I’ve been eyeing you Internet Explorer. Watching the moves your team makes. They look a lot like the moves Internet Explorer 6’s team made back in the day. Blatant disregard for what’s in the future. Legacy support. Whatever. I’m getting worried, and a little bit upset. We all are. However, I’m focusing on CSS3 today.
Do me a favor and ReTweet in support of this message to Internet Explorer. The entire internet thanks you (okay, just me).
I’m always very interested in urban design (especially here, in Jacksonville), as I know very little about it. Awhile back, Metro Jacksonville posted some very interesting documents from the Los Angeles Department of City Development, specifically on creating rhythm and design to promote interesting city streets and safety.
Short side note on the blog: Please do yourself a favor and switch over to this feed, instead of the current one for this website. I made the switch and forgot to update the sidebar link to my feed.
The iTunes LP experience is accomplished with HTML 4.01, CSS and JS. The interface feels very Flash-like, but there is no trace of it. The CSS animations are elaborate and smooth. Font files are referenced with an @font-face declaration in the CSS but there seems to be little to no use. Most text, even long passages of lyrics, is represented visually with a PNG file. I wonder if they originally intended to use font replacement for all text, but changed their mind.
I’ve been on a documentary fling for awhile now. It started out with “Man On Wire”, then onto “Annie Leibovitz: Life through a Lens”, “Dear Zachary” (this is absolutely morbid, but almost impossible to not watch after seeing the trailer), and most recently…