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Blue Griffon 1.5.2Blue Griffon - 17.09MB (Open Source) |
BlueGriffon is a new WYSIWYG content editor for the World Wide Web. Powered by Gecko, the rendering engine of Firefox, it's a modern and robust solution to edit Web pages in conformance to the latest Web Standards.
BlueGriffon is an intuitive application that provides Web authors (beginners or more advanced) with a simple User Interface allowing to create attractive Web sites without requiring extensive technical knowledge about Web Standards. Because Gecko lives inside BlueGriffon, the document you edit will look exactly the same in Firefox. Advanced users can always use the Source View to hard-code their page.
Features:
- WYSIWYG web editor
- Based on Gecko, the rendering engine of Firefox
- Create and edit all HTML 4, XHTML 1 and HTML 5 (both HTML and XML serializations) documents
- Nice, simple and intuitive User Interface
- Directly embed HTML 5 audio or video elements
- Extract a frame from your video file with a single click to use it as the poster in the Web page
- Full support for the HTML 5 forms with dialogs for all the elements currently defined by the HTML 5 specification
- Insert all HTML 5 elements, including the new semantic elements like header, footer, aside, section, etc.
- Easily resizing of tables using the vertical and horizontal rulers in the window
- Own CSS parser
- Automatic output of alternative CSS properties or values for other browser domains
- CSS Style Properties panel
- CSS 3 Properties such as 2D Transforms, 3D Transforms, Transitions, Shadows, Linear and Radial Gradients, Repeating Gradients, Border Images, Columns, Flex Box Model, and more are supported
- CSS 3 Media Queries to apply stylesheets not only on a per-medium basis (styles for screen, mobile, print, ...) but also depending on the features of the rendering device
- SVG Edit included
- WebFonts
- Add-ons
- Available in many languages
PL


VirtualBox 4.2.12.84980
VMware Server 2.0.2
Sandboxie 3.76
MySQL 5.6.12
TortoiseSVN 1.7.13

![Scientists are getting very close to creating an actual invisibility cloak, as separate research teams over the past week have revealed significant advancements in the area. From an invisibility cloak scaled up to be able to hide a person to a quantum invisibility cloak that can hide objects in time, there is no better moment for fans of H.G. Wells and the Harry Potter franchise than this one. The invisibility cloak that uses time was designed by Purdue University scientists. Unlike the spatial cloak we all saw in Harry Potter, this device uses time cloaking, a relatively new concept based on the idea that in some places in time, the things that happen are not picked up. Since nobody can tell that these things occurred, it’s like they never happened. The concept still has a long way to go before it turns into reality, although scientists have been able to cloak small electrical signals so far. The technology may be difficult to grasp, yet researchers think that if successful , it will be a major breakthrough in making quantum information computing and storage very successful. Another research team, meanwhile, detailed how to make an invisibility cloak to hide large objects, including a person. The New York University of Rochester scientists used a conventional arrangement of lenses and mirrors to drive the light around the area they want to hide from view. The human-scale cloak also manages the impressive feat of hiding items across the entire optical range. But it still faces one major problem: that is only works in one direction, which means the hidden object becomes visible if the viewpoint changes. Nonetheless, this large-scale cloak could be successfully used to hide satellites in orbit and other huge objects. And a Shanghai-based team of researchers unveiled another invisibility cloak which they claim can be adjusted to make items invisible from any line of sight. The scientists demonstrated the cloak by making a pet goldfish and a cat disappear. According to the Chinese team, the device may have important applications in security, surveillance and entertainment. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YNO9-DYCi2U With all the new ideas and research, it seems we will see an actual invisibility cloak in use very soon. What do you think of this technology? What would you do if you had your very own invisibility cloak? [Image via Mental floss]](http://cdn.techbeat.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/invisibility-harry-120x80.jpg)