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POSH Language
Here is a selection of notable links from the design and web development front. For those working with type on the web, I highly recommend the following 24 Ways article written by Richard Rutter: “Compose to a Vertical Rhythm.” I also recommend Meagan Fisher’s 24 Ways article“Make Your Mockup in Markup.” Are you exploring progressive enhancement in your designs via CSS3? Then CSS3 Please! The Cross – Browser CSS3 Rule Generator is just your ticket. For some POSH (Plain Old Semantic HyperText) design, I think the following articles on markup and semantic class names are quite useful:
Of course, I would be remiss if I did not provide a few notable links from the digital history front. To that end, I suggest George Lakoff’s articles on “Gulf War Metaphor, Part I” and “Part II” as well as Cameron Chapman’s “Applying ‘A Pattern Language’ To Online Community Design” as worthy reading. Both Lakoff’s and Chapman’s articles made me wonder about the of role language — both used and constructed — in digital history? I think this is a particularly intriguing question when one considers how digital historians use one language—e. g. POSH — to construct digital history tools and another language — e. g. English — to develop and promulgate (the language of?) community and collaboration via digital history tools. Finally, on a “non” digital history front but engaging nonetheless is Paddy Donnelly’s “Learn To Fucking Spell.” His post is engaging not only for its subject matter but also how that subject matter is effectively communicated through the lush illustrations — another language in its own right — that heavily inform the post.