What if there was software with the elegance and extensibility of WordPress but all the features you’ve come to expect from social networks like Facebook? Now there is: check out BuddyPress.
BuddyPress is an official sister project of WordPress. The idea behind it was to see what would happen to the web if it was as [...]
Archive for April, 2009
Compass is a stylesheet framework (and not only a collection of classes) for Ruby.
Using Compass, you can still use the other css frameworks -blueprint, yui, 960- that are ported to Sass and they are ready to be used in your ruby-based web application or stand-alone via a simple command-line interface.
The framework comes with a [...]
A MooTools based File-Manager for the web that allows you to (pre)view, upload and modify files and folders via the browser.
Designing and printing brochures from home, whether you’ve had plenty of experience or none at all, has been made very possible by helpful websites. The only problem can be knowing what tips you need and also what are the best sources for those tips.
Here is a collection of high speed photographs of liquid or water. Most of them are water bullets, exploding or splashing water when something like fruits are thrown into it.
A CSS Framework is meant to provide ready-made solutions for various tasks that we perform on regular basis. In simple terms an ideal CSS framework will provide you with a default style sheet which you should be able to use as a starting point for most of your web design projects. W3Avenue has prepared a [...]
Selectors define which part(s) of your (X)HTML document will be affected by the declarations you’ve specified. Several types of selectors are available in CSS. Note that some of them are not supported in all browsers.
“Best of Parallax-Effect” includes 12 interesting international webpages with its own parallax-solution.
The poll is closed, the votes are counted, and the results are interesting. The table below shows the actual breakdown of the poll votes, of which there were 2,651. As you can see, there were four main contenders: Dean J. Robinson’s Fluency-based submissions (two variations), the existing 2.7 interface, and Matt Thomas’s comp (MT), which [...]



