Cool Bookmarks since 2004

Time

“On June 17th, every year, the family goes through a private ritual: we photograph ourselves to stop a fleeting moment, the arrow of time passing by.”
http://zonezero.com/magazine/essays/diegotime/time.html

20 CSS Tips and Tricks

  1. Rounded Corners
  2. Rounded Corners without images
  3. Creating a Netflix style star ratings
  4. Tableless forms
  5. Styling Lists with CSS
  6. 2 Column Layout Technique
  7. 3 Column Layout with CSS
  8. 3 Column Fixed width centered layout
  9. Printing with CSS
  10. Adding a CSS stylesheet to an RSS feed
  11. Footer Stick
  12. CSS Element Hover Effect
  13. Styling Horizontal Rules
  14. Clearing Floats
  15. CSS Popups
  16. Box Punch
  17. CSS Badge
  18. Orange RSS Buttons with pure CSS
  19. 10 CSS Tricks you may not know
  20. 10 More CSS Tricks you may not know

http://www.petefreitag.com/item/475.cfm

Netvibes

Personalized page where you can modify everything: move modules, add new RSS/ATOM feeds, change the parameters for each module, etc. Modifications are saved in real-time and you’ll find your page when you get back.
http://www.netvibes.com

NerdTV

NerdTV is a new weekly online TV show from PBS.org technology columnist Robert X. Cringely. NerdTV is essentially Charlie Rose for geeks – a one-hour interview show with a single guest from the world of technology. Guests like Sun Microsystems co-founder Bill Joy or Apple computer inventor Steve Wozniak are household names if your household is nerdy enough, but as historical figures and geniuses in their own right, they have plenty to say to ALL of us. NerdTV is distributed under a Creative Commons license so viewers can legally share the shows with their friends and even edit their own versions.
http://www.pbs.org/cringely/nerdtv

Ajax IM

ajax im (”asynchronous javascript and xml instant messenger”) is a browser-based instant messaging client. It uses the XMLHTTPRequest object in JavaScript to send and receive commands to and from the server. No refreshing of the page is ever needed for this “web application” to work, as everything is updated in real-time via JavaScript.
http://www.unwieldy.net/ajaxim