Useful links: HigherEdSolo, Pseudo-classes, AIR

If you’re in higher ed, you might want to check out what HigherEdSolo is all about.

Getting to Know CSS3, Part 1: Structural Pseudo Classes is at script junkie.

CSS3 introduces a number of new pseudo-classes, including structural pseudo-classes that target elements according to their position in the document tree and relation to other elements.

 

Useful Links: Online Education, HTML5 forms, hidden menus

Here’s an opposing viewpoint to the one expressed by Daphne Koller here. The opposing view is Online Education: Is it All It’s Cracked Up to Be? 

30 HTML5 and CSS form exercises has some good tutorials listed.

Very nice fold-in hidden menu for mobile devices and available for download onGithub.

Add a bang to your search with DuckDuckGo and Google

I first heard about DuckDuckGoog in a post from Netted. I quickly became fascinated with the idea of using a bang (!) to limit my search.

DuckDuckGoog is a marriage of DuckDuckGo and Google.

Here’s how it works. At DuckDuckGoog, you can use a search string beginning with a bang to search specific sites. For example, a search string beginning with !yt would search only You Tube and !engadget would search only Engadget. You can search for downloads and add-ons. To search for Chrome add-ons, for example, use !chrome. You can search all sorts of programming languages with strings like !jquery. There are strings for startups, sysadmins, shopping, academics, government, health, law, words, maps, tools and more.

Read the complete list of !bang keywords. At DuckDuckGoog, all the keywords are available to you from a drop down menu next to the search box. Of course, if you know what you want, you can just type it in the search box along with your keyword. Most big sites work with a bang, and many generic keywords such as “images” will work with a bang as well.”

I tried searching for “!imdb total recall” and was taken straight to this:

imdb total recall

Bang on, DuckDuckGoog!