CSS Archive
These posts are all in this one category.
The best web and graphic designer I know, and the only one I talk to on a regular basis, got an interesting call from Microsoft.
FoO's work is like the fine meals in an upscale trendy downtown restaurant - it's usually experimental, sometimes controversial, constantly cutting edge, and always damn impressive.
Update:
Thanks to TNL, I now have an account and 100 invites to give away.
My 360 page: http://360.yahoo.com/dylangreene
Leave a comment here if you'd like an invite.
Original Message:
I don't have any Yahoo 360 invites to give away just yet, but while you are waiting, I suggest checking out dhteumeuleu.com the witness some of the coolest interactive DHTML demos I've ever seen. I strongly recommend you visit using Internet Explorer since Firefox is unable to render some of his coolest effects. All of the demos include access to his elegantly simplistic source code. Flash and Java were not used for any of the demos.
One of my favorite demos is a DHTML PowerPoint-like slide show built as a ZUI (zooming user interface) - each slide zooms into view while the next slide approaches from the distance.
Meanwhile, Yahoo 360 mini-reviews have appeared from Steve Rubel and Tristan Louis, and some info from well-known Yahoo bloggers Russell Beattie and Jeremy Zawodny have good things to say.
So.... is Yahoo 360 what started the XBOX 360 rumor? That would be pretty funny.
You'll have to excuse my excitment, I've been on the Internet for a while now, but never as a blogger.
And there's always somebody that doesn't like the idea:
http://gammatron.novarese.net:
I saw on Scripting News that somebody has created a PNG version of the XML icon. Here's code to create via CSS (261 bytes) instead of a GIF (429 bytes) or PNG (283 bytes):
Now you can do neat tricks, such as a more obvious button: . No more wondering what RSS version you're about to access, and now Google and other search engines will see the words "RSS" on your web site. You can even use your browser's built-in find function to find that pesky link to the RSS.
But I have a question - Dave Winer calls the PNG version "more politically correct" than the GIF version. Is the CSS version even more PC than the PNG version?
