Color Blender
href="http://www.meyerweb.com/eric/tools/color-blend/">Color
Blender: Simple but extremely usefull. Also by
href="http://www.meyerweb.com/eric">Eric Meyer.
href="http://www.meyerweb.com/eric/tools/color-blend/">Color
Blender: Simple but extremely usefull. Also by
href="http://www.meyerweb.com/eric">Eric Meyer.
href="http://www.megnut.com/weblogs/002594.asp">Lafayette: Are
we looking at a new
href="http://www.technorati.com">Technorati,
href="http://blogdex.media.mit.edu">Blogdex or
href="http://www.daypop.com/">Daypop. I guess we’ll have to
wait and see.
Systems such as Blogger and Movable Type have made it
easy to publish to the web, but the reader experience leaves much
to be desired. The more weblogs there are, the harder it is to keep
track of them all. That’s the problem we’re addressing: turning the
weblog network into accessible media.
href="http://blog.portugalmail.pt/K/archive/001806.html#001806">K:
Spot the differences Sergio with a nice example of what you can
do with CSS. This comes to prove it’s possible to do complex
websites separating content from design completely.
Seems
href="http://www.meyerweb.com/eric/thoughts/2003a.html#t20030213">Eric
Meyer is a guilty part of this nice redesign.
href="http://doc.weblogs.com/">The Doc Searls Weblog : Friday,
February 14, 2003 How can commercial companies benefict from
the open source movement? This is how Jabber did it.
href="http://www.sun.com/">Sun’s
href="http://www.sun.com/software/star/staroffice/6.0/">StarOffice
and OpenOffice are also
good examples.
When I founded the commercial company Jabber, Inc. in
2000, there was a lot of concern and a lot of confusion around our
business model. No-one quite understood that we were a commercial
company, funding an open source project that built a product that
competed with our own commercial Jabber server. They didn’t
understand that we were serving two different markets, that every
success of the open source project added a feather to the success
cap of Jabber, Inc., and that every new Jabber, Inc. customer
(Disney was the first) added to the pride of the Jabber community
at large. The notion of ‘MUTUALISM’ didn’t exist — both parties
benefit from each other.