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codercode

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  1. I disagree with you, Saint. Basically it's not just Microsoft and Yahoo! copying Google. All 3 companies are copying each other. Let me make this clear. First, Google was the first to roll out an AJAX-powered mail system - Gmail, with 2GB of storage. So in other words, Google pioneered AJAX mail and large storage. Not so long after that Microsoft and Yahoo! followed suit. Microsoft has its Live Mail and Yahoo has its Yahoo!Mail Beta and recently Yahoo made its email storage space unlimited. Besides having better aesthetics, I don't see Live Mail and Yahoo! Mail are in anyway better than Gmail. On to mapping products. Microsoft was the first to roll out Virtual Earth and then streetview (which Google has only implemented recently) and 3D map view. To be frank, I think Microsoft has the most sophisticated map among them all. So, in other words, Google copied them And oh yeah, Google also copied Yahoo's IE7 download page: Some also pointed out that Google's new Experimental Search are basically Yahoo's idea.
  2. Or maybe you accidentally added a German proxy server to your Firefox. Google.com, ebay.com and aol.com are known to detect your IP address to determine your geographical location in order to provide you with relevant contents in your native language. 1. Tools -> Options -> Advanced -> Network -> Settings 2. Check if 'Direct connection to the internet' is selected. If not, select it. Hope this helps.
  3. It kind of amazes me that there's not even a mention of the Mootools javascript library throughout this whole forum. So here I'll do a brief introduction and a tutorial on how to produce the famous accordion effect. http://www.webshots.com/todays?utm_source=webshots&utm_content=catchall&utm_campaign=legacyURL MooTools is a compact, modular, Object-Oriented javascript framework designed to make writing extensible and compatible code easier and faster. MooTools lets you get the job done efficiently and effectively. It is slightly based on the powerful Prototype javascript framework, of which Scriptaculous runs on. (But frankly, I dislike Scriptaculous due to its large file size = slows down page load time. The same effects could be achieved using Mootools which is much much much smaller in size (about 30kb compressed with other plugins included)) Moreover, you can select the only modules you want (thus reducing file size) because Mootools is modular. Seeing is believing. See for yourself what can be done with Mootools. It first started as the popular Moo.fx javascript effects library which boasts its 3kb file size and powerful effects Moo.fx became so popular that its creators decided to lay out a full-featured javscript library. Mootools is currently in version 1.1. Even sites like Ubuntu.com and Joomla.com use Mootools Now on to my tutorial: How to create Accordion effect with Mootools First, we create a HTML skeleton of your webpage <h3> The Mighty Accordion</h3><div id="accordion"> <h3 class="toggler atStart"> History </h3> <div class="element atStart"> <p> The first suggestion that all organisms may have had a common ancestor and diverged through random variation and natural selection was made in 1745 by the French mathematician and scientist Pierre-Louis Moreau de Maupertuis (1698-1759) in his work Venus physique. Specifically: </p> <blockquote> "Could one not say that, in the fortuitous combinations of the productions of nature, as there must be some characterized by a certain relation of fitness which are able to subsist, it is not to be wondered at that this fitness is present in all the species that are currently in existence? Chance, one would say, produced an innumerable multitude of individuals; a small number found themselves constructed in such a manner that the parts of the animal were able to satisfy its needs; in another infinitely greater number, there was neither fitness nor order: all of these latter have perished. Animals lacking a mouth could not live; others lacking reproductive organs could not perpetuate themselves... The species we see today are but the smallest part of what blind destiny has produced..." </blockquote> <p> In 1790, Immanuel Kant (Konigsberg (Kaliningrad) 1724 - 1804), in his Kritik der Urtheilskraft, states that the analogy of animal forms implies a common original type and thus a common parent. </p> <p> Charles Darwin's grandfather, Erasmus Darwin, hypothesized in 1795 that all warm-blooded animals were descended from a single "living filament": </p> <blockquote> "...would it be too bold to imagine, that all warm-blooded animals have arisen from one living filament, which THE GREAT FIRST CAUSE endued with animality...?" (Zoonomia, 1795, section 39, "Generation") </blockquote> <p> In 1859, Charles Darwin's The Origin of Species was published. The views about common descent expressed therein vary between suggesting that there was a single "first creature" to allowing that there may have been more than one. Here are the relevant quotations from the Conclusion: </p> <blockquote> "[P]robably all of the organic beings which have ever lived on this earth have descended from some one primordial form, into which life was first breathed." "The whole history of the world, as at present known, ... will hereafter be recognised as a mere fragment of time, compared with the ages which have elapsed since the first creature, the progenitor of innumerable extinct and living descendants, was created." "When I view all beings not as special creations, but as the lineal descendants of some few beings which lived long before the first bed of the Silurian system was deposited, they seem to me to become ennobled." </blockquote> <p> The famous closing sentence describes the "grandeur in this view of life, with its several powers, having been originally breathed into a few forms or into one." The phrase "one form" here seems to hark back to the phrase "some few beings"; in any case, the choice of words is remarkable for its consistency with recent ideas about there having been a single ancestral "genetic pool". </p> </div> <h3 class="toggler atStart"> Evidence of universal common descent </h3> <div class="element atStart"> <h4> Common biochemistry and genetic code </h4> <p> All known forms of life are based on the same fundamental biochemical organisation: genetic information encoded in DNA, transcribed into RNA, through the effect of protein- and RNA-enzymes, then translated into proteins by (highly similar) ribosomes, with ATP, NADH and others as energy currencies, etc. Furthermore, the genetic code (the "translation table" according to which DNA information is translated into proteins) is nearly identical for all known lifeforms, from bacteria to humans, with minor local differences. The universality of this code is generally regarded by biologists as definitive evidence in favor of the theory of universal common descent. Analysis of the small differences in the genetic code has also provided support for universal common descent.[2] </p> <h4> Irrelevant differences </h4> <p> Differences which have no relevance to evolution and therefore cannot be explained by convergence, tend to be very compelling support for the universal common descent theory. </p> <p> Such evidence has come from two domains: amino acid sequences and DNA sequences. Proteins with the same 3-d structure need not have identical amino acid sequences; any irrelevant similarity between the sequences is evidence for common descent. In certain cases, there are several codons (DNA triplets) that code for the same amino acid. Thus, if two species use the same codon at the same place to specify an amino acid that can be represented by more than one codon, that is evidence for recency of a common ancestor. </p><img src= "http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/70/Phylogenetic_tree.svg/340px-Phylogenetic_tree.svg.png" class="float-right" /> <p> The universality of many aspects of cellular life is often pointed to as supportive evidence to the more compelling evidence listed above. These similarities include the energy carrier ATP, and the fact that all amino acids found in proteins are left-handed. It is possible that these similarities resulted because of the laws of physics and chemistry, rather than universal common descent and therefore resulted in convergent evolution. </p> <h4> Phylogenetic trees </h4> <p> Another important piece of evidence is that it is possible to construct detailed phylogenetic trees mapping out the proposed divisions and common ancestors of species, and no matter what method is used, morphological (based on appearance, embryology, etc) or molecular (based on mutation rates and relative similarities of important, conserved genes), still get extremely similar results. If there were no common ancestor, these different methods should give wildly different results, thus the phylogenetic tree is strong evidence of common descent. </p> <div style="clear:both"></div> </div> <h3 class="toggler atStart"> Examples of common descent </h3> <div class="element atStart"> <h4> Artificial selection </h4> <p> Artificial selection offers remarkable examples of the amount of diversity that can exist between individuals sharing a late common ancestor. To perform artificial selection, one begins with a particular species (following examples include wolves and wild cabbage) and then, at every generation, only allow certain individuals to reproduce, based on the degree to which they exhibit certain desirable characteristics. In time, it is expected that these characteristics become increasingly well-developed in successive generations. Many examples of artificial selection, like the ones below, occurred without the guidance of modern scientific insight. </p> <h4> Dog breeding </h4><img src= "http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/7/7e/IMG013biglittledogFX_wb.jpg/180px-IMG013biglittledogFX_wb.jpg" class="float-right" /> <p> An obvious example of the power of artificial selection is the diversity found in various breed in domesticated dogs. The various breeds of dogs all share common ancestry (being all ultimately descended from wolves) but were domesticated by humans and then selectively bred in order to enhance various features such as coat color and length or body size. To see the wide range of difference between the many breeds of dogs compare the Chihuahua, Great Dane, Basset Hound, Pug, and Poodle. Also compare this enormous diversity with the relative uniformity of wild wolves. </p> </div></div> Then, we style it properly with CSS .toggler { color: #222; margin: 0; padding: 2px 5px; background: #eee; border-bottom: 1px solid #ddd; border-right: 1px solid #ddd; border-top: 1px solid #f5f5f5; border-left: 1px solid #f5f5f5; font-size: 11px; font-weight: normal; font-family: 'Andale Mono', sans-serif;} .element { } .element p { margin: 0; padding: 4px;} .float-right { padding:10px 20px; float:right;} blockquote { text-style:italic; padding:5px 0 5px 30px;} Just to give you an idea of how it looks like without the accordion effect: With the accordion effect, everything stacks up nicely, thus saving viewport space and at the same time produces aesthetics value: Now that we already have the HTML and CSS, all we need to do is just add a few lines of javascript. With Mootools, this has never really been easier: opacity linenums:0'>var accordion = new Accordion('h3.atStart', 'div.atStart', { opacity: false, onActive: function(toggler, element){ toggler.setStyle('color', '#ff3300'); }, onBackground: function(toggler, element){ toggler.setStyle('color', '#222'); }}, $('accordion')); var newTog = new Element('h3', {'class': 'toggler'}).setHTML('Common descent'); var newEl = new Element('div', {'class': 'element'}).setHTML('<p>codercode codercode sample</p>'); accordion.addSection(newTog, newEl, 0); That is all it takes to create a nice accordion effect for your divs! Hope y'all enjoy this tutorial
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