Red X and alt tag visible over your PNG transparency fix images in IE6?

Red X and alt tag over PNG in IE6 with IE PNG Fix

Red X and alt tag over PNG in IE6 with IE PNG Fix

Today, I put a PNG transparency hack into use. For those of you with social lives, this is one of several PNG transparency fixes out there that blesses Internet Explorer 6 (and even IE5.5) with support for PNG32 images. Basically, utilizing one of these hacks will allow your older browser to show multiple levels of transparency instead of the more widely supported yes or no transparency. Newer versions of IE (IE7+) support PNG32 natively.

The method of the day was IE PNG Fix 1.0 from TwinHelix. It was extremely easy to implement, and only requires adding a line to your CSS. The ZIP package contains an HTML file that explains installation and use.

There’s one caveat I’d like to point out. No matter how tempting it is because it reminds you of the old single pixel spacer days, don’t delete the blank.gif image that is part of the installation. It’s there for a reason. Deleting or having blank.gif in the wrong folder will cause IE6′s red X and alt tag to display over what is otherwise the desired behavior. You’ll notice that that hack works, but without that GIF, your page gets red X measels.

See also PNG32 hacks and IE6. Is it worth it?

Turn web pages into stand-alone apps with Fluid

There are a few web pages that I always have open. Google Reader, Vitalist, and Workamajig (yikes). Sites like Mint and, (shameless plug) Twuffer are even beginning to make the tabs-never-to-be-closed list.

Fluid is written by ex-Apple Dashboard developer Todd Ditchendorf. It allows you to create Site Specific Browsers, or SSBs. Thanks to Fluid, “you can create SSBs to run each of your favorite WebApps as a separate Cocoa desktop application.” It’s Mac OSX Leopard only, so all you Tiger cats need to upgrade.

My immediate goal was to make an SSB of Google Reader. I think of Google Reader as a separate RSS aggregator app anyhow, so why not make it totally separate from the browser? I downloaded Fluid from the site, unpacked it, and moved it to my Apps folder.

Create a Fluid SSB

Create a Fluid SSB

When you launch Fluid, it asks you for the URL of the site to app-ize (appify?), what you want to call the app, where to put it, and even what you want to use for the app’s icon. If you leave the default on that last option, your app switcher will use a giant, blurry version of the favicon gleaned from the web.

Google Reader SSB. (yes, thats 1000+ unread)

Google Reader SSB. (yes, thats 1000+ unread)

The magic happens, and the next thing you’ll see is your new web app all neatly bundled in it’s own page, complete with it’s own taskbar. To really burn up time that might otherwise be productive, think about your web apps having their own taskbar and what that allows you to do. Super nerds will love the Convert to MenuExtra SSB option so you can drop the app down from next to your clock, then fold it up again. Google Calendar perhaps?

That’s right Gmail fans, you can now participate with your Apple Mail and Outlook cohorts in email client groan fests. And all you protective tweeters out there who like your Twitter in a comfy, toasted, no-butter browser style aesthetic, Fluid was made for you. I’m off to make a stand-alone Twuffer app.

Must read: ‘Click’, by Bill Tancer

Click, by Bill Tancer

Click, by Bill Tancer

If you haven’t come across this book by Bill Tancer, force yourself to. As heard on NPR’s ‘Talk of the Nation’, ABCNews’ Sci-Tech Blog, as well as a columnist for Time Magazine, Tancer’s book is a data-driven glimpse of the hive mind of online searchers and trends.

I enjoyed the sociological data romp that was Freakonomics, and Click is the companion guide for the web-curious. As the GM of Global Research for Hitwise, Tancer unravels billions of data points to mine insight from what we’re all doing online. From understanding which day is the busiest for porn, to his ability to predict the winner of popular reality shows, it’s almost too much to absorb in a single read, so have your dog-earing finger at the ready.

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