Archive for April 24th, 2008

Kelamaan pake mouse

Hari ini lecturer di kelas ngasih wejangan hikmat ke kita semua. Apa yang dia ceritain sederhana banget tapi dampaknya ternyata lumayan besar. Dia ngalamin pembengkakan di lengan kanan dekat engsel ke telapan tangan. Sebetulnya beberapa bulan berselang dia pernah cerita hal yang sama tapi sambil joke santai sehingga kami juga anggap itu adalah [...]




  • Novianto Agam

    If you wish to contact me, please click on my picture and leave me a message...

  • RSS CSS Tricks

    • Print Design to Web Design: Comparative Analogies November 12, 2009
      I used to work in Pre-Press for a long time. Longer even now than I’ve been working on the web. I was in and out of InDesign documents all day every day. I’m not an uber-pro, but I know my way around pretty well. Recently I’ve been finishing up laying out my new book Digging [...]
      Chris Coyier
    • The Book: Digging Into WordPress November 11, 2009
      Learn More / Buy Now It’s ready! Jeff Starr and I started the journey of writing Digging Into WordPress in December ‘08 and it’s finally for sale. It’s 400 pages packed full of WordPress learning. We go from setting things up, to explaining how things work (really get to know the loop and how to use [...]
      Chris Coyier
    • What Beautiful HTML Code Looks Like November 9, 2009
      I originally wrote this over two years ago. It was getting a little long in the tooth, especially now that HTML5 has come along and made HTML far more beautiful than even XHTML 1.1 was. So I updated it! I can’t help but view source on every nice looking website I see. It’s like if you [...]
      Chris Coyier
    • Quickie CSS3 Tricks with Fallbacks November 6, 2009
      CSS3 can do some seriously neat stuff. Just check out some of the crazy 3D stuff you can do in WebKit. But as we all know, we need to be careful with what we choose to do with it. The most cutting edge techniques are fun to play with, but since since only a [...]
      Chris Coyier
    • New Poll: How do you format your CSS? November 4, 2009
      The poll is in the sidebar, so jump down there to vote. You can see examples of the different ways to format CSS here. I think that covers most of the popular ways to format CSS, but if you have your own unique way, feel free to post some code or a link to [...]
      Chris Coyier
    • Poll Results: When Do Jobs Get Done? November 3, 2009
      When this poll first kicked off, the “late” options were way ahead. Over time, things have evened off a bit, and the results are closer than I thought they might be. If you are in the on time or early crowd, congrats! That means you are really good at estimating project completion times. For the [...]
      Chris Coyier
    • Holy Sprites November 2, 2009
      Lots of folks joined in on the fun with the Show Off Your Sprites! contest. I used the ol’ random number generator and came up with Lee Kowalkowski as the big winner, congrats Lee! Now let’s take a look at some of the submissions. Looking at sprites I find strangely fascinating. It’s like this strange [...]
      Chris Coyier
    • Redesigned Personal Site October 30, 2009
      As I do from time to time, I redesigned my personal site (redesign notes). I wanted to make the site a better vessel for writing, so the shell of the site has a much nicer structure for doing that. It’s 100% WordPress of course. I did break one major rule: the design is a complete [...]
      Chris Coyier
    • New Screencast: How Not To Design a Checkout October 29, 2009
      You’ll have to forgive me here folks, this isn’t a very constructive screencast. I was frustrated at the crappy checkout process for a software product I was trying, so I thought I’d screencast it as a lesson to us all on how not to design a checkout. It was confusing, frustrating, error-prone, and make me [...]
      Chris Coyier
    • Images on a Subdomain (?) October 28, 2009
      I can’t remember where, but a while ago I read something about using subdomains to serve up a sites resources as a way to potentially speed up loading. The theory was that the protocol that browsers use to communicate with servers only allows some limited number of things to be download concurrently from a single [...]
      Chris Coyier