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October 2009

Coming At You Like A Pydermonkey at Toolness

by karlcow

Pydermonkey’s mission is pretty simple and straightforward: it’s just meant to wrap Spidermonkey’s C API as faithfully as possible—including its debugging API—while enforcing the memory safety that Python is known for. This makes it awfully low-level for casual programmers, but thanks to Python’s awesome support for magic methods, it’s not hard to create high-level wrappers that provide much more convenient bridging between JavaScript and Python code.

September 2009

my secret to happy relationship - jordan

by blackgoldfish
We have a thing called "surprise treats." They can be flowers, love notes, our favorite candy, a cool picture, a drawing or a book. It's not usually expensive--just a thoughtful, fun surprise. We wrap them up and hide them, and then call each other and say there's a surprise treat waiting.

Stanford’s Open Source Camera Project

by sbrothier & 1 other
The web is abuzz over a project over at Stanford that aims to revolutionize how we think about photography by building an open source camera (dubbed Frankencamera). That’s right… Open. Source. Camera. While you try to wrap your mind around this new paradigm, I’ll point out of a few of the important aspects of the project and throw in some of my thoughts on it.

Stanford’s Open Source Camera Project

by Spone & 1 other (via)
The web is abuzz over a project over at Stanford that aims to revolutionize how we think about photography by building an open source camera (dubbed Frankencamera). That’s right… Open. Source. Camera. While you try to wrap your mind around this new paradigm, I’ll point out of a few of the important aspects of the project and throw in some of my thoughts on it.

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August 2009

a textile editor - built over html5 canvas

by Spone & 2 others
I'm pretty sure that textile is the right way to produce content for the web, and that WYSIWYG editors are bad for your website. But editing a large chunk of textile using a textarea is not fun. I usually use Textmate to edit textile content, and wanted to reproduce the same feeling inside a browser. The best online text editor is currently Bespin and I gave it a try. Unfortunately, the current state of bespin make it pretty difficult to embed the editor itself in a standalone way. Moreover I needed specifics features like 'soft wrap' that is totally required to edit some textile content. So I took the Bespin way, and started to hack using javascript and HTML5 canvas to create a simple, standalone and totally embeddable textile editor for the web.

July 2009

Cool Tools: How To Wrap Five Eggs

by karlcow

Presentation is everything in Japan. Go to any department store and buy even a small sack of tea, and the time and effort put into packing up your purchase is enough to astound any n00b Westerner. This tradition goes way back, of course. First published in 1967 and long out of print, this picture-heavy book of classic Japanese packaging has finally been reprinted in paperback. The title is misleading. There are no step-by-step directions, only black and white images up front with annotations in the back, detailing the materials used, region, specific use/occasion/tradition surrounding each item.

How to make community members stick at djst’s nest

by karlcow

an interesting conclusion about how to turn new and casual contributors into long-time community members: the key is to distribute ownership.

To wrap up, there were several things that motivated me to stay active in the Mozilla community: * A belief in the mission of the project — to create a web browser that supports and promotes the use of open standards * An interest in the technology — initially with the Gecko logo as my hook * The feeling of belonging in a community of people with similar interests * The desire to give something back to a project that gave (and still gives) me the best browser in the world for free * The experiences gained by managing a website — HTML, CSS, server configurations, and perhaps most importantly, the English language * The recognition and respect from Mozilla project members for my contributions * The pride of being responsible for an important piece of the project

April 2009

9 Semantic Search Engines That Will Change Search

by decembre
Here is a wrap up of some of the top semantic search engines which we’ve covered previously, and some updates on their research.

Wrap

by blackgoldfish
A great use for hand carved rubber stamps is printing your own gift wrapping paper

jQuery & .NET

by ms_michel
A set of ASP.NET Friendly controls which wrap up the jQuery UI Interactions and Widgets

March 2009

mongoworks :: ZAKKA BOOKS AND MAGAZINES

by sbrothier
mongoworks / Furoshiki (gray) Is a cloth used to wrap things, comes from the word 'furo' (bath) and 'shiki' (spread). As the name describes, Furoshiki is a wrapping product. It accommodates objects of various sizes and shapes. The inner material of 5-mm polyurethane can sustain shock, and keeps your electronic or other gear safe and handy. It can be carried by the outside belt, or in your bag. It is a novel Furoshiki for our generation.

December 2008

CSS Text Wrapper

by camel
The CSS Text Wrapper allows you to easily make HTML text wrap in shapes other than just a rectangle. You can make text wrap around curves, zig-zags, or whatever you want. All you have to do is draw the left and right edges below and then copy the generated code to your website

css text wrapper

by blackgoldfish & 13 others (via)
The CSS Text Wrapper allows you to easily make HTML text wrap in shapes other than just a rectangle. You can make text wrap around curves, zig-zags, or whatever you want.

CSS Text Wrapper

by Krome & 1 other
These are just a few examples of what can be done using the CSS Text Wrapper. Note that the wrap shape stays constant regardless of font or content. The examples on this page use the javascript method to apply them to the site. There are two other ways to create the wrap without using javascript and that are purely CSS/XHTML.

CSS Text Wrapper

by srcmax & 1 other (via)
These are just a few examples of what can be done using the CSS Text Wrapper. Note that the wrap shape stays constant regardless of font or content. The examples on this page use the javascript method to apply them to the site. There are two other ways to create the wrap without using javascript and that are purely CSS/XHTML.

November 2008

September 2008

August 2008

the Idea Shower » » CSS Text Wrapper

by karlcow

The CSS Text Wrapper allows you to generate HTML and CSS to wrap text on your website into any shape.

June 2008

ibarona - USPP(Universal Serial Port Python Library)

by Emaux
USPP Library is a multi-platform Python module to access serial ports. At the moment, it only works in Windows, Linux and MacOS but as it is written entirely in Python (doesn't wrap any C/C library) I hope you can extend it to support any other platforms.

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