AbcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzAbcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzAbcdefghijk.com – The World’s Longest Alphabetical Email Address and offers unusual benefits you won’t find anywhere else (almost).
Free typewriter fonts. What do you mean, “What’s a typewriter???” Gee, am I that old?
This blooper from BBspot is a winner.
Quality Web Content has a nice long list of articles about writing Web content. [ Via InfoDesign ]
Presentation to the Web Standards Group, Macromedia User Group and Cold Fusion User Group at MXDU2004: Day Zero on “The benefits of Web Standards to your visitors, your clients, and you.” [ Via wg ]
EFNet IRC has a chat group called #css where designers and those interested can gather to ask and answer CSS questions. According to wg, many have heard that tables are bad and want to switch to CSS but have no idea where to start.
The experts are answering questions and recommending resources. Those who are overwhelmed should benefit from an FAQ that huphtur and Rick Yribe are working to pull together. [ Via wg ]
I posted about FlipStart a couple of days ago. Captain has started a site dedicaed to Flipstart PC to make us poor geeks’ mouths water.
Nick Bradbury has an well thought out response to the question of dealing with too many RSS feeds. That was one of my initial questions when I used RSS for the first time.
He’s right that RSS is not like email in that you don’t have to figure out what you need to read and don’t read. RSS content is not directed at you like a personal email.
However, it’s human nature, especially for those who are neat freaks or to do list check-off freaks. You see a box full of unread stuff and can’t resist the urge to go through it all to clean it up and delete it. FeedDemon makes it easy to delete everything with its “Delete All News Item” feature. Not all aggregators have this capability.
The Web design team can’t alone focus on usability, accessibility, and branding. But also they have to work with other teams to ensure a site makes the most of the persuasion process. In his article, Bryan Eisenberg gives seven criteria he expected his company’s Web site to have in its redesign. [ Originally posted in InformIT