On Mar 12, 2006, at 10:03 AM, blaise wrote:

Same, nice work Emilio, but same, on a my linux box, it displays well in
Mozilla and Firefox, but the image is misplaced in Konqueror.

Makes sense. Safari is based on KHTML, the basis for Konqueror. Emilio, keep in mind, for most every part, Safari is totally standards compliant. So are Gecko-based browsers (Mozilla, Firefox, Camino, etc.), but they may be more forgiving of non-standard html. I could be very wrong in this, but generally if it works in Safari, it is standards-compliant, and will likely work in other standards-compliant browsers. There are a few Safari (Webkit) specific features, but they degrade gracefully (although the validation service complains).


On Sunday 12 March 2006 13:00, Puneet Kishor wrote:
Hi Emilio,

Nice work. Some feedback from the Mac side... looks nice in Camino, but
the image is misplaced in Safari. The image shows up in the top left
corner of the browser instead of in the image box. Hope you can fix
that.

Puneet.

On Mar 11, 2006, at 9:01 PM, Emilio Mayorga wrote:
This site does not break any new ground with MapServer. In fact, I'm
still stuck with 4.0 b/c I don't have the time to upgrade. But I
really wanted to thank the community, especially Steve Lime, for the
excellent feedback I got over the last two and a half years while
building the site (it's been a labor of love), and the resources
available in the form of the mailing list archives, documentation, and presentations from the conferences available on the web. I even got to
submit a feature request (regarding HTML legends) and saw it
implemented by Steve and Daniel Morissette (or Paul Spencer, I
forget)!

Our site uses Steve's javascript DHTML framework, and the layer tree
javascript code swiped from the Red River Basin site. If I can take
any credit, it's for integrating the two fairly closely and packaging
it all a bit more cleanly, in a separate .js file. It's also fully
bilingual, though the way it's done may not be the most elegant
(PHP/server-side scripting wasn't an option). If anyone is interested
in what you see there, please email me and I'd be happy to talk about
it.

Cheers,

Emilio Mayorga
Central American Ecology & Environment (http://garrobo.org/)


Mapache: New web mapping tool for Central America, focused on "Ecology
& Environment"
http://geo.garrobo.org/mapache/index.html

The CAEE/ACEA group (http://garrobo.org/) is pleased to present
"Mapache", an online mapping tool focusing on Central America. The
result of an all-volunteer effort, it is a GIS software framework for
presenting interactive maps covering all of Central America, using
free, open-source software. With this framework and with appropriate
geographical datasets (including real-time data), our goal is to build
applications focused on particular themes: ecosystems, biodiversity,
climate, geology, oceans, etc. We intend to make existing information
more easily accessible. Our first thematic application is
"Ecosystems": http://geo.garrobo.org/mapache/en/ecosistem.html. We
thank many groups that make their data freely available: universities,
non-governmental organizations, and national, regional, and
international agencies. We are especially grateful to the University
of Washington River Systems Research Group for donating the server and bandwith. Mapache was developed through a collaboration between Emilio
Mayorga, Derek Parent, and Alexis Aguilar
(http://garrobo.org/members.html).

Please contact us if you would like to collaborate with us.

--
Puneet Kishor

--
Puneet Kishor

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