Posted by Nate Baldwin on October 26th, 2007
I recently started using Google’s AdSense on MindPalette.com (hey, I’ve got to pay for development time somehow). One of the features I thought was worth mentioning is the integrated search option. Sure, you have to put up with the rather large ads block at the top of the search results page, but it’s fairly easy to integrate the search form and results page into your web site’s template.
Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in Nate's Blog | No Comments »
Posted by Nate Baldwin on October 26th, 2007
As posted on this site’s “Form Processing” page, the NateMail and ProcessForm projects had been put on hold due to a lack of development time and resources. Well, I’m not content to leave things that way… I hope to get back into development within the next couple weeks.
Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in Nate's Blog | 9 Comments »
Posted by Nate Baldwin on October 26th, 2007
So… I’ve been trying out Panic’s 1.0 release of Coda (a nice new web development environment). So far, I’d have to say I’m pretty impressed, especially for a 1.0 version. I don’t see it completely replacing applications like Dreamweaver for me, but I find myself using it more and more, particularly for making quick edits or improvements to sites I only work on sporadically.
Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in Nate's Blog, Reviews | No Comments »
Posted by Nate Baldwin on September 25th, 2007
Since I’ve been fairly involved in the GoLive community for the last few years, I’ve been asked more than a few times what I thought about the new GoLive 9, and how it compares to Dreamweaver CS3.
In the past, I’d always been a fan of GoLive - even preferring it to Dreamweaver for most projects. I like the site management features, the design view and tools, and the source code editing environment, among other things. There’s long been the stigma attached to GoLive that it was primarily a tool for designers, not coders. As a designer + coder hybrid, I’ll claim it’s only partially true because GoLive’s layout and design tools are easier for many designers, not because it was an inferior product for coding and development. Until version 9, at least.
Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in Nate's Blog, Reviews | 4 Comments »