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As has been widely reported

May 2, 2002 by Michael Boyle

As has been widely reported

, the publishers of DallasNews.com seem to need a smack with the clue-stick. Check out 4B: “If you operate a Web site and wish to link to this Site, you may link only to the home page of the Site and not to any other page or subdomain of us.”

Uh, sorry, but which page I link to on the open internet is my business, not yours. If you don’t want links to your content, don’t put it on the internet. And if you can’t figure out a way to make money off putting material on the open internet, that’s your problem. Deal with it.

Tags: Business, Internet, Links, Opera, Web

Chillingeffects.org

April 30, 2002 by Michael Boyle

Chillingeffects.org

: The Chilling Effects Clearinghouse. “Do you know your online rights? Have you received a letter asking you to remove information from a Web site or to stop engaging in an activity? Are you concerned about liability for information that someone else posted to your online forum? If so, this site is for you.”

Tags: EFF, Web

Big news, maybe

April 17, 2002 by Michael Boyle

Big news, maybe

, in the not-quite-dead browser war: Netscape, not IE, put on new CompuServe [via Zeldman]. Of course this could become big news for web developers and internet people generally.

Tags: Browser, Developer, Internet, War, Web, Zeldman

Can someone please tell me

April 12, 2002 by Michael Boyle

Can someone please tell me

why, or if, I should care about the newly-beta-released Google Web APIs? They took a shot at it on MeFi, but fell short of the mark.

Tags: Google, Web

Many people

February 25, 2002 by Michael Boyle

Many people

have weighed in on the question of CSS now that the issue has become a “live” one in the weblog world. A representative opinion on one “side” of the thing (if sides here makes sense, which I don’t actually think it does) is that of Matt Bridges in CounterProductive. He wrote, “When a designer uses CSS to mimic what can be done with tables, separating content into different boxes that are placed at specific parts of the screen, they tie that content to that layout. This completely defeats the purpose of separation of style from content.”

It’s a perfectly reasonable statement, and having worked on some CSS layouts I do see the drawbacks alongside the advantages. The problem is, however, that most people seem to have the foundational principles wrong. And their error leads in ugly directions.

CSS is about style. But there’s something much more important than that. Implementing CSS also returns structure to HTML. And that is where the value is – it’s not about separating content from style – that’s what a CMS is for. Rather, it’s to return the third variable – structure – to its rightful place in the mix. So that not only do you have the flexibility to do anything you want with the content (in the CMS), and to redesign that site as you like, but there’s also a fully degradeable version at the heart of the human-readable, “published” version that any device can read, as long as it can interpret HTML in some rudimentary way.

Tags: Arts, Blogging, CMS, CSS, Design, Error, GNE, Human, Layout, Readable, Web

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