Friday, March 12, 2004 - Posts
From Slashdot: Dean Edwards has taken it upon himself to make Internet Explorer W3C compliant. He has created a stylesheet, dubbed 'IE7' that uses DHTML to load and parse style sheets into a form that IE can understand. Just include the style sheet in your HTML pages, and things should render correctly.
Now my question is: How is creating a stylesheet to be included in individual web pages considered making IE standards compliant?
UPDATE: His site seems not working now!! :)
A terrible notice I'm reading now...
At the recent congress of the major TLC Society that offer ADSL Connectivity in UK arrives the notice that the peer-to-peer (P2P) could be a danger for the future of ADSL Flat (connectivity without limit of time) offers.
The ADSL user that use every day P2P programs are about the 5% of all ADSL users, but their traffic is about the 55% of the total traffic.
Internet Provider are thinking to stop ADSL Flat offers or to introduce limits of traffic for users... terrible!
It's an absurd idea... is like if you have a virus on your PC and to delete it you destroy your PC! :((
5 days ago was out the Beta 2, now DotNetNuke is ready with its Beta 3. Beta 3 contains critical patches to the MS Access data provider, data caching, error handling for third party custom modules, and PA installer upgrade logic. I'll try it soon...
Check also the great new site! :)
I've just read an interesting news from Adobe: Adobe Designer 6.0 is a new software from Adobe that enables users to extend the power of XML to create Portable Document Format (PDF) and HTML forms that effectively capture data and easily integrate it into enterprise systems. Now it's only on beta stage, but it seems really very interesting.
Crystal Report, I think that I'll leave you out of my future projects! :)
Just a few new interesting reading from Microsoft: