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16 October, 2007

Lowongan Kerja di Jepang / Vacancy Jobs In Japan

Filed under: CSS

The WorkinJapan.com Newsletter 341
From: djcontents@daijob.com
Add contact Add contact
Sent:
Wednesday, October 10, 2007 2:57:41 PM
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djcontents@daijob.com

================================================= 10th October 2007

THE WORKINJAPAN.COM NEWSLETTER
================ http://daijob.wir.jp/d.ut?t=9qxrNBBx6 ==

======================================================================

MENU

  • SEARCH JOBS
  • HOT JOBS: Engineering
  • JOB LINE UP
  • URGENTLY REQUIRED
  • Reflections on Life in Japan:

    Gift-giving in Japan I: Omiyage

  • TERRIE’S JOB TIPS:
    Fingerprinting for Foreigners is Back

    - Who Wants to Find a Job?

    SEARCH JOBS : Find your dream job!
    You can search by job type, location, salary and/or
    Japanese/English level

    http://daijob.wir.jp/d.ut?t=9qxL37Ms6

    HOT JOBS: Engineering

  • APAC Technical Marketing Manager – DOE

  • Project Manager – DOE
  • Market Data Infrastructure Support – DOE
  • Data Cabling Engineer – DOE
  • 8162- Blackberry Support – DOE

    http://daijob.wir.jp/d.ut?t=9qxRJxXT6

—-———————————————————————————————JMEC Competition – a unique opportunity for English speaking
individuals wanting to acquire invaluable business skills, and for
companies in search of new ideas to kick-start new or boost current
strategic projects! Click here for more detail:
http://daijob.wir.jp/d.ut?t=9qxHQDHY6

————————————————————————————————-

(more…)

10 October, 2007

What is good PowerPoint design?

Filed under: CSS

Occasionally, I’m asked by colleagues or clients to send samples of “great slides” or “good PowerPoint.” I usually hesitate to send examples of slides since my answer to the question, “what does a great PowerPoint slide look like?” is “…it depends.” In a world which often thinks in terms of absolutes — “this is good, that is bad” — “it depends” is not the most popular answer.

Context matters
However, as far as design is concerned, it is useful not to think (judge) in terms of “right or wrong,” but rather in terms of what is “appropriate or inappropriate.” That is, is it appropriate or inappropriate for a particular context? “Good” and “bad” are indeed terms we use when talking about design — including PowerPoint slides — but I’m personally cautious of this dualistic thinking, especially when judging a design without its full context available. So much depends on how the visual is placed within the context of the presentation, and the content and objectives of that particular presentation are of paramount concern. Without a good knowledge of the place and circumstance, and the content and context of a presentation, it is impossible to say this is “appropriate” and that is “inappropriate.”

(more…)

6 October, 2007

Free E-Book

Filed under: CSS

Ini secara tida sengaja aku temukan di sebuah forum arab (maksudnya arabpati nggenah), di link ini anda bisa menikmati banyaknya kumpulan e-book dari engenering, computer science, dan masih banyak lagi. coba deh… pasti gak nyesel deh. Berikut ini linknya.


Anita is My True Love › Create New Post — Wordpress Cognotent

Filed under: CSS

Anita is My True Love › Create New Post — Wordpress Cognotent

Installasi Replikasi Mysql

Filed under: CSS

Langkah install MySQL cara 1:

Yang jelas pada langkah awal ini kamu harus punya source nya punk, jangan install pake RPM ya… cos waktu aku dulu belajar pake rpm ditertawai, soale anak TK aja bisa he he he. Kalo kita install pake sourceball kelihatan kayak hacker deh…
Kalo kamu belum punya file mysql coba download di situs :

http://dev.mysql.com/downloads/

Buat group baru dengan nama myql, dan memasukkan user mysql ke dalam group tersebut.
[root@linuxer johan]#groupadd mysql
[root@linuxer johan]#useradd –g mysql mysql

perintah groupadd en useradd biasnya ada di directory /usr/sbin atau kalo nggak ketemu kamu cari dulu letak directory groupadd / useradd dengan cara

(more…)

23 September, 2007

The Importance of Content for SEO

Filed under: CSS

by: SEO Factor

Often times we get so caught up in marketing our site and making it aesthetically pleasing, we forget one of, if not THE most important part of SEO. Content. The search engines can not see pictures, so the only way to tell them what your site is all about is to provide that information to them via text. But why is it so difficult to put text on our sites?

During the creation of a site, we often care more about how it looks than how it functions. Flash, in my opinion, can be used to create some of the most beautiful sites out there. We get so drawn into making nice layouts with neat animations, we completely neglect the fact that we are building a site for the world, not just us.

(more…)

11 August, 2007

Pembuka Kunci-kunci Rezeki Berdasarkan Kitab Al-Quran dan As-Sunnah

Filed under: CSS

aling kurang terdapat 10 Pembuka Kunci yang perlu di lakukan secara serius oleh setiap individu Mu’min yang berdasarkan panduanAl-Qur’an dan al-hadith sebagaimana yang tersebut dalam buku ‘Pembuka Kunci-kunci Rezeki Berdasarkan kitab Al-Qur’an dan As-Sunnah’ oleh Doktor Fadhl llaahi iaitu sebagai berikut:
1. Istighfar dan Taubat
i. Hendaklah dia menahan dari melakukan maksiat (tidak lagi mengulanginya lagi).
ii. Hendaklah dia menyesal terhadap ketelanjurannya.
iii. Hendaklah dia bercita-cita untuk tidak mengulanginya lagi.
iv. Hendaklah dia melepaskan hak tuannya. Hendaklah memulangkan semula harta kepada tuannya atau meminta maaf atau meminta kemaafannya.
Tanpa salah satu ciri-ciri ini, menurut para ulama’, maka taubatnya adalah tidak sah.
2. Taqwa.
Memelihara diri dari perkara yang mencetuskan dosa; dan yang demikian di peroleh dengan meninggalkan perkara yang haram. Manakala ketaqwaan itu dapat disempurnakan dengan meninggalkan sebahagian perkara yang harus (mubaah).”
3. Berserah kepada Allah / Tawakal. (more…)

4 July, 2007

Filtering CSS

Filed under: CSS

Source from :
<a href=”http://www.minzweb.de/en/pages/index/default.asp”>http://www.minzweb.de/en/pages/index/default.asp</a></p>

<p>Again this is a post that was inspired by ongoing discussions with students of the IWA HWG CSS workshop. Some of it has been widely covered over the web , but I thought I’d summarize a bit what I found most useful and provide a small link collection.</p>

<p>When it comes to CSS hack’s and filters I am the kind of developer that really tries to avoid them. If there is something to be done against minor glitches I tend to use CSS filters and manage the used hacks in several different files that are served to the browsers in question. Most of the main concerns l have with Internet Explorer versions 6, 5.5, 5.0 on Windows (i. e. 1px offset with absolute positioning, initial font size issue with the 5.x branch and the broken box-model.) and Internet Explorer on Mac (for example the miraculous margin-right: 15pxadded to absolute positioned elements).

(more…)

21 June, 2007

CSS Hacking For Internet Explorer

Filed under: CSS

From : http://www.maratz.com/

The summary of our latest project client-side development brought to conclusion that there’re are really just a few essential Internet Explorer hacks. By careful structure planning, I managed to stripe down all hackery to a much less additional rules. Since they are promising IE7 some time soon, more and more I think about secure CSS hacking. We surely don’t want our sites to be a mess in IE7 for it’s quite possibly half-repaired CSS support.
Conditional Comments

The alpha and the omega of IE hacking are IE’s conditional comments. They are IE-only feature and they’re not supported by any other browser. For other browsers they are just an ordinary comments and therefor, they are safe to use.

The typical usage is as follows:

<!--[if IE]>

do something
< ![endif]–>

Untill now I used to write something like above, which applies to all versions of Internet Explorer, i.e. 5.01, 5.5 and 6.0, but since the latest announcements, I started applying the following condition:

<!--[if lte IE 6]>

do something
< ![endif]–>

which means: “if this is Internet Explorer less than or equal to version 6, do something”. My thoughts are—if they keep conditional comments feature in IE7, then the browser will ignore this, since it’s version designation number is 7. On the other hand, if they abandon that feature, the browser will assume that this is just another HTML comment.

When I work on a layout I usually place all hacks for some selector immediately after its’ default rule. This way, changes can be done quickly and without searching for the corresponding hack in other places.

After I’m done with layout, I like to go through all of the CSS files once again and optimize everything from short-hand properties to assigning the same rule for multiple selectors. At that point all hacks are removed to separate file(s), so the main CSS is clean and tidy. This separate file is then called in the header section of a file within conditional comments.

<!--[if lte IE 6]>

<link rel=”stylesheet” type=”text/css” href=”ie_hacks.css” />
< ![endif]–>

While still in main CSS file, hacked selectors start with * html. This is known as the ‘star-HTML’ hack. Standard compliant browsers ignore this selector, because there’s actually no elements above html in a document tree. Luckily, IE doesn’t know that and we’re safe to use this flaw when applying IE specific hacks. Once we move hacks to a separate file and call it in a document with conditional comments, it’s safe to remove the * html part.

Further on in the text, assume that we are dealing with separate file with IE hacks only.
Backslash hack for IE 5.x broken box model

A combination of width and padding on the same element is very well known to produce broken layouts in IE 5.x. Box model hack is widely used and can be stripped down to a few lines.

someselector {

padding: 10px;
width: 200px;
width: 180px;
height: 200px;
height: 180px;
}

This will give as an element which is 200px wide, 200px high and with 10px paddings in both IE 5.x and IE 6.
If floated and with margin, display: inline

Everything that is floated and has any margin larger than zero, should have additional rule display: inline;. Simple as that. More about the ‘Holly hacks’ read at P.I.E..
Overflow problems

Italic font style in any IE version will enlarge parent element horizontally. It’s usually just a few pixels, but it could be nasty and ugly few pixels. Simple solution is in the following rule:

someselector {

overflow-x: hidden;
}

I tend to apply that rule to every major column in a layout, especially in the period right after site launch. For the first week or two, when the large amounts of content are added and removed day and night by the site’s editors, it’s better to prevent content slips out of it’s boxes. A small digression—editors are sometimes inexperienced, but it’s not their job to know every HTML element and that’s why adequate support in their few first attempts is essential. There’s no worst for the guy who manage the content on his company’s brand new, ultra-modern and expensive web site, than the massive layout breakage when the site is still fresh and under the eyes of CEO. It’s our responsibility to keep his confidence intact.
Font size in tables in IE 5.x

Font rules set in html or body element are ignored in tables in case of IE 5.x. Again, simple addition will take care of it.

body {

font-size: 62.5%;
}

table {

font-size: 1em;
}

Later in a process, you can change rules according to a particular table’s needs.
To conclude…

CSS hacks are necessary evil, but with defensive approach, we can make sure they safely co-exist with default CSS rules, even in future browsers. What are your thoughts?

20 June, 2007

CSS3 >> background-origin and background-clip

Filed under: CSS

Mozilla, Safari 3 and Konqueror have experimental implementations of the CSS3 properties background-origin and background-clip.

Background-Origin

The background-origin property is used to determine how the background-position of a background in a certain box is calculated.

It takes three different values, border, padding and content. When you supply a value of padding, the position is relative to the upper left corner of the padding edge. With border it’s relative to the upper left corner of the border, and content means the background is started from the upper left corner of the content.

Background-Clip

The background-clip property is used to determine whether the backgrounds extends into the border or not. The default is border, which means it DOES extend into it, but if you set it to padding, it doesn’t.

(more…)

11 June, 2007

CSS3 >> create borders in Mozilla/Firefox

Filed under: CSS

Many exciting new functions and features are being thought up for CSS3. We will try and showcase some of them on this page, when they get implemented in either Firefox, Opera or Safari/Webkit.

W3C has offered some new options for borders in CSS3, of which, next to rounded borders, border-color is also very interesting. Mozila/Firefox has implemented this function, which allows you to create cool colored borders. This is an example:
Mozilla/Firefox users should see a nice grey fading border on this box…

(more…)

4 June, 2007

CSS Hack: IE5.0/Windows Band Pass Filter

Filed under: CSS

This paragraph should have green text in all browsers that support even a little CSS. However this paragraph will have a orange background in IE5.0/Windows from the @imported style sheet “ie50winbandpassbefore.css” at the start of the inline style sheet, and a thick maroon border from the @imported style sheet “ie50winbandpassafter.css” at the end of the inline style sheet.
Definition (more…)

CSS Hack: Mid Pass Filter

Filed under: CSS

This paragraph should have green text in all browsers that support even a little CSS. However this paragraph will have a red background in IE5.x/Windows from the @imported style sheet “midpassbefore.css” at the start of the inline style sheet, and a thick yellow border from the @imported style sheet “midpassafter.css” at the end of the inline style sheet.
Definition

mid pass filter

AKA band pass filter. A filter which transmits energy in a specified wavelength band but rejects energy above and below.
(more…)

CSS Hack:

Filed under: CSS

The Underscore Hack

Let’s start with three simple facts — as Petr Pisar found out.

  1. The underscore (“_”) is allowed in CSS identifiers by the CSS2.1 Specification
  2. Browsers have to ignore unknown CSS properties
  3. MSIE 5+ for Windows ignores the “_” at the beginning of any CSS property name

Therefore, a CSS definition, e. g. _color:red is:

  1. Correct, for CSS 2.1 specification allows it (even if software validators, knowing only older version CSS 2.0, say it’s a bug: they are wrong, it’s correct).
  2. Ignored in any browser but WinIE
  3. Treated as color:red in WinIE
    (more…)

25 May, 2007

Ketika aku berucap aku cinta pada-Mu

Filed under: CSS

Tuhan….

Saat aku menyukai seorang teman
Ingatkanlah aku bahwa akan ada sebuah akhir
Sehingga aku tetap bersama dengan sesuatu yang tak pernah berakhir….

Tuhan….

Ketika aku merindukan seorang kekasih
Rindukanlah aku kepada yang rindu cinta sejati-Mu
Agar kerinduanku terhadapmu semakin menjadi

(more…)






















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