Aaron

the beauty of CGIDEV2 is, that it is as capable to run a HTML5 based UI as
a WEB 1.0 UI ;-)

Niels

Nice demo






On Thu, Oct 14, 2010 at 5:54 PM, Nathan Andelin <nandelin@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

From: Aaron Bartell
Wow, that is a really sharp looking app Niels!

This is a case where you need Safari to see the transitional effects
between
panels.

-Nathan




Must have had a
creative developer help with that, or do you have those talents also
:-)

Where does the server side stuff come into play, or isn't it
implemented yet? I was looking for it but didn't see it. I am also
liking how these latest js frameworks are allowing and focusing on
configuring "screens" and all we need to do is show/hide them and
occupy them with information. Soooo much easier than the traditional
CGIDEV2 I grew up on - at least in my opinion.

Exciting times!
Aaron Bartell
http://mowyourlawn.com
http://mowyourlawn.com/blog/



On Thu, Oct 14, 2010 at 8:41 AM, Niels Liisberg <liisberg@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
Hi Aaron;

You know HTML5 is just like sex in high school: every body talks about
it, but
only a few do something about it :)

However, we are working on a presentation app for a medical company. We
are
using the iPad for the presentation and IceBreak for server stuff.

jqTouch is very transparent. You can use it with out really seeing it in
you
html code. So you get cool animation features simply by using the class
tag in
HTML like:

<a class="swap" href="#home"

style="position:absolute;left:970px;top:497px;height:150px;width:50px;"></a>

If you click this anchor the webkit animation "swap" will kick in - it
looks so
cool. No need for "flash" or any plugins.

But the primary reason I think JQT is cool - is the way you can have many
"screens" or screen components in the same html simply by a "div" tag. You
just
mark your main page with class="current" - other "div"s will be hidden. It
is
just like a good old display file :)

<div id="home" class="current">

The following code contains a small menu with four options. Each option
has one
ore more "sub" panels - and that is all whats required. Not much "J" to
see, but
it really works.

You need a webkit based browser before you can use it. iPad or just plain
safari will do the trick

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