Re: [WSG] Fw: The Great Firewall of Australia

2008-11-26 Thread Casey Farrell
Haha, it's not spam, unfortunately the only entity that fits your rather
heated descriptive words on this topic is the Government of Australia,
who are pushing for this filter.

This *is* already happening in Australia and the Government have
seriously said they would like it in place. I know, hard to believe. And
that's why anyone who values the freedom of the Internet should sign the
petition - god knows what could happen in other countries if they see
that Australia is able to get such a thing in place.

Regards,
Casey.


On Wed, 2008-11-26 at 22:59 -0600, Brett Patterson wrote:

 1) That, I do believe is a crock of shit!
 
 2) If he does anything like that, he will be dead!!!
 
 
 --and--
 
 
 3) Anyone who believes in those ideas are fucked up, stupid, and this
 I can promise, will NOT make it in this world, dead or alive!
 4) Like I said, I think this a crock of shit, and possibly spam.
 
 
 On Wed, Nov 26, 2008 at 9:56 PM, IceKat [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 
 Hi,
 
 Usually I'm suspicious of this stuff but I happen to know that
 Get Up is legit and thought the Aussie members of this list
 might like to know about this.
 
 IceKat.
 
 
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 Thought you might be interested
  
 Love Mum
  
  
 - Original Message - 
 
 From: GetUp 
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 Sent: Wednesday, November 26, 2008 4:17 PM
 Subject: The Great Firewall of Australia
 
 
 
 
 Dear Helen,
 
 Imagine a government proposing an internet censorship system
 that went further than any other democracy - one that made the
 internet up to 87% slower, more expensive, accidentally
 blocked up to one in 12 legitimate sites, and missed the vast
 majority of inappropriate content.
 
 This is not China, Saudi Arabia or Iran - this is the vision
 of Senator Stephen Conroy for Australia. Testing has already
 begun. The community must now move to stop this plan. Click
 here to save the net:
 
 www.getup.org.au/campaign/SaveTheNet
 
 The system that Senator Conroy wants is a mandatory filter of
 all internet traffic, with the government of the day able to
 add any unwanted site to a secret blacklist. Already, the
 wrangling has begun for the inclusion of material relating to
 anorexia, euthanasia and gambling. It isn't difficult to see
 the scheme is open to abuse. 
 
 Even when it comes to preventing child p-rnography, the filter
 will not prevent peer-to-peer sharing and is very simple to
 sidestep. The protection of our children is vitally important
 - that's why we can't afford to waste funds on this deeply
 flawed system. We should be concentrating on solutions that
 are more effective and won't undermine our digital economy or
 our democratic freedoms.
 
 This must rank as one of the most ill-thought decisions of the
 Rudd Government's first year in power. We need to act now to
 tell big brother the mandatory internet filter is incompatible
 with the principles of a modern democracy and modern economy:
 
 www.getup.org.au/campaign/SaveTheNet
 
 Our government should be doing all in its power to take
 Australia into the 21st century economy, and to protect our
 children. This proposed internet censorship does neither. Take
 action to save the net today.
 
 Thanks for being a part of the solution,
 The GetUp team 
 
 PS - The proposed scheme will pass all internet traffic
 through a government filter - it's like asking Australia Post
 to filter every letter sent in Australia. Click here to save
 the net. 
 
 __
 
 GetUp is an independent, not-for-profit community campaigning
 group. We use new technology to empower Australians to have
 their say on important national issues. We receive no
 political party or government funding, and every campaign we
 run is entirely supported by voluntary donations. If you'd
 like to contribute to help fund GetUp's work, please donate
 now! If you have trouble with any links in this email, please
 go directly to www.getup.org.au. To unsubscribe from GetUp,
 please click 

[WSG] accessible client side form validation

2008-04-22 Thread Casey Farrell

Hi,

Does anyone know of a free form validation javascript that is reasonably 
accessible? I realise that no client-side validation will be completely 
accessible without a server-side backup, but are there any good ones out 
there?


Thanks,
Casey.


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Re: [WSG] Floating model: FF counterintuitive

2008-04-17 Thread Casey Farrell
Changing the order of the DIVs in the source should fix the problem, 
it's strange that you say IE6/7 are rendering as per your ascii layout - 
as I tried your code and IE7 rendered the same as Firefox.


h2 style=float:left;width:300pxheading/h2
div style=float:right;width:200pxdiv two/div
div style=float:left;width:300pxdiv one/div

that seems to do what you wanted.

Regards,
Casey.

Jens-Uwe Korff wrote:

Hi group,

I have a really easy setting: 


h2 style=float:left;width:300pxheading/h2
div style=float:left;width:300pxdiv one/div
div style=float:right;width:200pxdiv two/div

When I imagine this I expect the browser to render the two left-floated
elements on the left side and the single right-floated div on the right
side, aligned with the heading:

+---+ ++
|heading| |div2|
+---+ ||
+---+ ++
| div1  |
|   |
+---+

However, FF aligns the right-floated div with the left-floated div and I
cannot convice it to align the former with the heading.

IE6 and IE7 render it as I intuitively think it should render.

Having faith in FF I believe I'm missing something basic to understand
why this happens this way.

Anybody solved this without introducing a wrapper div for heading and
div1?

Thanks,
Jens

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Re: [WSG] Floating model: FF counterintuitive

2008-04-17 Thread Casey Farrell




Hi Jens,

In that case, the only solution I can think of is to position: relative
the right floated div, and move it up by the height of the header (with
top: -Xpx;). This of course requires you to have a fixed height for the
header.

Regards,
Casey.

Jens-Uwe Korff wrote:

  Hi Casey,

  
  
Changing the order of the DIVs in the source should fix the problem

  
  
you're absolutely right - changing the source order would solve the
problem. But in order to keep together what content-wise has to be kept
together (heading and div1) I wanted to know if there is another
solution. 

Cheers,
 
Jens 

The information contained in this e-mail message and any accompanying files is or may be confidential. If you are not the intended recipient, any use, dissemination, reliance, forwarding, printing or copying of this e-mail or any attached files is unauthorised. This e-mail is subject to copyright. No part of it should be reproduced, adapted or communicated without the written consent of the copyright owner. If you have received this e-mail in error please advise the sender immediately by return e-mail or telephone and delete all copies. Fairfax does not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of any information contained in this e-mail or attached files. Internet communications are not secure, therefore Fairfax does not accept legal responsibility for the contents of this message or attached files.


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Re: [WSG] PNG file sizes

2008-04-16 Thread Casey Farrell




Definitely can be used for PNG, and I'm pretty sure at least all of the
CS versions can.

Casey.

Susie Gardner-Brown wrote:

  Maybe I'm wrong, but I thought that in the 'save for web' option you could
only save as gif or jpeg. Am I wrong? I'd love it if I could use it to
compress png files -  just needed to yesterday!! ... :)

- susie


On 17/4/08 1:40 AM, "Nick Fitzsimons" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

  
  
On Wed, April 16, 2008 5:59 am, Rachel May wrote:


  Only my personal website I've used transparent PNGs a lot...  I've been
rather picky on how it looks, so that the shadows look natural etc.

But this means that the file sizes are HUGE and download is really long.

I created the PNGs in Photoshop (CS3) and just wondering if there are any
better tools or ways of saving the PNGs for smaller file size, while still
retaining their high quality??

  

If you just use Photoshop's normal "Save" functionality, selecting PNG as
the type, it will include a large amount of information in the file to
assist it when the file is opened for editing at a later time. Use the
"Save for Web and Devices" dialog instead and it will create much smaller
files.

HTH,

Nick.

  
  


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Re: [WSG] Rogue text appears in IE6.

2008-04-03 Thread Casey Farrell
I don't know if this might be causing it, but you do have a closing div 
for a content div but no opening content div - all up one too many 
closing divs.


Try getting rid of this line:

/div!--/CONTENT--


Casey.

Rob Enslin wrote:
I've recently built a website trying to move towards more 
standards-compliant code. After the delight at pushing the site live 
my world 'caved in' (a little over-dramatic maybe) this morning when a 
colleague noticed rogue 'ls. text some way down the home page.


Live site: http://www.londoncalling2008.com
Screen-grab in IE6: http://www.flickr.com/photos/doos/2384241027/

Testing the site:

IE7 - no problem
FF2 - no problem
Safari/PC - no problem
Safari/Mac - no problem
FF2/Mac - no problem

** IE6 - PROBLEM (http://www.flickr.com/photos/doos/2384241027/)

Could anyone find an explanation for this?

--
Rob Enslin
http://enslin.co.uk
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Re: [WSG] data generator

2008-02-22 Thread Casey Farrell

Excellent resource - thanks Thierry :-)

Casey.

Thierry Koblentz wrote:
This is pretty cool tool to generate volume of any kind of data (it even 
includes SQL options)

http://www.generatedata.com

  



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Re: [WSG] hello

2008-02-13 Thread Casey Farrell




touch.

Stuart Foulstone wrote:

  Very ironic.

On Wed, February 13, 2008 12:38 pm, Nick Fitzsimons wrote:

...

  
  
NickFitz in "about time to unsubscribe from this list if it's going to
degenerate into pretentious drivel" mode...
--
Nick Fitzsimons
http://www.nickfitz.co.uk/




  
  



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Re: [WSG] use of p in li

2008-02-10 Thread Casey Farrell


I'm not talking about presenting a list of links; I'm talking about 
presenting the actual content on a page. From your example above, it's 
quite feasible that you'd just have one page for Services and one for 
About Us. If you present


* Web Site Development
* Graphics
* SEO 
In the case presented, I'd use headings and paragraphs. I think in any 
situation where multiple paragraphs are required, the information should 
be broken out of the list, as it's taking away from what a list is 
really for - presenting multiple points in an easy-to-scan format.


Casey.


John Faulds wrote:

If the lists have a number of levels like
 Services
   Web Site Development
Graphics
SEO and
more
About Us
Me
You
Someone else


I'm not talking about presenting a list of links; I'm talking about 
presenting the actual content on a page. From your example above, it's 
quite feasible that you'd just have one page for Services and one for 
About Us. If you present


* Web Site Development
* Graphics
* SEO

as a list of services (which it is), then it's quite likely you're 
going to need more than one paragraph to describe each of them.


I don't buy the definition list option because I don't believe a 
description of a service is a 'definition' of that service 
(descriptions and definitions are two separate things).


The argument for splitting onto separate pages may not always be the 
best option either - there may not be enough to say about each one to 
warrant that, but there may be more than can fit into one single 
paragraph.


You see bulleted or numbered lists of more than one paragraph in 
printed material all the time, particularly academic publications.





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Re: [WSG] This IE8 controversy

2008-01-29 Thread Casey Farrell
I disagree. Why should I make fixes on my clents sites because ie8 
doesn't work properly?


I won't, and what I know has nothing to do with it. MS says it would 
cost too much to change the engine. well, too bad, I'm not going to 
with my time fix their errors. 

Good luck keeping clients with that attitude.

There's no point disagreeing with what MS are going to do. It will 
happen and IE8 _will_ be the most popular web browser. At least this 
time we have options and some standards adherence. If MS get the picture 
that 'standardistas' are never happy, they're not going to bother even 
trying to please us.


Casey.


Bruce wrote:

...Too much work for those that aren't in the know.
Chris.

I disagree. Why should I make fixes on my clents sites because ie8 
doesn't work properly?


I won't, and what I know has nothing to do with it. MS says it would 
cost too much to change the engine. well, too bad, I'm not going to 
with my time fix their errors.


Bruce
bkdesign


- Original Message - From: Chris Broadfoot 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
Sent: Tuesday, January 29, 2008 7:04 PM
Subject: Re: [WSG] This IE8 controversy



Chris Knowles wrote:

Chris Broadfoot wrote:

Chris Knowles wrote:
  I don't see how opting-in to standards by adding a meta tag does
  anything for me or anyone else. Except for Microsoft of course, by
  allowing them to do the right thing at last and create a decent 
browser
  while at the same time not doing the right thing and ignoring 
the mess

  they created.
 

I don't think they're ignoring the mess they created at all.. Is 
adding a meta tag really too much work to provide your 
users/visitors the viewing experience they should have?




Yeah actually I agree, they're not ignoring the mess. Just actively 
covering it up by enlisting yours and my support.


My users/visitors should get the right viewing experience by 
default, not by having to opt-in. On the contrary, if you wish your 
users/visitors to NOT get the right viewing experience, is 
opting-out by adding a meta tag really too much work?




Too much work for those that aren't in the know.

Chris.


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Re: [WSG] question about max-width's behaviour

2007-11-21 Thread Casey Farrell
 But  my testing shows that, with a max-width of 60em, a 1680px wide 
monitor, when a browser is opened in full screen,  with fontsize 
increases, the page just continued expanding until it reaches 1680px 
full screen.


This is because em is a measuring unit relative to the font size of the 
page, so as you increase the font size, the size of 1 em increases as 
well, and therefore your max-width of 60em gets larger and larger.




Tee G. Peng wrote:
I thought  max-width tells the browser: This is the limit of the width 
you can expand, regardless how big the screen is.


But  my testing shows that, with a max-width of 60em, a 1680px wide 
monitor, when a browser is opened in full screen, with fontsize 
increases, the page just continued expanding until it reaches 1680px 
full screen. If I drag the screen to the second monitor, it keeps 
expanding.  If I make the screen smaller to 900px, then expansion stop 
there.


Am I missing somthing?

I tried setting a max-width of 1024px and 60em width , it doesn't 
work, my test shows that FF and Safari ignore the max-width.


tee


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Re: [WSG] How to send two values to javascript

2007-11-14 Thread Casey Farrell

Try using single quotes, as in:

select name=category 
onchange=showSubcategory(document.getElementById('category').value)  


Michael Horowitz wrote:

Having trouble so I went to testing with one element like this

select name=category 
onchange=showSubcategory(document.getElementById(category).value)  
and firebug shows a syntax error.


I tried it again taking oub the 

select name=category 
onchange=showSubcategory(document.getElementById(category).value)


and then received the error message this document has not properties.


Michael Horowitz
Your Computer Consultant
http://yourcomputerconsultant.com
561-394-9079



Olly Hodgson wrote:

On Nov 14, 2007 10:37 PM, Michael Horowitz
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 

I have examples using one value

onchange=showSubcategory(this.value)

from a form to a script.

What if I need to send two values one from the current element in the
form and one from another element



onchange=showSubcategory(this.value,
document.getElementById(anotherElement).value);


  



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Re: [WSG] How to send two values to javascript

2007-11-14 Thread Casey Farrell
It must not be finding the element... does the element you are looking 
for in the document have id=category?


Michael Horowitz wrote:
I've tried single quotes and keep getting the error 
document.GetElementByID has no properties


Michael Horowitz
Your Computer Consultant
http://yourcomputerconsultant.com
561-394-9079



Casey Farrell wrote:

Try using single quotes, as in:

select name=category 
onchange=showSubcategory(document.getElementById('category').value) 
Michael Horowitz wrote:

Having trouble so I went to testing with one element like this

select name=category 
onchange=showSubcategory(document.getElementById(category).value)  
and firebug shows a syntax error.


I tried it again taking oub the 

select name=category 
onchange=showSubcategory(document.getElementById(category).value)


and then received the error message this document has not properties.


Michael Horowitz
Your Computer Consultant
http://yourcomputerconsultant.com
561-394-9079



Olly Hodgson wrote:

On Nov 14, 2007 10:37 PM, Michael Horowitz
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 

I have examples using one value

onchange=showSubcategory(this.value)

from a form to a script.

What if I need to send two values one from the current element in the
form and one from another element



onchange=showSubcategory(this.value,
document.getElementById(anotherElement).value);


  



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Re: [WSG] Firefox web developer icons

2007-06-03 Thread Casey Farrell




I think it's http://www.famfamfam.com/lab/icons/silk/, but it looks
like its down atm.


Bojana Lalic wrote:

  
  
  
  
  Hi all
  
  Where can I find those
icons used in the firefox web
developer add-on? I am after the Disable, Information and Green tick
ones.
  Regards
  Bojana
  
  
  
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