[wdvltalk] RE: SCR: www.streightsite.blogspot.com

2004-09-14 Thread Jon Haworth
> What are we supposed to do, own multiple 
> browsers, and view every site we create or 
> operate in all the browsers? 

Afraid so :-)

There's a service at www.browsercam.com that can generate screenshots of how
things look in various browsers, but for best results you really should
check out your pages in the actual browsers themselves.

> how many browsers, and which ones, should 
> a web developer view his sites in?

Personally, I use:

- IE 6
- Mozilla/Firefox (Gecko engine)
- Opera
- Lynx (for search engine testing)

If you have access to a Mac it's also a very good idea to test on those as
there are some substantial differences, e.g. in how large your text will be
displayed.

I suppose you could use Netscape 4 as well, but I just can't bring myself to
care about it any more :-)

Cheers
Jon



 • The WDVL Discussion List from WDVL.COM • 
To Join wdvltalk, Send An Email To: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
   Send Your Posts To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To set a personal password send an email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the words: "set 
WDVLTALK pw=yourpassword" in the body of the email.
To change subscription settings to the wdvltalk digest version:
http://wdvl.internet.com/WDVL/Forum/#sub

  http://www.wdvl.com  ___

You are currently subscribed to wdvltalk as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To unsubscribe via postal mail, please contact us at:
Jupitermedia Corp.
Attn: Discussion List Management
475 Park Avenue South
New York, NY 10016

Please include the email address which you have been contacted with.



[wdvltalk] RE: SCR: www.streightsite.blogspot.com

2004-09-14 Thread ANDREA STREIGHT
Joseph:

I always browse with IE 6, and the site looks okay, but when I tried using 
Netscape just for a different view, it had the top 1/8 inch chopped off, the 
blog posts had a gray background for the text, rather than white, and there 
was a strange white stripe running across the top of the displayed post.

What are we supposed to do, own multiple browsers, and view every site we 
create or operate in all the browsers? This might make a good thread: how 
many browsers, and which ones, should a web developer view his sites in?

Very frustrating, and I have no idea what to do next.


Steven Streight
STREIGHT SITE SYSTEMS
Web Usability Analysis
Web Content Writing
Online & Direct Marketing

[EMAIL PROTECTED]

www.vaspersthegrate.blogspot.com  *Web Usability*

www.streightsite.blogspot.com  *Mentally Correct Marketing*

www.stcsig.org/usability/newsletter/0408-user-observation.html  *latest 
published online article* 

 • The WDVL Discussion List from WDVL.COM • 
To Join wdvltalk, Send An Email To: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
   Send Your Posts To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To set a personal password send an email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the words: "set 
WDVLTALK pw=yourpassword" in the body of the email.
To change subscription settings to the wdvltalk digest version:
http://wdvl.internet.com/WDVL/Forum/#sub

  http://www.wdvl.com  ___

You are currently subscribed to wdvltalk as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To unsubscribe via postal mail, please contact us at:
Jupitermedia Corp.
Attn: Discussion List Management
475 Park Avenue South
New York, NY 10016

Please include the email address which you have been contacted with.



[wdvltalk] RE: CSS boxes etc

2004-09-14 Thread Cheryl D Wise
Ah, those are usually done with javascript and not just CSS. Especially if
you see them on IE because IE only supports position fixed for background.
The first started appearing a couple of years ago and are intended to keep
some object always in view, usually a menu. Not many people use them now.
They were a fad for awhile. If someone wants to use one it should be in its
own column so it doesn't obscure text.

Or do you mean the Flash ads? Yahoo is notorious for using them. One of the
benefits to using Firefox, Mozilla or Opera is that those floating flash ads
don't "float".


Cheryl D. Wise
Certified Professional Web Developer
MS-MVP-FrontPage
www.wiserways.com
mailto: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
713.353.0139 Office

 
-Original Message-
From: Joseph Harris

The mobile boxes I have seen which I have been describing (inadequately) are
not the ones that fill a width, but those that float so that if the browser
is scrolled a section (usually with transparency but not always) bounces
around at the top ot side or bottom of the window, often obscuring some part
of the main text;  the movement can be uncomfortable.   I am starting to
understand this is not what I had thought, but what is that?


 • The WDVL Discussion List from WDVL.COM • 
To Join wdvltalk, Send An Email To: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
   Send Your Posts To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To set a personal password send an email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the words: "set 
WDVLTALK pw=yourpassword" in the body of the email.
To change subscription settings to the wdvltalk digest version:
http://wdvl.internet.com/WDVL/Forum/#sub

  http://www.wdvl.com  ___

You are currently subscribed to wdvltalk as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To unsubscribe via postal mail, please contact us at:
Jupitermedia Corp.
Attn: Discussion List Management
475 Park Avenue South
New York, NY 10016

Please include the email address which you have been contacted with.



[wdvltalk] RE: SCR: www.streightsite.blogspot.com

2004-09-14 Thread Joseph Harris
Well isn't that wierd Steven.   Now the box area has come up grey (gray) in
IE, Opera and Firefox (which I have just installed).   In firefox it merges
into one grey area with a strange grey/white strip at the top of the white.

I don't know why the blue isn't showing - it does need that colour area I
think.   I wasn't thinking of the web safe colours (I'm not sure that is
important any more, though others will be able to advise better) just that
the cerise? was it? came through very bright.

The wording seems good and direct, though I liked the previous one too -
just pulling your leg about the poetry.   On the other hand one can't assume
potential customers have a sense of humour!   (Unless your site is about
humour, of course!)

I just reloaded to check and in Firefox the centre now has its shadow.   But
still no blue at the top.

HTH

Joseph

> Joseph: thanks for taking a moment to check the color of my blog
description
> area. I use only browser-safe colors according to Thomas Powell's Web
Design
> book, the 00 and FF hexadecimals, which gives me 10 colors to choose from.
> >From 00 aqua to 00 yellow. I switched the background color to
blue,
> and shortened the text, so I think it works now.
>
> Steven Streight
> STREIGHT SITE SYSTEMS
> Web Usability Analysis
> Web Content Writing
> Online & Direct Marketing
>
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> www.vaspersthegrate.blogspot.com   *Web Usability*
>
> www.streightsite.blogspot.com  *Mentally Correct Marketing*
>
> www.stcsig.org/usability/newsletter/0408-user-observation.html  *latest
> published online*
>


 • The WDVL Discussion List from WDVL.COM • 
To Join wdvltalk, Send An Email To: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
   Send Your Posts To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To set a personal password send an email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the words: "set 
WDVLTALK pw=yourpassword" in the body of the email.
To change subscription settings to the wdvltalk digest version:
http://wdvl.internet.com/WDVL/Forum/#sub

  http://www.wdvl.com  ___

You are currently subscribed to wdvltalk as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To unsubscribe via postal mail, please contact us at:
Jupitermedia Corp.
Attn: Discussion List Management
475 Park Avenue South
New York, NY 10016

Please include the email address which you have been contacted with.



[wdvltalk] RE: SCR: www.streightsite.blogspot.com

2004-09-14 Thread ANDREA STREIGHT
Joseph: thanks for taking a moment to check the color of my blog description 
area. I use only browser-safe colors according to Thomas Powell's Web Design 
book, the 00 and FF hexadecimals, which gives me 10 colors to choose from. 
>From 00 aqua to 00 yellow. I switched the background color to blue, 
and shortened the text, so I think it works now.

Steven Streight
STREIGHT SITE SYSTEMS
Web Usability Analysis
Web Content Writing
Online & Direct Marketing

[EMAIL PROTECTED]

www.vaspersthegrate.blogspot.com   *Web Usability*

www.streightsite.blogspot.com  *Mentally Correct Marketing*

www.stcsig.org/usability/newsletter/0408-user-observation.html  *latest 
published online* 

 • The WDVL Discussion List from WDVL.COM • 
To Join wdvltalk, Send An Email To: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
   Send Your Posts To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To set a personal password send an email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the words: "set 
WDVLTALK pw=yourpassword" in the body of the email.
To change subscription settings to the wdvltalk digest version:
http://wdvl.internet.com/WDVL/Forum/#sub

  http://www.wdvl.com  ___

You are currently subscribed to wdvltalk as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To unsubscribe via postal mail, please contact us at:
Jupitermedia Corp.
Attn: Discussion List Management
475 Park Avenue South
New York, NY 10016

Please include the email address which you have been contacted with.



[wdvltalk] RE: CSS boxes etc

2004-09-14 Thread Stephen Caudill
Just to follow up...  I had meant to mention earlier that there are
quite a few /benefits/ to fixed width layouts.  While you noted they
seem inflexible, until we get a bit better CSS support from IE (namely
min-width and max-width, which will enable us to blend fluid and fixed
width layouts a bit more freely), they're actually a boon to
usability:

http://psychology.wichita.edu/surl/usabilitynews/3S/layout.htm
http://www.humanfactors.com/downloads/feb03.asp

The basics of it being that shorter lines are easier for people to
read. I'm not dyslexic, but it's still sometimes easy for me to lose
my place in the midst of reading lengthy texts with longish lines... I
can only imagine how crapulent that must be for people with genuine
disabilities (even relatively minor ones like dyslexia).

I'm fairly sure the 'mobile boxes' you're refferring to are actually
DHTML (JS, CSS and HTML) layers which are being positioned relative to
the viewport.  Interestingly enough, this is a really just a hack for
the CSS2 property 'position:fixed', which does the same thing in
browsers that support it, but without the annoying bumping around you
describe.

 - Stephen


On Tue, 14 Sep 2004 22:44:57 +0100, Joseph Harris
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Will,
> 
> I saw this after I had sent out my earlier reply.   I have Top Style Lite
> (from a much earlier recommendation by Cheryl) and I agree it is a great
> help.   And thanks Cheryl for the further link.
> 
> I clicked back to my own (tables) site to check I was talking (and writing)
> sense and I find that some pages re-adjust to more or less fit a smaller
> browser window and some don't - or do so to a lesser degree!!   My skills
> (and time to hone them) are by necessity limited, so I'm not too ashamed of
> that, but my object is a site which offers a good experience however the
> browser window is.
> 
> I have taken on board Stephen's further highly informative and helpful
> remarks.
> 
> Now I have (since I have noted boxes) understood that there are great
> similarities in appearance between tables and boxes;  and previously that
> css cleans up the html (the added SE positioning value I had not registered
> before, though).
> 
> I will download and see how I get on with Stephen's Firefox advice.
> 
> The mobile boxes I have seen which I have been describing (inadequately) are
> not the ones that fill a width, but those that float so that if the browser
> is scrolled a section (usually with transparency but not always) bounces
> around at the top ot side or bottom of the window, often obscuring some part
> of the main text;  the movement can be uncomfortable.   I am starting to
> understand this is not what I had thought, but what is that?
> 
> Thanks again for all the comments, teachers.
> 
> Joseph (who thought he had a good gripe)

 • The WDVL Discussion List from WDVL.COM • 
To Join wdvltalk, Send An Email To: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
   Send Your Posts To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To set a personal password send an email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the words: "set 
WDVLTALK pw=yourpassword" in the body of the email.
To change subscription settings to the wdvltalk digest version:
http://wdvl.internet.com/WDVL/Forum/#sub

  http://www.wdvl.com  ___

You are currently subscribed to wdvltalk as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To unsubscribe via postal mail, please contact us at:
Jupitermedia Corp.
Attn: Discussion List Management
475 Park Avenue South
New York, NY 10016

Please include the email address which you have been contacted with.



[wdvltalk] RE: CSS boxes etc

2004-09-14 Thread Ross Clutterbuck
Joseph
Just a little thing. Don't confuse "floats" with "fluid" as they're 
different things. All the behaviour you seem to be referring to is fluid 
design, whereby the layout of a page flows with the sizing of the browser.

Note however that it's not really common user practice to constantly size 
your browser - users will have their preferences on how big they want their 
browser window and what text size they want and generally leave it at that. 
Fluid design will ensure that your design work will flow accordingly and fit 
to what canvas it's been provided with with the beneift of rejigging itself 
should the user resize.

But fixed sized design is also perfectly valid: A List Apart, Happy Cog and 
Macromedia sites all look mighty fine with their fixed-width, centered 
display area design.

Enjoy yourself on this one Joseph - it's a big scary world at first but 
you'll come to love it...

MOU 


 • The WDVL Discussion List from WDVL.COM • 
To Join wdvltalk, Send An Email To: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  Send Your Posts To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To set a personal password send an email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the words: "set WDVLTALK pw=yourpassword" in the body of the email.
To change subscription settings to the wdvltalk digest version:
   http://wdvl.internet.com/WDVL/Forum/#sub

  http://www.wdvl.com  ___
You are currently subscribed to wdvltalk as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To unsubscribe via postal mail, please contact us at:
Jupitermedia Corp.
Attn: Discussion List Management
475 Park Avenue South
New York, NY 10016
Please include the email address which you have been contacted with.


[wdvltalk] RE: CSS boxes etc

2004-09-14 Thread Joseph Harris
Will,

I saw this after I had sent out my earlier reply.   I have Top Style Lite
(from a much earlier recommendation by Cheryl) and I agree it is a great
help.   And thanks Cheryl for the further link.

I clicked back to my own (tables) site to check I was talking (and writing)
sense and I find that some pages re-adjust to more or less fit a smaller
browser window and some don't - or do so to a lesser degree!!   My skills
(and time to hone them) are by necessity limited, so I'm not too ashamed of
that, but my object is a site which offers a good experience however the
browser window is.

I have taken on board Stephen's further highly informative and helpful
remarks.

Now I have (since I have noted boxes) understood that there are great
similarities in appearance between tables and boxes;  and previously that
css cleans up the html (the added SE positioning value I had not registered
before, though).

I will download and see how I get on with Stephen's Firefox advice.

The mobile boxes I have seen which I have been describing (inadequately) are
not the ones that fill a width, but those that float so that if the browser
is scrolled a section (usually with transparency but not always) bounces
around at the top ot side or bottom of the window, often obscuring some part
of the main text;  the movement can be uncomfortable.   I am starting to
understand this is not what I had thought, but what is that?

Thanks again for all the comments, teachers.

Joseph (who thought he had a good gripe)

> Joseph,
>
> Also google for "css columns."  That will help you get a foundational
> understanding of how css does layouts.  I try to shy away from absolute
> positioning as much as I can.
>
> Check out: http://www.simplebits.com  He has some wonderful CSS designs
> and tutorials (although many are advanced). Here is the exact link to
> his CSS section:
> http://www.simplebits.com/notebook/css/index.html
>
> Purchase TopStyle3 Pro.  I cannot say enough about how this program has
> helped me.  It will give you instruction on what certain CSS elements
> are and help you keep syntactically correct.
>
> Take a lot of code apart.  This is my best way of learning.  I'm like
> the apprentice brain surgeon: I touch a brain lobe and then see what
> part of the body twitched!  :)
>
> Hope that helped,
> Will
>
> Professional Graphics Artist
> Certified Web Designer (BCIP)
>
> Stewart and Company
> --
> www.stewartandcompany.net
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> --
> W: 304.550.2687
>
> Rt. 1 Box 364
> Buffalo, WV
> 25033
>
> -Original Message-
> From: Joseph Harris [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Monday, September 13, 2004 7:44 PM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: [wdvltalk] CSS boxes etc
>
> With Cascade DTP I have just been experimenting with absolute
> positioning.
> My impression is that this forces a very rigid approach to design and
> layout.   And I have not felt there is comfortable surfing with the
> floats I
> have viewed.
>
> If I am missing the point how, with the latest css (oft-praised on wdvl
> talk), can I achieve the flow and adaptability of tables - which I find
> a
> much more comfortable viewing experience?
>
> Intertwined in this, I suppose, is the question:  just because it can be
> done, should it?I hope this is a sensible question;  I have my
> dunce's
> cap ready if not.
>
> Joseph Harris
>
>
>  . The WDVL Discussion List from WDVL.COM . 
> To Join wdvltalk, Send An Email To: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Send Your Posts To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> To set a personal password send an email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the
words: "set WDVLTALK pw=yourpassword" in the body of the email.
> To change subscription settings to the wdvltalk digest version:
> http://wdvl.internet.com/WDVL/Forum/#sub
>
>   http://www.wdvl.com  ___
>
> You are currently subscribed to wdvltalk as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> To unsubscribe send a blank email to
%%email.unsub%%
>
> To unsubscribe via postal mail, please contact us at:
> Jupitermedia Corp.
> Attn: Discussion List Management
> 475 Park Avenue South
> New York, NY 10016
>
> Please include the email address which you have been contacted with.
>
>


 • The WDVL Discussion List from WDVL.COM • 
To Join wdvltalk, Send An Email To: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
   Send Your Posts To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To set a personal password send an email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the words: "set 
WDVLTALK pw=yourpassword" in the body of the email.
To change subscription settings to the wdvltalk digest version:
http://wdvl.internet.com/WDVL/Forum/#sub

  http://www.wdvl.com  ___

You are currently subscribed to wdvltalk as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To unsubscribe via postal mail, please contact us at:
Jupitermedia Corp.
Attn: Discussion List Management
475 Park Avenue South
New York, NY 10016

Please include the email address which you have been contacted with.

[wdvltalk] RE: CSS boxes etc

2004-09-14 Thread Cheryl D Wise
To add to Stephen's description of what a float is the closes HTML analogy
is "align". Basically allows text wrapping. 

Another site to look at for CSS layouts but this time featuring current live
sites is http://cssvault.com/

Cheryl D. Wise
Certified Professional Web Developer
MS-MVP-FrontPage
www.wiserways.com
mailto: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
713.353.0139 Office

 
-Original Message-
From: Stephen Caudill

> Oh so many of the floats I have seen move around with scrolling, or 
> change shape and/or position as the page downloads (maybe not only a 
> box problem, but encouraged by the technique).

I think you're unclear on what a float is.  Maybe it's an issue of
terminology, but it sounds like you're talking more about the liquid width
layouts than floats. So, first a definition:

http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-CSS2/visuren.html#floats";>
9.5 Floats

A float is a box that is shifted to the left or right on the current line.
The most interesting characteristic of a float (or "floated" or "floating"
box) is that content may flow along its side (or be prohibited from doing so
by the 'clear' property)...


I will presume you mean liquid layouts (correct me if I'm wrong). 
Again, what you've said of liquid CSS layouts is just as true of liquid
table based  layouts.  The premise is the same.  You have a portion of the
screen which stretches to fit the available area. 
Content reflow is going to behave precisely the same regardless.  In fact
here's a demo page:

http://mechavox.com/sandbox/squishy.html

>  So I am not just asking for adivce and help on how to go about it (I 
> am already sold on css itself) but for a part of the discussion MOU 
> referred to:  can I make this new (to me anyway) method as flexible in 
> different sized bowsers as I can make tables (visually comfortable is 
> what I mean) without suffering a fluidity that ageing and imperfect 
> eyes will find uncomfortable?

Well, I can't speak on the matter of what is and is not easy on the eyes,
but I can say with much certainty that you may not only find as much
flexibility, but much more with CSS layouts.  Here's a good
example:

http://www.csszengarden.com/?cssfile=/063/063.css&page=0

Try changing your font size on that page.
 
> At the moment I am planning to stay with tables for my redesign (if I 
> ever get it done!!!) but I could still be convinced that I shouldn't;  
> but it is viewr experience I am concerned with.

In respect to viewer experience:  By laying out with CSS, you allow more
viewers to experience your site.  A semantically coded, valid site, with
separated presentation goes a long way to being accessible by default.  This
means more user agents (PDA's, cell phones, braille and screen readers,
web-enabled toilets, etc.) can get your content in an easily digested
format.  That, to me, *is* good viewer experience.
 
> Sorry to go on at length, but I think this is an important aspect.

So do I :)

Here's another tidbit for your thinking cap.  You've got one customer that's
(arguably) more important than any other.  And it's blind.  The web spider.
It likes to have high "content-to-markup" ratio's.  An easy way to achieve
that is by having all of your presentation separated out into a single
external file that the spider doesn't care about... your css.  Add to that,
semantically appropriate markup that gives spiders hints as to which pieces
of text in a page should be considered important and you'll be well on your
way to good search engine placement.

okay, I'm done.  someone put the soap box away for me. I need a smoke.


 • The WDVL Discussion List from WDVL.COM • 
To Join wdvltalk, Send An Email To: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
   Send Your Posts To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To set a personal password send an email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the words: "set 
WDVLTALK pw=yourpassword" in the body of the email.
To change subscription settings to the wdvltalk digest version:
http://wdvl.internet.com/WDVL/Forum/#sub

  http://www.wdvl.com  ___

You are currently subscribed to wdvltalk as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To unsubscribe via postal mail, please contact us at:
Jupitermedia Corp.
Attn: Discussion List Management
475 Park Avenue South
New York, NY 10016

Please include the email address which you have been contacted with.



[wdvltalk] Re: Cracked DVD

2004-09-14 Thread Scott Glasgow
Download DVD Decrypter (http://www.dvddecrypter.com/) and DVD Shrink
(http://www.dvdshrink.info/ and http://www.dvdshrink.org/where.html).
Personal-use copies of media that you own are not a problem, but you will
need DVD Decrypter to get rid of the CSS and Macrovision protection and DVD
Shrink to fit the content into the 4.7 GB available on consumer-recordable
single-layer DVDs (typical commercial movies have 5.5 - 8.5 GB, depending on
extra features, on their dual-layer--9 GB--commercial disks).

Be aware that this will be a little time-consuming. It takes 25-35 minutes
to decrypt a disk and another 55-80 minutes to compress it, then about 25-35
to burn it (YMMV, that's on my NEC 1000+). Although it takes a while, DVD
Shrink does a hell of a good job, retaining all menus and special features
while providing exceptionally good quality compressed video.

Cheers,
Scott

P.S. Note that although both programs are free, the authors have done a hell
of a job and produced quality, frequently updated programs that do what they
claim to do. They do accept donations, and a few bucks ain't gonna kill ya
if you use their stuff.

- Original Message - 
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Monday, September 13, 2004 6:17 PM
Subject: [wdvltalk] Cracked DVD


> Hi all,
>
> A friend bought my son a 2 disc set of Toy Story off eBay.  The problem
> is that disc 2 is cracked.  It is still playable but if you lift it out
> the wrong way the whole thing will crack.  Is there a way of repairing
> it?  What about tape/sticker something?  I guess it would be illegal to
> copy it onto my computer and then burn another cd . . .
>
> TIA,
> Riva
>
>
> Riva Portman, MCIWD
> Certified Webdesigner
> Star Quality Designs
> www.starqualitydesigns.com
>
>  . The WDVL Discussion List from WDVL.COM . 
> To Join wdvltalk, Send An Email To: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Send Your Posts To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> To set a personal password send an email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the
words: "set WDVLTALK pw=yourpassword" in the body of the email.
> To change subscription settings to the wdvltalk digest version:
> http://wdvl.internet.com/WDVL/Forum/#sub
>
>   http://www.wdvl.com  ___
>
> You are currently subscribed to wdvltalk as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> To unsubscribe send a blank email to %%email.unsub%%
>
> To unsubscribe via postal mail, please contact us at:
> Jupitermedia Corp.
> Attn: Discussion List Management
> 475 Park Avenue South
> New York, NY 10016
>
> Please include the email address which you have been contacted with.
>


 • The WDVL Discussion List from WDVL.COM • 
To Join wdvltalk, Send An Email To: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
   Send Your Posts To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To set a personal password send an email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the words: "set 
WDVLTALK pw=yourpassword" in the body of the email.
To change subscription settings to the wdvltalk digest version:
http://wdvl.internet.com/WDVL/Forum/#sub

  http://www.wdvl.com  ___

You are currently subscribed to wdvltalk as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To unsubscribe via postal mail, please contact us at:
Jupitermedia Corp.
Attn: Discussion List Management
475 Park Avenue South
New York, NY 10016

Please include the email address which you have been contacted with.



[wdvltalk] RE: CSS boxes etc

2004-09-14 Thread Stephen Caudill
/me whipes the sweat from his brow.

Okay...  


On Tue, 14 Sep 2004 16:10:38 +0100, Joseph Harris
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> drew, MOU and Stephen,


 
> Now, whatever size of screen a surfer has his/her viewing experience is
> affected by the size of browser as she/he uses it.   On the fixed box sites
> a browser smaller than the designed size needs scrolling (not such a problem
> in all honesty) but may also mean important design aspects cannot do their
> 'one second hypnosis' job, and it looks inflexible which is not a good image
> on the flexible net.

Everything you just said is as true of table-based layouts as CSS
based layouts.  It's pretty simple really... if you set your width to
high, people will have to scroll.
 


> Oh so many of the floats I have seen move around with scrolling, or change
> shape and/or position as the page downloads (maybe not only a box problem,
> but encouraged by the technique). 

I think you're unclear on what a float is.  Maybe it's an issue of
terminology, but it sounds like you're talking more about the liquid
width layouts than floats. So, first a definition:

http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-CSS2/visuren.html#floats";>
9.5 Floats

A float is a box that is shifted to the left or right on the current
line. The most interesting characteristic of a float (or "floated" or
"floating" box) is that content may flow along its side (or be
prohibited from doing so by the 'clear' property)...


I will presume you mean liquid layouts (correct me if I'm wrong). 
Again, what you've said of liquid CSS layouts is just as true of
liquid table based  layouts.  The premise is the same.  You have a
portion of the screen which stretches to fit the available area. 
Content reflow is going to behave precisely the same regardless.  In
fact here's a demo page:

http://mechavox.com/sandbox/squishy.html

>  So I am not just asking for adivce and
> help on how to go about it (I am already sold on css itself) but for a part
> of the discussion MOU referred to:  can I make this new (to me anyway)
> method as flexible in different sized bowsers as I can make tables (visually
> comfortable is what I mean) without suffering a fluidity that ageing and
> imperfect eyes will find uncomfortable?

Well, I can't speak on the matter of what is and is not easy on the
eyes, but I can say with much certainty that you may not only find as
much flexibility, but much more with CSS layouts.  Here's a good
example:

http://www.csszengarden.com/?cssfile=/063/063.css&page=0

Try changing your font size on that page.
 
> At the moment I am planning to stay with tables for my redesign (if I ever
> get it done!!!) but I could still be convinced that I shouldn't;  but it is
> viewr experience I am concerned with.

In respect to viewer experience:  By laying out with CSS, you allow
more viewers to experience your site.  A semantically coded, valid
site, with separated presentation goes a long way to being accessible
by default.  This means more user agents (PDA's, cell phones, braille
and screen readers, web-enabled toilets, etc.) can get your content in
an easily digested format.  That, to me, *is* good viewer experience.
 
> Sorry to go on at length, but I think this is an important aspect.

So do I :)

Here's another tidbit for your thinking cap.  You've got one customer
that's (arguably) more important than any other.  And it's blind.  The
web spider.  It likes to have high "content-to-markup" ratio's.  An
easy way to achieve that is by having all of your presentation
separated out into a single external file that the spider doesn't care
about... your css.  Add to that, semantically appropriate markup that
gives spiders hints as to which pieces of text in a page should be
considered important and you'll be well on your way to good search
engine placement.

okay, I'm done.  someone put the soap box away for me. I need a smoke.

- Stephen

 • The WDVL Discussion List from WDVL.COM • 
To Join wdvltalk, Send An Email To: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
   Send Your Posts To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To set a personal password send an email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the words: "set 
WDVLTALK pw=yourpassword" in the body of the email.
To change subscription settings to the wdvltalk digest version:
http://wdvl.internet.com/WDVL/Forum/#sub

  http://www.wdvl.com  ___

You are currently subscribed to wdvltalk as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To unsubscribe via postal mail, please contact us at:
Jupitermedia Corp.
Attn: Discussion List Management
475 Park Avenue South
New York, NY 10016

Please include the email address which you have been contacted with.



[wdvltalk] OT: domain name, familywebdesign.com

2004-09-14 Thread William Stewart
I purchased the domain name familywebdesign.com last year and have
decided to let it expire.  I just wanted to give everyone a notice in
case you want to purchase it once I lose the name.  It will expire
September 18.

Sincerely,
Will Stewart

Professional Graphics Artist
Certified Web Designer (BCIP)

Stewart and Company
--
www.stewartandcompany.net
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
--
W: 304.550.2687

Rt. 1 Box 364
Buffalo, WV
25033



 • The WDVL Discussion List from WDVL.COM • 
To Join wdvltalk, Send An Email To: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
   Send Your Posts To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To set a personal password send an email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the words: "set 
WDVLTALK pw=yourpassword" in the body of the email.
To change subscription settings to the wdvltalk digest version:
http://wdvl.internet.com/WDVL/Forum/#sub

  http://www.wdvl.com  ___

You are currently subscribed to wdvltalk as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To unsubscribe via postal mail, please contact us at:
Jupitermedia Corp.
Attn: Discussion List Management
475 Park Avenue South
New York, NY 10016

Please include the email address which you have been contacted with.



[wdvltalk] RE: CSS boxes etc

2004-09-14 Thread Stephen Caudill
See my replies inline.


On Tue, 14 Sep 2004 09:34:11 -0400, William Stewart
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Joseph,
> 
> Also google for "css columns."  That will help you get a foundational
> understanding of how css does layouts.  I try to shy away from absolute
> positioning as much as I can.

Oh... Absolute Positioning's not so bad.  In fact it's *very*
powerful.  Especially when you start mixing absolute and relative
positioning.  Not so good as far as subject matter for beginners
though.
 
> Check out: http://www.simplebits.com  He has some wonderful CSS designs
> and tutorials (although many are advanced). Here is the exact link to
> his CSS section:
> http://www.simplebits.com/notebook/css/index.html
> 
> Purchase TopStyle3 Pro.  I cannot say enough about how this program has
> helped me.  It will give you instruction on what certain CSS elements
> are and help you keep syntactically correct.

You know, I didn't think about it, but Will is absolutely correct on
this one.  TopStyle (even the free lite version if you have to [be
assured the Pro upgrade has functionality out the wazoo and it's only
$40us]) has been the key to my attaining a thorough understanding of
CSS.  Can't reccomend it enough.
 
> Take a lot of code apart.  This is my best way of learning.  I'm like
> the apprentice brain surgeon: I touch a brain lobe and then see what
> part of the body twitched!  :)

To aid in doing this... Make the switch to FireFox.  For two reasons:

[1] Web Developers Toolbar
[2] EditCss sidebar

The Web Developers Toolbar will help you immensely with CSS Layout. 
The ability to easily turn on and off borders on block level elements
in and of itself (Outline > Outline Block Level Elements) will save
you /tons/ of time.  Not to mention the bevy of other goodies it
boasts...

EditCss!  Even though the Web Developers Toolbar has this
functionality built into it, this is the way to go!  All I do is hit
ctrl + 8 and I've got *all*  of the CSS (inline, embedded, linked)
ready to edit in a handy sidebar that slides out from the right.  Make
changes and watch there effects in real time.  So bad ass!

Plus, it's all free.

hth,
Stephen

[1] http://www.chrispederick.com/work/firefox/webdeveloper/
[2] http://editcss.mozdev.org/

 • The WDVL Discussion List from WDVL.COM • 
To Join wdvltalk, Send An Email To: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
   Send Your Posts To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To set a personal password send an email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the words: "set 
WDVLTALK pw=yourpassword" in the body of the email.
To change subscription settings to the wdvltalk digest version:
http://wdvl.internet.com/WDVL/Forum/#sub

  http://www.wdvl.com  ___

You are currently subscribed to wdvltalk as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To unsubscribe via postal mail, please contact us at:
Jupitermedia Corp.
Attn: Discussion List Management
475 Park Avenue South
New York, NY 10016

Please include the email address which you have been contacted with.



[wdvltalk] RE: CSS boxes etc

2004-09-14 Thread Joseph Harris
drew, MOU and Stephen,

I am following through on the urls and will further build my understanding;
zengarden and happycog are excellent sites.   I don't argue with that at
all.   Positioniseverything offers great clarity.   I have no trouble with
the principles of css/box/float, nor the site control it offers -
particularly for the larger sites.

While, as a limited web designer, I like any of these techniques which make
that side of life easier I am also a site owner concerned with my surfer's
experience.   It is here that I see problems.   I use my own surfing as a
test and a sort of metaphor for my visitors.

Now, whatever size of screen a surfer has his/her viewing experience is
affected by the size of browser as she/he uses it.   On the fixed box sites
a browser smaller than the designed size needs scrolling (not such a problem
in all honesty) but may also mean important design aspects cannot do their
'one second hypnosis' job, and it looks inflexible which is not a good image
on the flexible net.

Floats have another difficulty.   Many surfers will have no problem with an
ever changing text and box shaping as scrolling is done.   But, not only for
old codgers like me, too much visual disturbance creates actual discomfort.
In fact I increasing limit my television watching because the excess use of
flashing, quick refocussing, idiiotically close close-ups, crossing of
people and objects between the subject and the camera, fast sweeps and
ever-shortening takes (to name but a few coke-induced ideas).   Like
everybody else I sit much closer to the monitor than to a TV screen.

Oh so many of the floats I have seen move around with scrolling, or change
shape and/or position as the page downloads (maybe not only a box problem,
but encouraged by the technique).   So I am not just asking for adivce and
help on how to go about it (I am already sold on css itself) but for a part
of the discussion MOU referred to:  can I make this new (to me anyway)
method as flexible in different sized bowsers as I can make tables (visually
comfortable is what I mean) without suffering a fluidity that ageing and
imperfect eyes will find uncomfortable?

At the moment I am planning to stay with tables for my redesign (if I ever
get it done!!!) but I could still be convinced that I shouldn't;  but it is
viewr experience I am concerned with.

Sorry to go on at length, but I think this is an important aspect.

Joseph Harris

> From: Joseph Harris
> Subject: [wdvltalk] CSS boxes etc
>
> With Cascade DTP I have just been experimenting with absolute positioning.
> My impression is that this forces a very rigid approach to design and
> layout.   And I have not felt there is comfortable surfing with the floats
I
> have viewed.
>
> If I am missing the point how, with the latest css (oft-praised on wdvl
> talk), can I achieve the flow and adaptability of tables - which I find a
> much more comfortable viewing experience?
>
> Intertwined in this, I suppose, is the question:  just because it can be
> done, should it?I hope this is a sensible question;  I have my dunce's
> cap ready if not.
>
> Joseph Harris
>
>
>

>
> West Civ offers a fine set of basic courses. Their technique is to offer
> free online versions on a rotating basis. Currently they are offering CSS
> Level 1, the introductory course. It's in week 5 now but you can also get
to
> Week 4 and frankly the expense is minor for the entire course. Have a look
> at:
>
> http://www.westciv.com/courses/free/index.html
>
> Also for the box model, Big John and Holly have a fine mini tutorial at:
>
> http://www.positioniseverything.net/articles/float-theory.html
>
> Their site is excellent for explaining some of the special features found
> only in IE.
>
> drew
>
>  . The WDVL Discussion List from WDVL.COM . 
> To Join wdvltalk, Send An Email To: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Send Your Posts To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> To set a personal password send an email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the
words: "set WDVLTALK pw=yourpassword" in the body of the email.
> To change subscription settings to the wdvltalk digest version:
> http://wdvl.internet.com/WDVL/Forum/#sub
>
>   http://www.wdvl.com  ___
>
> You are currently subscribed to wdvltalk as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> To unsubscribe send a blank email to
%%email.unsub%%
>
> To unsubscribe via postal mail, please contact us at:
> Jupitermedia Corp.
> Attn: Discussion List Management
> 475 Park Avenue South
> New York, NY 10016
>
> Please include the email address which you have been contacted with.
>
>


 • The WDVL Discussion List from WDVL.COM • 
To Join wdvltalk, Send An Email To: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
   Send Your Posts To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To set a personal password send an email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the words: "set 
WDVLTALK pw=yourpassword" in the body of the email.
To change subscription settings 

[wdvltalk] RE: CSS boxes etc

2004-09-14 Thread William Stewart
Joseph,

Also google for "css columns."  That will help you get a foundational
understanding of how css does layouts.  I try to shy away from absolute
positioning as much as I can.

Check out: http://www.simplebits.com  He has some wonderful CSS designs
and tutorials (although many are advanced). Here is the exact link to
his CSS section:
http://www.simplebits.com/notebook/css/index.html

Purchase TopStyle3 Pro.  I cannot say enough about how this program has
helped me.  It will give you instruction on what certain CSS elements
are and help you keep syntactically correct.

Take a lot of code apart.  This is my best way of learning.  I'm like
the apprentice brain surgeon: I touch a brain lobe and then see what
part of the body twitched!  :)

Hope that helped,
Will

Professional Graphics Artist
Certified Web Designer (BCIP)

Stewart and Company
--
www.stewartandcompany.net
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
--
W: 304.550.2687

Rt. 1 Box 364
Buffalo, WV
25033

-Original Message-
From: Joseph Harris [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Monday, September 13, 2004 7:44 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [wdvltalk] CSS boxes etc

With Cascade DTP I have just been experimenting with absolute
positioning.
My impression is that this forces a very rigid approach to design and
layout.   And I have not felt there is comfortable surfing with the
floats I
have viewed.

If I am missing the point how, with the latest css (oft-praised on wdvl
talk), can I achieve the flow and adaptability of tables - which I find
a
much more comfortable viewing experience?

Intertwined in this, I suppose, is the question:  just because it can be
done, should it?I hope this is a sensible question;  I have my
dunce's
cap ready if not.

Joseph Harris


 • The WDVL Discussion List from WDVL.COM • 
To Join wdvltalk, Send An Email To: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
   Send Your Posts To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To set a personal password send an email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the words: "set 
WDVLTALK pw=yourpassword" in the body of the email.
To change subscription settings to the wdvltalk digest version:
http://wdvl.internet.com/WDVL/Forum/#sub

  http://www.wdvl.com  ___

You are currently subscribed to wdvltalk as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To unsubscribe via postal mail, please contact us at:
Jupitermedia Corp.
Attn: Discussion List Management
475 Park Avenue South
New York, NY 10016

Please include the email address which you have been contacted with.



[wdvltalk] RE: CSS boxes etc

2004-09-14 Thread Trusz, Andrew


-Original Message-
From: Ross Clutterbuck [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Tuesday, September 14, 2004 8:58 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [wdvltalk] RE: CSS boxes etc

> Their site is excellent for explaining some of the special features found
only in IE.

How politically correct of you drew :P

MOU


==

Rudy has referred to me as a reactionary and now I'm politically correct.
Does that make me bi-polar?

drew

 • The WDVL Discussion List from WDVL.COM • 
To Join wdvltalk, Send An Email To: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
   Send Your Posts To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To set a personal password send an email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the words: "set 
WDVLTALK pw=yourpassword" in the body of the email.
To change subscription settings to the wdvltalk digest version:
http://wdvl.internet.com/WDVL/Forum/#sub

  http://www.wdvl.com  ___

You are currently subscribed to wdvltalk as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To unsubscribe via postal mail, please contact us at:
Jupitermedia Corp.
Attn: Discussion List Management
475 Park Avenue South
New York, NY 10016

Please include the email address which you have been contacted with.



[wdvltalk] RE: CSS boxes etc

2004-09-14 Thread Ross Clutterbuck
> Their site is excellent for explaining some of the special features found
only in IE.

How politically correct of you drew :P

MOU


 • The WDVL Discussion List from WDVL.COM • 
To Join wdvltalk, Send An Email To: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
   Send Your Posts To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To set a personal password send an email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the words: "set 
WDVLTALK pw=yourpassword" in the body of the email.
To change subscription settings to the wdvltalk digest version:
http://wdvl.internet.com/WDVL/Forum/#sub

  http://www.wdvl.com  ___

You are currently subscribed to wdvltalk as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To unsubscribe via postal mail, please contact us at:
Jupitermedia Corp.
Attn: Discussion List Management
475 Park Avenue South
New York, NY 10016

Please include the email address which you have been contacted with.



[wdvltalk] RE: SCR: www.streightsite.blogspot.com

2004-09-14 Thread Joseph Harris
Steven,

The colour is right on the edge of my comfort zone in IE6 on 15" Dell flat
screen Xphome.   Otherwise I like the whole look and cleanliness.   You
might want to check the black curves on the colour block corners and
consider whether both or neither of the white areas should have the dark
grey(gray) border.

Oh.And you do the business - I'll do the poetry...;-)

Joseph Harris
www.smilepoetryweekly.com

> Would appreciate a quick gaze at my new blog site, just to make sure it's
> not burning any retinas on different browsers. If that violet background
is
> a pain, I'll change it. This is just a color check.
>
> thanks a lot everyone.
>
>
> Steven Streight
> STREIGHT SITE SYSTEMS
> Web Usability Analysis
> Web Content Writing
> Online & Direct Marketing
>
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>
> www.vaspersthegrate.blogspot.com  *Web Usability*
>
> www.streightsite.blogspot.com *Mentally Correct Marketing*
>
> www.stcsig.org/usability/newsletter/0408-user-observation.html  *latest
> published online article*
>
>  . The WDVL Discussion List from WDVL.COM . 
> To Join wdvltalk, Send An Email To: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Send Your Posts To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> To set a personal password send an email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the
words: "set WDVLTALK pw=yourpassword" in the body of the email.
> To change subscription settings to the wdvltalk digest version:
> http://wdvl.internet.com/WDVL/Forum/#sub
>
>   http://www.wdvl.com  ___
>
> You are currently subscribed to wdvltalk as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> To unsubscribe send a blank email to
%%email.unsub%%
>
> To unsubscribe via postal mail, please contact us at:
> Jupitermedia Corp.
> Attn: Discussion List Management
> 475 Park Avenue South
> New York, NY 10016
>
> Please include the email address which you have been contacted with.
>
>


 • The WDVL Discussion List from WDVL.COM • 
To Join wdvltalk, Send An Email To: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
   Send Your Posts To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To set a personal password send an email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the words: "set 
WDVLTALK pw=yourpassword" in the body of the email.
To change subscription settings to the wdvltalk digest version:
http://wdvl.internet.com/WDVL/Forum/#sub

  http://www.wdvl.com  ___

You are currently subscribed to wdvltalk as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To unsubscribe via postal mail, please contact us at:
Jupitermedia Corp.
Attn: Discussion List Management
475 Park Avenue South
New York, NY 10016

Please include the email address which you have been contacted with.



[wdvltalk] RE: CSS boxes etc

2004-09-14 Thread Trusz, Andrew


-Original Message-
From: Joseph Harris [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Monday, September 13, 2004 7:44 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [wdvltalk] CSS boxes etc

With Cascade DTP I have just been experimenting with absolute positioning.
My impression is that this forces a very rigid approach to design and
layout.   And I have not felt there is comfortable surfing with the floats I
have viewed.

If I am missing the point how, with the latest css (oft-praised on wdvl
talk), can I achieve the flow and adaptability of tables - which I find a
much more comfortable viewing experience?

Intertwined in this, I suppose, is the question:  just because it can be
done, should it?I hope this is a sensible question;  I have my dunce's
cap ready if not.

Joseph Harris




West Civ offers a fine set of basic courses. Their technique is to offer
free online versions on a rotating basis. Currently they are offering CSS
Level 1, the introductory course. It's in week 5 now but you can also get to
Week 4 and frankly the expense is minor for the entire course. Have a look
at:

http://www.westciv.com/courses/free/index.html

Also for the box model, Big John and Holly have a fine mini tutorial at:

http://www.positioniseverything.net/articles/float-theory.html

Their site is excellent for explaining some of the special features found
only in IE.

drew

 • The WDVL Discussion List from WDVL.COM • 
To Join wdvltalk, Send An Email To: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
   Send Your Posts To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To set a personal password send an email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the words: "set 
WDVLTALK pw=yourpassword" in the body of the email.
To change subscription settings to the wdvltalk digest version:
http://wdvl.internet.com/WDVL/Forum/#sub

  http://www.wdvl.com  ___

You are currently subscribed to wdvltalk as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To unsubscribe via postal mail, please contact us at:
Jupitermedia Corp.
Attn: Discussion List Management
475 Park Avenue South
New York, NY 10016

Please include the email address which you have been contacted with.



[wdvltalk] Re: CSS boxes etc

2004-09-14 Thread Stephen Caudill
Joe wrote:
> Might a good starting point for my education be a couple of urls where you 
> consider this is well done and a good advertisement for the technique?

http://www.csszengarden.com

nuff said.

- Stephen

 • The WDVL Discussion List from WDVL.COM • 
To Join wdvltalk, Send An Email To: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
   Send Your Posts To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To set a personal password send an email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the words: "set 
WDVLTALK pw=yourpassword" in the body of the email.
To change subscription settings to the wdvltalk digest version:
http://wdvl.internet.com/WDVL/Forum/#sub

  http://www.wdvl.com  ___

You are currently subscribed to wdvltalk as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To unsubscribe via postal mail, please contact us at:
Jupitermedia Corp.
Attn: Discussion List Management
475 Park Avenue South
New York, NY 10016

Please include the email address which you have been contacted with.