This weekend one of my good friends passed away. His name was Julio Gonzalez, and he was on of the greatest people I've encountered in my life. At the age of 24 and with a birthday right around the corner, Julio had his life unexpectedly taken away from him...and us.
February 2008
Goodbye my friend - RIP Julio Gonzalez
Well, it looks like we have our top three candidates for the next president of the United States. For the Republicans we have John McCain and for the Democrats we have Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama. In my opinion all three candidates are not bad choices, but after digging around and reading up on each candidate I definitely have to say Barack Obama is my choice to run this country.
While most people are perfectly fine just seeing the date of an item, it's also nice to be able to show your visitors the age of this item as well. By 'age', I mean how long ago an item was published, or modified, or added, etc. The below function will help you easily display the item's age. All you have to do it pass it the item's date.
Creating an auto-save feature for the TinyMCE editor was a lot easier than I thought it would be. This can be due to the ease of working with TinyMCE or the ease of working with jQuery (my javascript library of choice), or both. Here I'm going to explain how to create an auto-save and recovery feature with a MySQL database. Let's begin!
Well, I just spent the past 15 hours redesigning my site. Or I could say, I just spent my entire Saturday working non-stop to get this new design out. This design is really just a clean up or final version of the previous design. Except, instead of just finishing my previous design, I went ahead and created this one from scratch.
About a year ago I introduced you to the back-end/administration panel for WebNV (check it out here). And about six months after that I did the same thing, though this time showing you updates and whatnot (check it out here). So here I am, six months later, showing you guys the latest version of my administration panel. Introducing NiBuM.
Throughout the past several years, since WebNV and its cms have been in development, I've gone through numerous WYSIWYG editors to help with content creation. While a lot of them were nice, I always seemed to be annoyed by some feature, or lack of feature, or bug that seemed to plauge virtually every editor. But with TinyMCE, I finally found a perfect editor.

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Feb 25, 2008
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