Sell Standards With Numbers [en]

Picked up in the comments at What do I know (a page in the chapter “How to Sell Standards to the Managers”):

I was tired of the other developers calling to ask me if the page looked okay on the Mac. The other developers kept tossing in more tables and spacers to .fix. it for the Mac..So I was driven to tell a manager last week that his home page currently has 800 lines of code, 160 transparent spacers, 21 nested tables, over 36,000 characters and a page size of 65K. (Total copy on the page was less than 1500 characters!)

65K isn.t too awful, but a CSS redesign brought it down to under 12K and it looks almost identical in modern browsers.

Jeff Hartman

Wishlist [en]

Unobtrusive DHTML [en]

Having just tested it five minutes ago, let me tell you that unobtrusive DHTML is to web pages what Plug-and-Play is to hardware.

Web design : la vie, c'est le changement [en]

Si vous souffrez de réticences à  abandonner les bonnes vieilles méthodes qui ont fait leurs preuves depuis 1995 (comprenez, par exemple, l’utilisation de tableaux pour la mise en page), lisez (et relisez) l’histoire de Clarence le poney. C’est une très jolie histoire, et elle explique bien dans quelle situation se trouvent bon nombre de web designers aujourd’hui.

Remettre un peu d'espace dans le web [en]

Suivez les excellentes instructions de poxx pour ajouter votre site à  GeoURL. Internet a aboli l’espace, GeoURL lui redonne une place en localisant les différents sites Web sur une carte. Ensuite, vous pouvez par exemple faire connaissance de vos voisins (tiens, salut Bertrand !)

Notons que Maporama fonctionne même si vous n’habitez pas en France ! 😉

Aleika’s Recipe for Masoor Daal [en]

Here is the delicious recipe Aleika showed me last time I was in Birmingham to visit her. It is an indian lentil recipe.

You’ll need:

  • masoor daal (the red lentils you find at any indian supermarket near you)
  • nigellas, also called kalonji (kind of small black onion seeds)
  • onions
  • tomato
  • butter (yum!) or oil
  • a green chili if you want
  • fresh coriander leaves

First, cook the daal. You can wash and/or soak it first if you like. Basically, you cook it like rice: about a cup of daal, roughly twice that amount of water, stick in a saucepan and boil until it turns pasty (take care, it foams a lot if you didn’t wash it really well). Let’s say it takes 20 minutes or so.

Chop the onions very finely while the daal is cooking (“more onions than you would think expect”, says Aleika) — I put a couple of onions in for a teacup of daal.

When the daal is nearly done (or plain done), heat the butter or oil, drop in a teaspoon of kalonji (or half, depending on your taste — they aren’t strong) and the green chili (or not). Add the onions and fry them gently until they melt. Then add the tomato and make it melt too.

Once the tomato and onion look as pasty as the daal (well, nearly!), simply dump the daal on top of them. Re-heat if necessary, stir well, add chopped coriander leaves (or not, but it’s nicer with them), and it’s ready!

Daal is usually eaten with rice. Pour the daal on top of the rice and mix, or eat separately if you prefer.

Bon appétit!

Achetez Femina ! [en]

N’oubliez pas d’acheter Femina ce dimanche. Vous y trouverez normalement un article sur les TMS pour lequel j’ai été interviewée.