38 private links
Compatibility tables for features in HTML5, CSS3, SVG and other upcoming web technologies
Trying to get CSS-based websites to look the same across all browsers can often be difficult. Many of the problems however lie with Internet Explorer implementing CSS commands differently to other, more standards compliant browsers. All is not lost, however, as many of the differences you see across browsers are caused by the same Internet Explorer CSS issues...
Click the really big link above to activate auto-scroll (you may want to make your window small enough to have significant scroll space
A plugin for Safari that adds keyword search to the browser’s location bar.
Glims adds a cocktail of features to Safari (Tabs, Thumbnails, Full Screen, Search Engines, Search Suggestions, Forms autocomplete on, Dated download folders, Type Ahead ...)
Very small utility to convert TTF files to EOT.
EOT is used by Internet Explorer to support css @font-face declarations.
"Stay-Open Menu is a extension created for Firefox® to keep the Bookmarks Menu open when middle-clicking, to enable easily opening multiple items in tabs. I find it especially handy for RSS feed (Live Bookmark) items."
Browser-specific CSS hacks have become a taboo among standards-aware web designers for good reason; ideally you shouldn't need them. However, as long as the Internet Explorer 6 browser continues to hold significant market share, there will likely remain some cases where you need to use unfashionable CSS rules to accommodate outdated technology.
Comprehensive List of Browser-Specific CSS Hacks
How do you answer the Internet Explorer 6 question?
This is something I spent way too much time on, trying to figure out why
it didn't want to do what I wanted in IE7.
I'm posting it here, so maybe it will save some others a bit of time.
The problem: You have a
All Hallows’ Eve seems the perfect time for something a little spooky. Getting @font-face working in IE may just be spooky enough. As you probably know @font-face already works in Safari 3 via WebKit and is supported in the latest Firefox 3.1 beta. With IE, that means around 75% of the world audience could see custom typefaces today if their EULAs allowed it. Fortunately, there are good free faces available to us already, as well as some commercial faces that permit embedding. Fontin is one of them and I’ve built it into this example page:
IE NetRenderer allows you to check how a website is rendered by Internet Explorer 7, 6 or 5.5, as seen from a high speed datacenter located in Germany. Just type in a URL in the field above and try it out - it's free! Unlike other screenshot services, we are able to process a large number of capturing jobs in parallel and in realtime, making it the fastest service that we know of.
Having read the blurb around Safari’s CSS transitions I opted to familiarize myself with a quick project - the aim of which was to create a functional, CSS only, analogue clock.
Not your mother's JavaScript.
Offers the possibility to display documents in browser window.
Remove tabs on the left/right side of selected one.