I’ve always been taken with the way that the BBC styles their A-Z index using a simple list and CSS. However, because they use pixels to set the dimensions of each list item, the design breaks when you increase the text size. Check out this revised rendition… and use it for your next site!
Everyone, this is your lucky day. Since Monofactor cancelled further drawing of this set as a commercial project, they decided to distribute the first icons for free!.
The loveliest part is, they are in scalable vector format. and Free for Personal and Commercial Use!!
You have to check these out… these tabs: slide, fade, rotate, slide and fade, you name it… This is the best tabbed system you’re gonna find, and compliments of a Guiwood find… it’s FREE! Use these on your next site and make an impression.
The mooSlideBox v3 is a small and slim ajax based extension or replacement of the common “lightbox” that can be found on nearly every page. This lightbox clone works in IE 6/7, Opera and Firefox. This is pretty sweet, and a nice new approach to the lightbox. Try it out for your next site…
Taggify is a web widget [?] which allows bloggers and publishers enhance their sites by adding visual tags to any site’s images. Visual tag is a clickable image region tagged with some title, description and link. When vistor moves mouse over such region Taggify shows popup tooltip with interesting content provided by the publisher.
Designed to view full-size photos and images inline without requiring a separate web page load, FancyZoom’s (from Cabel) raison d’être (French for “raisin-determination”) is providing a smooth, clean, truly Mac-like effect, almost like it’s a function of Safari itself. Since this script was originally wrote, there are now a lot of image zoomers to choose from (including a similar effect now on Apple’s own site!), such as the popular (and inspiring) Lightbox. So you might be asking: “Why use FancyZoom?” Well, here’s why!
This combination of JavaScript and CSS will hide checkbox and radio inputs that have a class = "crirHiddenJS", an id, and a proper label tag.
This will allow you to style the label however you wish using CSS, and the actual input control will be hidden. The form will still collect data as it normally would because the label itself will trigger the hidden input control. If javascript is disabled no inputs will be hidden and the form is still be fully functional.
I found this CSS gallery the other day, and though it would be a nice add. Uses nothing but html and css, so if you’re looking for a super lightweight gallery solution, then check out Hoverbox from Son Spring.
Enhance your websites with advanced Google innovations without touching the code. Set up a site-specific Google Search, show the way with a Google Map, roll in any of six new cell phone tools for Google Mobile or sell your goods for less with Google Checkout. Dreamweaver Tools for Google is totally easy to use and absolutely free!