Here’s a utility program called MM-Exporter that does, “Backup utility to save and restore all important settings and data from Macromedia® Dreamweaver®, Contribute® Fireworks® and Flash®” If you need to reinstall and import your settings, this is supposed to make it easy. It is only for Windows. I’ve imported Dreamweaver site definitions using Macromedia’s tedious site-by-site importing process and figure anything that would make it faster is worth a look.
Editing .htaccess on a Mac
Here’s a tip explaining how to see and edit an .htaccess file on a Mac from OSXFAQ – Technical News and Support for Mac OS X
New CSS Compatibility Chart
With some of the popular charts becoming hard to find, it is nice to have this one posted by Keith Schengili-Roberts. Full CSS Property Compatibility Chart It covers CSS 1 and the much-less-fully supported CSS 2 properties.
Accessibility and Apple
Apple – Mac OS X – VoiceOver Spoken Interface: “VoiceOver is a fully integrated, built-in enhancement to the Mac OS X Aqua user interface, providing an additional and equal way to access the Macintosh. It reads aloud the contents of documents such as Web pages, Mail messages and word processing files. It provides a comprehensive audible description of your workspace and all the activities taking place on your computer.”
I’m eager to see reviews as to how this compares with JAWS or Home Page Reader. Anybody know?
Houston, we have a semantic problem
A think piece at molly.com » what is a web standard? ties together the practice and science of standards and charges us, as educators, to teach conformance to standards. This article was also published at the Web Standards Project, however, your comments are invited at molly.com.
Open source image editing
Tasks such as photo retouching, image composition and image authoring free with GIMP – The GNU Image Manipulation Program.
Review: Photoshop Productivity Toolkit
Al Ward’s Photoshop Productivity Toolkit: Over 600 Time-Saving Actions (Sybex, 2004) is the second small book I’ve reviewed recently. By small, I mean it is just over 100 pages and very focused on a single idea: Photoshop actions. There are only four chapters. Ward explains what actions are, how to edit actions, how to create actions and then provides a boatload of actions you can use in myriad ways.
If you have never used actions in Photoshop, this book makes it easy to get started. Ward’s instructions are clear and easy to follow. He has you using the actions on the CD by Chapter 2 and by Chapter 3, you are in the actions business yourself.
Even if you already use your own Photoshop work flow and habits to create actions for yourself, you will probably find some interesting new actions on the CD, which includes actions for color correction, enhancement, production, typography and more.
I like this trend, if it is a trend, toward small, focused books that sell for under $25 and help readers master just one bit of information. They’re kind of like cable movies on demand–get the information you want when you want it without anything extraneous to clutter up the mental landscape. There is so much new information in web design–a constant pressure to learn more, more, more–that books helping you tame the one piece of knowledge that you need at the time seem like an excellent idea. In fact, I can think of a few topics I’d like to write about myself in one of these small tomes.