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  • Andy P 9:19 pm on December 21, 2004 Permalink | Reply  

    I recently visited Montreal with my Powerbook and was happy to find that most of the Starbucks offered free wireless Internet access, something rarely utilized back in London.

    At the moment I am in Cape Town, way down in the Southwestern tip of South Africa visiting my parents and family. It’s been quite the contrast in web accessibility; broadband Internet is expensive and slow (512kb ADSL for around $160 per month!). This does of course write off any real chance of a fairly substantial Internet cafe starting up.

    Things are moving forward though, costs are reducing due to increased competition, and people in South Africa are starting to warm to the idea of a fast internet connection.

    My parents who live here in Cape Town are looking into the idea of opening a sandwich bar/Internet cafe somewhere in the city. What do you look for when choosing an Internet cafe on your travels?

    Personally, the price is a big factor for me, but other factors like privacy, atmosphere and speed definitely play a part in my decision.

    It would be interesting to hear what people consider before walking into an Internet cafe, and what you would personally like to see, whether it be good food, a friendly atmosphere, or even a room packed full of G5’s.

     
    • Paul Bischoff 10:19 pm on December 21, 2004 Permalink | Reply

      It really depends..

      Basically, there is no practical need of visiting internet cafe’s. It’s possible to check emails and RSS with a good GSM cell phone or pocket PC. Some of them even has the capability of browsing the Internet with Opera.

      I’m pretty much turned off by the thought of visiting internet cafe’s after some “interesting” experiences in Eastern Europe, where internet security isn’t a top priority most places.

      Should I ever visit an internet cafe again I would go for comfort (nice soft chairs and space for elbows), security (possibility of deleting cookies, history etc. from the browser) and finally a decent menu of foods and beverages .

    • Jacobus van Niekerk 8:13 am on December 23, 2004 Permalink | Reply

      Hi,

      Welcome back to Cape Town! I have also return to SA, since things are looking better in SA. I work from my “home” office and the ADSL is not to bad! only thing that really bothers me is the 3GIG cap! Anyway. have a nice xmas in SA,

      Regards
      Jacobus

    • Angela 10:12 pm on December 24, 2004 Permalink | Reply

      I love internet cafes. Not everybody has those fancy cell phones or likes the tiny screens on them (I for one, do not). And hey, satellites have been known to get knocked out from time to time. Anyway, I think its nice when cafes have a little reading section, and a place to leave cards or flyers for websites.

    • Denis Kabistan 10:21 am on December 26, 2004 Permalink | Reply

      Interesting. The only time i’ve been amazed when walking into a net caf√© was when I entered the MacLee Express Store. woa !! 21″ widescreen Sony Displays with dual processor 4gb RAM g5 s!!!! Yikes I was in an euphoric stated of ming.

    • Alex 8:15 pm on December 30, 2004 Permalink | Reply

      Depends what i am looking for, but good hardware is a must, and high speed internet.

      Cost is a big factor, but when i know i will only spend 5 min or less, i dont really care about the price, but i f i am spending 30 min or more, i shop for the best price.

  • Andy P 7:36 pm on December 8, 2004 Permalink | Reply  

    University Lecture HallI have to say I think that the presentation was well received, there are quite a few budding web designers and developers on the course currently, and I think that showing them the potential of CSS really opened their eyes to new possibilities.

    We also distributed hand-outs to everyone that attended with answers to frequently asked questions, as well as a list of interesting websites – including many of the well known design blogs out there.

    It was also interesting to hear the questions that people had to ask about standards based design. One of them was infact directed at our lecturer, asking “Why have we not been taught this method of design on our course?”

    We do have a web-design module on our course, but it’s in the first year of our studies, and to be perfectly honest the content for the module is a good 4 years out of date… tags anyone?

    Maybe our presentation will shake things up a bit, change some of the course content, and give graduates of the degree an early taste of standards based design. Something that they can work on and benefit from in the ‘real world’.

    View Presentation (pdf)

     
    • Alex Nin 5:37 pm on December 17, 2004 Permalink | Reply

      Great, but a little detail … the “Presentation” is not in a friendly format (Frames!!!), it could be better in a pdf or ppt able to download!

    • Andy Peatling 9:37 pm on December 17, 2004 Permalink | Reply

      I am working on this Alex, rest assured. At the moment the PDF is 9mb, so a little weighty to download – the powerpoint export is a temporary option currently and I’l take it down once I have a compressed pdf sorted.

    • Alex Nin 1:45 am on December 18, 2004 Permalink | Reply

      Thanks Andy! I guess you could take the PDF under 3 Mb. and that will be nice! (eg. Beast Mag is fully of graphics and some issues are -4 Mb.).

    • sike 10:43 pm on April 24, 2006 Permalink | Reply

      The link is broken.

  • Andy P 11:54 pm on December 6, 2004 Permalink | Reply  

    Yes, there are still a few bugs that I need to iron out, I’ve changed my blogging software over to WordPress as it’s getting fairly decent reviews and also let’s me tinker with it’s source.

    I’m pleased with the design, it uses the onion skin technique in order to achive the shadow either side of the white content section – also enabling me to add a fairly descreet gradient to the background either side.

    Over the next few week’s I’ll be refining and refining, so expect to see subtle changes. I’m not sure how long this will take – hey it’s Christmas!

     
    • Jamie 12:08 am on December 7, 2004 Permalink | Reply

      Looking good!! I look forward to seeing how it develops.

      I’m sure that you told me you couldn’t come out to the pub because you had too much work to do …..

    • Carsten 5:08 pm on December 17, 2004 Permalink | Reply

      Very nice!
      How did you do the calendar? Is it generated by a script ?

    • Andy Peatling 10:25 pm on December 17, 2004 Permalink | Reply

      Carsten, the calendar is generated in php by wordpress, the blogging tool that I use.

      I have modified it though, so instead of outputting text for each day of the month, it outputs a small graphic number.

      It also changes the graphic to a yellow version if there are posts for that particular date.

    • Erik Kallevig 8:33 pm on December 27, 2004 Permalink | Reply

      I like the design. Great colors, good layout. Too bad about the diagonal lines though, I’ve still yet to see a good way to get them to line up with footers correctly without stretching the content column to the bottom of the viewport. As you can see on your design, the diagonals on the bottom don’t always line up with the footer background, although it’s hardly noticeable behind the opaque white. Still it’d be nice to find a workaround.

    • Andy Peatling 11:32 am on February 10, 2005 Permalink | Reply

      Thanks for the comments.

  • Andy P 11:37 pm on December 2, 2004 Permalink | Reply  

    Sure, going through and adding an tag to all your hyperlinks would work, but that’s just tedious.

    CSS offers a far easier solution. Here’s a quick, three step guide that will give you funky links in no time.

    • Create the icon you want to use. Think about the size, it should be a similar height to the default text size of your site.
    • Add the following line of code to your CSS.
      a {
      background-image: url(IMAGE_URL);
      background-position: right;
      background-repeat: no-repeat;
      padding-right: 10px; }

      background-image: url(IMAGE_URL);

      It will tell the browser where the icon image is located. Replace IMAGE_URL with the location of your image.

      background-position: right;

      In these links, the icon will appear to the right of the text. You can change this to left if you want it at the beginning.

      background-repeat: no-repeat;

      We only want the icon to show once. So turn off repeating.

      padding-right: 10px;

      This part gives all your hyperlinks some extra space at the end for the icon to sit. (You’‘ll probably want to tweak this value depending on your icon size.) You can change this to ‘’padding-left’’ for icons at the front of links.

    • Hey presto, check those links again – easy huh? You can also extend this a little, try changing the icon for the :hover event, you can come up with some simple but stylish looking effects.
     
    • Benny T 12:27 pm on December 7, 2004 Permalink | Reply

      Simple, yet briliant. The a:hover idea works like a charm.

    • Patrick Fitzgerald 9:54 pm on December 20, 2004 Permalink | Reply

      In the wikipedia stylesheet they use something like the following:

      a[href ^="http://"] {

      That will add the image only to links that start with http: (which on their site is used only for external links).

      They use similar rules to give diffent icons for mailto:, https:, etc.

    • Stefan Isarie 6:53 pm on February 9, 2005 Permalink | Reply

      Patrick the problem with this kind of selectors
      a[href ^="http://"] {
      is that they are not recongnized by MS IE.

      I will add a few more selectors of this kind, on topic:

      a[href^="mailto"] {background: transparent url(images/envelope.gif) center left; padding-left:16px;}

      ^ style only the links starting with mailto (a href=”mailto:me@internet.com”, for example).

      a[target^="_blank"] {background: transparent url(images/topArrow.gif) center right;padding-right:16px;}

      ^ Adds an arrow on the right of the link suggeting that you will leave the current website by clicking on that link

      Stefan
      PS. Hmm… Why can’t I preview my post before replying?

    • Andy Peatling 10:39 pm on February 9, 2005 Permalink | Reply

      Hmm previewing, why didn’t I notice that?

      I’ll get on it, maybe I turned it off in WordPress…

      Update: Comment previewing is now possible.

    • bingo 3:33 am on March 6, 2006 Permalink | Reply

      I am trying to start my own blog and I’m trying to learn how this works.
      My site looks like this bingo
      http://bingoplaying.com

    • Jürgen 3:56 pm on March 17, 2007 Permalink | Reply

      Great Post. Very helpfull informations. Thanks a lot. Jürgen from Germany. :-)

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