<Content
Heading="
Articles about programming"
ID="
software"
CreatedTmSt="
19-Sep-2001 23:35:14"
><P>
This page contains links to several articles which I found interesting at the time. Will you find them interesting?
Neveer know unless you read them.</P>
<P>
PS: Most of the articles are about XML or programming stuff.
</P>
</Content>
<SiteList
title="
Articles about XML and/or XSL"
><SITE href="http://pltplp.net/2000/10/xmlsite.html" title="Using XML in web site design">Preserving a consistent look and feel across an entire web site is not so hard to achieve. But how do you handle easily a complete web site redesign without modifying every page? Let's have a look at the solution that is used for the web site you are looking at right now...</SITE>
<SITE href="http://theregister.co.uk/content/4/23919.html" title="Gnome to move to .NET">Gnome leader Miguel de Icaza, calls .NET the "natural upgrade" for the Gnome platform, and enthused about the technology in an interview with <a href="http://theregister.co.uk" target="_blank"/>The Register/</a> at LinuxWorld.</SITE>
<SITE href="http://www.swynk.com/friends/jones/articles/xml_101.asp" title="XML 101 at Swynk">Good introduction to XML. (Swynk has lots of good stuff</SITE>
<SITE href="http://www.sun.com/software/xml/developers/palm/#d41e948" title="XML from you Palm">Great links from Sun about getting XML from your palm pilot. (Check the HTML calendar one in particular.)</SITE>
</SiteList>
<SiteList
title="
Unicode articles I found when trying to solve some XSLT problems"
><SITE href="http://www.unicode.org/" title="Unicode Home Page">The official unicode home page and a perfect place for finding anything and everything about Unicode.</SITE>
<SITE href="http://www.macchiato.com/unicode/charts.html" title="Javscript Unicode chart">Fantastic DHTML page that displays the unicode characters mathcing the requested character number.</SITE>
</SiteList>