Showing posts with label css. Show all posts
Showing posts with label css. Show all posts

Saturday, July 9, 2011

Startup Research, CSS text-overflow and why should you keep things simple

One of the early topics in the Founder Institute curriculum is “Startup Research”. Here is a video and slides of a Startup Research lesson to the Silicon Valley program by Adeo Ressi, Founder of the Founder Institute.

Startup Research, CSS text-overflow and why should you keep things simple


Backlink: http://brajeshwar.com/2011/startup-research-css-text-overflow-and-why-should-you-keep-things-simple/

Saturday, October 16, 2010

The Father Of CSS Talks HTML5, CSS3 (A TCTV Interview)

Lots of abbreviations in the title and URL, but with an audience like TechCrunch's I'm not too worried about the point coming across or not. At this week's Opera press event held in Oslo, Norway, I had a chance to spend a couple of minutes talking to Håkon Wium Lie, who is not only the software company's chief technology officer but also broadly known as the "father of CSS". In 1994 while at W3C, Wium Lie was the man who proposed the concept of Cascading Style Sheets, which describes how documents are presented on screens, in print, or perhaps how they are pronounced. A graduate of the MIT Media Lab, he also spent quite some time at CERN working on the World Wide Web project together with Tim Berners-Lee and Robert Cailliau (see our earlier interview with the latter here). We talked CSS3 (the next iteration of Cascading Style Sheets), HTML5 (the next iteration of the HTML language) and the role of Opera Software as a company in both.

Post originale: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/0d_COth1KYA/