Dynamic and multi-modal web-based vocabulary learning tool for Biblical Hebrew. Built using XML, Python, CSS, Javascript, and HTML. From "Using the Vocabularies" ...can be sorted according to Hebrew, English gloss, root, semantic and frequency. Double clicking... displays... the Hebrew word (with animation from right to left), its gloss (approximate English rendering), root, grammatical information, and a relevant Hebrew phrase presenting the word in context. From "About the Project" ...developed at The University of Auckland in a project team consisting of staff from its School of Theology and the Centre for Flexible and Distance Learning. It utilises the web to provide the framework for a multimedia vocabulary which can be customised by teachers and augmented by selected scholars...
A free (libre), open-source (GNU GPL) content management framework written in PHP with support for a number of operating-systems, web-servers and databases.
Drupal made international news following the U.S. White House's October 2009 web redesign. The variety of Drupal-powered websites demonstrates the platform's flexibility. Notable examples include British Medical Journal (BMJ); Stanford Law School, and Turner Broadcasting.
Open-source (font OFL, code MIT, docs CC BY) icon font and CSS toolkit. No JavaScript required. Documentation includes accessibility instructions/recommendations.
This project provides 'executables' that enable you to make your own soft-toy Linux® penguin. To put it straight: You can find sewing patterns and a community to sew your own soft toy or stuffed Linux® Tux penguin here.
The Functional Accessibilit Evaluator analyzes web resources for markup that is consistent with the use of DRES/CITES HTML best practices for development of functionally accessible web resources and resources that support interoperability. The HTML best practices are not a new standard, but rather a statement of techniques for implementation of the W3C Web Content Accessibility Guidelines and United States Federal Government Section 508 standards that not only improve accessibility for people with disabilities, but also the interoperability of web resources for everyone so all people benefit by having more options to access and use web resources.