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Web Design Posts Tagged ‘web design’

Safari is starting to support downloadable fonts

It looks like the technology behind Safari, Webkit, is starting to support downloadable fonts. This could mean we could use more advanced forms of typography within web sites in the near future. Currently Safari is the only one I know about that is supporting the CSS @font-face feature but it is expected that the other browsers will soon join suit.

It is exciting to think about using fonts other then the classic web safe fonts that you would find across various operating systems. (more…)

Popularity: 9%

Newsvine has been acquired by MSNBC

It looks like the popular user published news site, Newsvine has been acquired by MSNBC. The site which launched in March of 2006 and now receives millions of page views a month. Currently the Newsvine team consists of 6 people. Newsvine had raised $1.5 million in capitol before it had been bought out. The figures of exactly how much the purchase price were haven’t been released, some speculate that it was as high as $54 million. This news is groundbreaking as of yesterday. The deal, however, was finalized on Friday, October 5th 2007. Mike Davidson the co-founder of the news service has detailed the release of this information on his blog.

Apparently it has been in the works for a few months now and the deal was finally at the point to make it public. You can find out more over at Mike Industries, on Newsvine , TechCrunchor even on the MSNBC web site about it.

Popularity: 3%

Open source Dreamweaver alternatives

I have used Dreamweaver for a long time now, before that just like most in the field it was notepad. I used to not need anything fancy but the more I learned about Dreamweaver the more I liked. For instance, the ability to create keyboard shortcuts for custom snippets was endlessly handy. It is the one feature I have yet to find done decently in any other software. I also like auto-complete because when it is done right it saves you tons of keystrokes. (more…)

Popularity: 20%

Weekly link roundup for September 7th

It has been a long week of adjusting after the labor day weekend. You get into the mode where you are just not used to working and coming back Tuesday morning you are totally unprepared for the week ahead of you. But here I am on Friday picking right back up to bring some great stuff to everyone. It looks like Bitbox has a great set of Web 2.0 layer styles that can help save you time if you are making a lot of Web 2.0 layouts for applications. (more…)

Popularity: 4%

CSS Hack:Getting Safari to behave

Safari is one of those tricky browsers that aren’t the most cooperative but there aren’t many hacks for it that will work. Unlike IE that allows you to target the browser directly easily, Safari doesn’t offer that solution within XHTML. I could only come up with 2 ways to use CSS hacks or tricks for Safari specifically. The best step towards making sure all browsers work the same for your site is to use valid XHTML Strict code, this helps most of the time. But, sometimes you do have to venture away from that ideal. (more…)

Popularity: 31%

CSS Trick: Getting content wrappers to wrap

You ever had that frustrating div that would stop just short of wrapping your content like it is supposed to? Usually this div will have a background image or color that you need to go all the way around the content. There are cases where this has come up for me and there are usually two things you can do one of them is to fix the problem as you have accidentally set a property to it that doesn’t need to be there in the CSS. The other is you can add something to it to help wrap the div around your content. I’ll talk about both of these methods a little more in depth but they are quick and easy solutions for the stubborn div. (more…)

Popularity: 11%

Weekly link Roundup for the week of July 23rd

It’s been a hectic week for me, I’m sure the lack of articles portrays that pretty good. I am just glad that I have rearranged things so I can find time to focus on things like this. At any rate, I have a great collection of links from around the web today. First off I read a great article from Sitepoint this week about Microformats and getting meaning out of your markup. From the article,

Microformats are all about representing semantic information encoded within a web page, allowing that information to be leveraged in ways that were possibly never conceived by the original publisher.

All in all a great article and something that I am definitely an advocate for standards and semantics in design they are impossibly important. (more…)

Popularity: 8%

Test IE5 or IE6 on your PC with IE7 installed

I get this question quite a bit for people that need to test their web sites on IE6 mostly that already have IE7 installed. I have found a great piece of software from TredoSoft that does just this. It basically installed IE 3.0, IE 4.01, IE 5.01, IE 5.5 and IE 6 on your computer to let you test your web page on them. This is all assuming you have IE7 already installed. If for whatever reason you don’t want to replace your IE6 with IE7 they also have a stand alone IE7 that you can install to test your web pages on.

I mostly use this software for testing web pages on IE6 standalone. This is a very useful software for testing your web page. For those of you wishing to test Safari you may know that it has been released for PC, but it is still a little buggy.

Unfortunately I don’t have a good way right now to test other browsers on your Mac but I will keep an eye out for something that does. Hopefully the company will create IE6 stand alone for the Mac soon. Currently it does work for Windows XP and Vista though.

Popularity: 24%

Weekly CSS Trick: The IE underscore hack

This week it is a hack that I am providing for everyone to enjoy, it allows you to easily add a quick style within your existing style sheet to target internet explorer. This can help so you don’t have to check your ie CSS file if is just a simple margin adjustment. Which as we all know internet explorer has some issues with, especially internet explorer 6. The underscore hack is pretty basic but I will go over the various uses for it and touch on what browsers it affects and which browsers ignore it. (more…)

Popularity: 9%

Back from vacation, with some links

I went to Galveston Island in Texas over the weekend for a little weekend retreat to the beach. It was great. So I missed the link roundup for last week and I’m coming close to missing the CSS trick / hack for the week. But I won’t miss them and I’m here now to provide everyone with some quality links. (more…)

Popularity: 6%


Recent comments

Top 5 design podcasts for designers

On January 4, 2009, projectautomatika wrote:

Thanks for the list. I am currently listening to Rookie Designer podcast.

How to create a good looking form without tables, using CSS

On December 25, 2008, SEO Bonn wrote:

Super Beitrag! Frohe Weihnachten

How to ruin your website in 10 easy steps

On December 20, 2008, Coach Hire wrote:

Hello. I think you are eactly thinking like Sukrat. I really loved the post.

Safari is starting to support downloadable fonts

On December 19, 2008, vooxomoth wrote:

Yay, just like what I needed, let’s allow fucktard designers to flood us with stupid fonts, imagine myspace now. The web is supposed to be read not to...

The best free web development add-ons for IE 6 and 7

On December 18, 2008, Philips wrote:

I would recommend, however, that to understand how it all works to reference the information from http://w3schools.com. http://www.openwavecomp.com I agree...