Universal Selectors
Recently I was reading an article from Chris Coyier: Things It Might Be Fun/Useful to Try the Universal (*) Selector On talking about the use of the universal CSS selector (*) to accomplish many things. The examples go from modifying the box-model, apply CSS transitions to apply relative positioning.
Personally, I found this article dangerous, first, because the hard use of the Universal Selector, has it’s repercussions in the browser, not in the “performance” but at the end in the CSS pre-processing, aka rendering. You can read more information about this in Google’s article Optimize browser rendering.
Live Augmented Reality for National Geographic Channel
Is It Old?
Before you make a complete fool of yourself when you send a link to your friends, enter it here to make sure it’s fresh enough.
Emailology - The Science of Looking Good in the Inbox
A list of universally supported HTML and CSS in the most popular email clients.
money.js / fx()
A javascript currency conversion library.
The King of Legoland - Capturing toys from the 80s.
30 Ways to kill a cowboy
Real Motion Gaming Technology
Own A Colour And Help Save A Child's Life
“Did you know… Your average computer, smartphone and tablet can display 16.7 million colours?
That’s a lot of colours! So we want to name each and every one of these colours for at least £1 to raise money for the children’s charity UNICEF.”
AlphaDog Proto. Very impressive robot
(by BostonDynamics)
