over a mobile device. They deserve a good experience (and if you provide one, they'll keep coming back).
Converting your multi-column layout to a single, linear flow is a good start. But mobile devices are not created equal, and their disparate handling of CSS is like 1998 all over again. Please your users and tame their devices with handheld style sheets, CSS media queries, and (where necessary) JavaScript or server-side techniques.