El dl 21 de 08 del 2006 a les 17:14 +0200, en/na Claus Schwarm va
escriure:
Why not sort by priority/importance within each group of audience?
I tried: http://live.gnome.org/GnomeWeb/UseCases
This is not mathematical science. In fact it's quite subjective, but
anyway. Feel free to rearrange
El dt 22 de 08 del 2006 a les 13:21 +0200, en/na Claus Schwarm va
escriure:
However, if you tried to make the most important item bold and you
ordered them first, why are the bold items not all on top?
The bold stuff makes the list nearly unreadable.
Bold items tried to refer to those use
XML Parsing Error: not well-formed
Location: http://ftp.gnome.org/pub/GNOME/LATEST.xml
Line Number 258, Column 17:* Matic [EMAIL PROTECTED] (sl)lt;brgt;
This happens at least 2-3 times a month, every month. A developer is
uploading a NEWS file and the gnome RSS creator script is not
On Tue, 2006-08-22 at 12:33 -0700, Eugenia Loli-Queru wrote:
XML Parsing Error: not well-formed
Location: http://ftp.gnome.org/pub/GNOME/LATEST.xml
Line Number 258, Column 17:* Matic [EMAIL PROTECTED] (sl)lt;brgt;
This happens at least 2-3 times a month, every month. A developer is
One thing is to have a toptop nav bar across subsites linking subsites (i.e.
wgo, news.go, support.go, devel.go...) and then a wgo primary nav bar linking
wgo sections (discover, download, etc).
Another thing is to have a mixed primary nav bar that combines both functions,
as we currently
I have updated GnomeWeb/WebPolicies and I think it is 1.0 now. I
removed the comments about content that has been updated, but
they are available through the document history.
Just to let you know about the other side: I think, using tags for
written content is usually a very bad idea.