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Wednesday, 28 January 2009 14:58 |
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The goal of a reset stylesheet is to reduce browser inconsistencies in things like default line heights, margins and font sizes of headings, and so on. The general reasoning behind this was discussed in a May 2007 post, if you're interested. Reset styles quite often appear in CSS frameworks, and the original "meyerweb reset" found its way into Blueprint, among others.
The reset styles given here are intentionally very generic. There isn't any default color or background set for the body element, for example. I don't particularly recommend that you just use this in its unaltered state in your own projects. It should be tweaked, edited, extended, and otherwise tuned to match your specific reset baseline. Fill in your preferred colors for the page, links, and so on.
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Wednesday, 28 January 2009 09:39 |
Powerful Simplicity to Meet Your Needs

For nearly a decade, Blue River Interactive Group has built custom content management tools for a wide range of clients. In that time, they’ve learned what works – and what doesn’t. they’ve seen that the best tools are those built to match the people who use them, both in terms of function and anticipation of common problems. This approach is at the core of Sava, a tool built to make work easier, whether it's something as simple as adding a news release or as complex as integrating data with an enterprise CRM.
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Saturday, 24 January 2009 23:28 |
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DeviantART is proud to announce the launch of NEW Profile Pages! In response to community feedback and deviously Deviant Technology innovation, new Profile Pages offer additional ways to personalize, customize, and organize your homebase at deviantART!

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Friday, 23 January 2009 10:19 |
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You can’t design without type. However, yon can use only type (or mostly only type) to create breath-taking designs. In fact, many graphic designers and artists take exactly this route to communicate their ideas through their works. The results are sometimes crazy, sometimes artsy, sometimes beautiful, but often just different from things we’re used to. Thus designers explore new horizons and we explore new viewing perspectives which is what inspiration is all about.
This post showcases over 50 breathtaking typographic posters designed by artists across the globe. We feature Oriental, Iranian, Hebrew, Japanese, Chinese and Russian typographic posters as well as a number of further references. This isn’t a “best of”, there is no ranking and the collection isn’t supposed to be complete; it’s rather subjective and quite random. All screenshots are clickable; however, links not always lead directly to the corresponding image (e.g. it’s impossible in Flash-based sites) — sometimes you’ll need to search for it.
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Friday, 23 January 2009 07:17 |
There are different types of inherent limitations with creating transparency for web-sites. Currently, if you’re going to work with PNG graphics, you’ll need to harness IE6, which has poor support for alpha transparency. This means working with IE specific code, or scripting-based solutions.
It’s important to know most common ways to overcome browser limitations. There are plenty of articles across the Web that review these issues. There are two articles below that describe Conditional Comments and a script-based solution. First though, review Jeff Croft’s article on creative use of transparent graphics, as it’s an excellent introduction to this topic.
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