That looks very sleek and modern. Good work Chip!
On Fri, Sep 27, 2013 at 10:06 AM, Sergio Tonani <[email protected]>wrote: > Nice > > It is more friendly than the current site. > > > > _________________________________________________________________________ > > > > Il 27 settembre 2013 alle 5.05 Chip Childers < > [email protected]> ha > > scritto: > > > Hi all, > > > > > > I've been working on a site redesign for cloudstack.apache.org for a > > > little > > > bit today, and I wanted to share where I'm at and get feedback. > > > > > > I've got it on a small (very small) server right now -> > > > http://84.51.246.11/ > > > > > > Have a look at the homepage and the downloads pages. > > > > > > The index page is pretty close to what I was looking to accomplish. > > > > > > The download page still needs lots of work, but it's showing the > general > > > concept that I'm aiming for. > > > > > > The rest of the pages are untouched basically (and therefore need > work). > > > Nav isn't complete either, since there are now some stranded pages > (and > > > perhaps some non-existent ones). > > > > > > It uses bootstrap 3, so it should be fairly decent at scaling for > small > > > and > > > large devices. > > > > > > Does this general direction work for folks? > > > > > > -chip > > > __________________________________________________________________ > Sergio Tonani > > CSI Piemonte > C.so Tazzoli 215 B - 10135 Torino > Tel. +39 011.316.5843 > e-mail: [email protected] > www.csipiemonte.it > __________________________________________________________________ > Il presente messaggio, corredato degli eventuali allegati, contiene > informazioni da considerarsi strettamente riservate e confidenziali. > Ne è vietato l'uso improprio, la diffusione, la distribuzione o la > riproduzione > da parte di altre persone e/o entità diverse da quelle specificate. > Qualora lo abbiate ricevuto per errore, vi preghiamo di distruggere il > messaggio, comunicando l'errata ricezione tramite il reply all'indirizzo > mittente. > > "A complex system that works is invariably found to have evolved from a > simple > system that worked…A complex system designed from scratch never works and > cannot be patched up to make it work. You have to start over with a > working > simple system." — John Gall in Systemantics: How Systems Really Work and > How > They Fail >
