Planet Argon Podcast, Episode 2: The Letter Scotch
66 comments Latest by supra shoes Thu, 02 Sep 2010 05:18:34 GMT
Earlier this week our new podcast was approved and is now available in the Apple iTunes Store. We’re also soliciting topic ideas for future episodes on brainstormr.
We posted Episode 2, The Letter Scotch, yesterday for your enjoyment. In this episode, we covered a handful of web browser tools that we use (and detest) to debug HTML, CSS, and JavaScript. This included Web Inspector, Firebug, DebugBar, and a handful of other tools. We all have slightly different preferences, depending on the tasks that we’re working on and the team had an open dialogue about the pros/cons of each of these tools.
You can learn more about and listen to our podcast at http://planetargon.com/podcast.
Thanks in advance for listening!
Favicons for 37signals apps
73 comments Latest by aaaaasssss Thu, 02 Sep 2010 03:43:53 GMT
If you’re using Highrise or Basecamp and miss not having favicons load in your browser, you can install either of the following greasemonkey scripts that I created.
These will just add a little html to the page to load some favicons that I created from their logos. Will look like this:
Hopefully 37signals will add favicons themselves in the future, but in the meantime. Here you go!
BetterFavicon for Google
22 comments Latest by Gucci women's Sun, 29 Aug 2010 10:28:45 GMT
Not loving Google’s new favicon too much?
Check out my quick and dirty hack… BetterFavicon for Firefox. (greasemonkey required)
Install it here: http://userscripts.org/scripts/show/40367
Enjoy!
Ubiquity meets RubyURL
73 comments Latest by loanssite@mayhemnewmedia.co.uk Wed, 01 Sep 2010 11:35:45 GMT
Alex Malinovich decided to take some time this afternoon to write a Ubiquity command for RubyURL using the new RubyURL API. You can take a look at Alex’s Ubiquity code for RubyURL. He’s taking advantage of the JSON support that I added to RubyURL this weekend and JQuery. Be sure to read Alex’s blog post, which includes a screencast! =)
Also! We added this to RubyURL so that if you have Ubiquity installed, you’ll be presented with the following the next time you visit: http://rubyurl.com.









