Posts Tagged ‘mysql’

Ready Cab

Monday, August 10th, 2009
Ready Cab screen shot

Ready Cab screen shot

Several months ago, we completed a new site for one of the most trusted names in Louisville transportation – Ready Cab. Their new site has a CMS system so they can keep the site up to date, has a Flight Checker so you can see if flights are on time, and you can even place a cab reservation on their site.

Check out their site at readycab.com

MCTA Tennis site

Monday, June 22nd, 2009
MCTA Tennis.org

Screen Shot of MCTA Tennis.org

The Montgomery Country Tennis Association was recently looking to refresh their web presence, and was referred to us from our pals over at Bluegrass.net. Not only were they looking for a redesign for their normal pages (maintained via a CMS built specifically for them by Bluegrass.net), they were looking for a partner interested in revamping their site’s architecture. (more…)

Joomla/IE problems

Wednesday, June 3rd, 2009

It seems that Internet Explorer has some problems when it comes to cut-and-pasting form code. One of our clients, which has a Joomla-based site, has found some errors that may cause them to switch over to Firefox.

The client is using Paypal to take payments and registrations for monthly events. They have an “events” module installed on their site that uses the Paypal buttons, as well as normal content pages. They’ve found that after repeated tests on different computers, they can’t seem to get the Paypal buttons to work. After asking us to put the buttons in the pages/events for them several months running, we finally tracked down the problem.

The problem stems from a combination of Joomla trying to clean up code and IE (version 7 and below) refusing to show FORM data inside an input box – thereby corrupting the Paypal button(s). For our clients that are using Joomla (or pretty much any CMS – though IE+Wordpress doesn’t seem to have this problem), we suggest utilizing Firefox, Safari, or even Opera, as all should have no problems if you are trying to put paypal buttons into individual CMS articles.

The client has updated to Internet Explorer 8 (available for free download), which we are suggesting to all clients. However, be aware that the rendering engine will likely make many sites look “funky” and possibily broken. This is due to Microsoft not fully embracing the W3C’s web standards and developers having to code IE-specific code for years. Unfortunately, the new version still doesn’t come up to par on the standards, but there is now the additional problem of a lot of that previous IE-only code not working well in IE8. Thankfully, you can browse pages in “Compatibility View” which should take care of your viewing experience while  you browse the web in a much safer, partially more usable fashion.