Also, you could dim the first view and thumbnail on the print and web
pages to show that they're currently displayed.

A beautiful site, though!  I was actually planning on doing the same
drop-down effect on my site redesign (which should be done sometime in
'09).  Stole my thunder!

On Jan 30, 3:04 pm, "Benjamin Sterling"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Looks really nice, but I would second Dan's comments and would probably
> suggest you implement the history plugin.  Being in the DC area, 508
> compliance is a big sell.
>
> On 1/30/08, Dan G. Switzer, II <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
> > >Sapitot Creative is a Design firm that recently redesigned their
> > >website. jQuery is being used to enhance page transitions and to give
> > >a little flair to the print and web portfolio sections. What is real
> > >interesting is the unconventional use of jQuery-ui.tabs plugin for the
> > >main navigation.
>
> > >Check it out:www.sapitot.com
>
> > Overall it looks good. A couple of comments:
>
> > 1) I'd change the URL each time one of the tabs is clicked--that way users
> > can cut-n-paste the URLs and e-mail them. If possible, it'd also use
> > meaningful hashes (like #store, #web, #print, #about, etc.)
>
> > 2) Occasionally I was able to get the "Loading..." message that appears
> > when
> > you've clicked on a category to never go away. It seems to happen if you
> > click on another menu option before the last animation has finished. (I
> > suspect you're using a global variable to reset the value and this is
> > getting overwritten.)
>
> > -Dan
>
> --
> Benjamin 
> Sterlinghttp://www.KenzoMedia.comhttp://www.KenzoHosting.comhttp://www.benjaminsterling.com

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