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This article will point out 3 simple and highly effective web design techniques that use cascading style sheets to improve your web design and make your website perform better in the major search engines.
Editor's Pick in HTML Articles, April 2006
Designers and coders will enjoy Pete Bekisz’s light-hearted approach to a serious and unforgettable discussion about programming.
Here a table of Web-safe colors is shown with their HTML signatures. There are altogether 216 colors (Cube 6x6x6), the classification is implemented in colors...
IE 6 has this (in my opinion) annoying little toolbar that appears when someone places their mouse pointer over an image: This tool bar offers some minor convenience,.....
HTML Quick Reference V 1.2 (Including HTML 3.2, IE, and Netscape Extensions.)
The CSS mantra is the separation of content and style. The content should be in the HTML and the CSS should take care of how the HTML is displayed on the page. However, most web-designs don't properly separate content and style. The HTML and CSS are there separately, but if you changed the HTML, th....
3 Column CSS Layouts always seem to be the most sought-after by web designers. To create a layout with three columns, including two fixed width sidebars and a fluid center and not using tables seems to be, as A List Apart's Matthew Levine put it, The Holy Grail in his article on this.
One thing that CSS allows us to use for screen presentation are alternate cursors. This is not the idea of downloading or forcing a download of a cursor, as was done in the past (though that is possible as well), but instead, we use several built in concept cursors.
ADN - (Advanced Digital Network) Usually refers to a 56Kbps leased-line.
See also: Leased Line
ADSL - (Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line)
A DSL line where the upload speed is different from the download speed. usually the download speed is much greater.
See also: DSL, SDSL...
An ASCII Chart is a simple way to keep a list of what all the printable, or displayable characters are. All computers store information as a set of 1's and 0's (bits), not as actual characters. A group of eight (8) bits make a byte. Believe it or not, four bits actually make a nibble and two nibbl.....














