Welcome to my corner of the web!
My name is Mihai and all I do is web development,
be it server-side (PHP, mySQL and others) or client-side. I am
mainly interested of Web standards and related technologies. I have
good experience with Flash as well, but I no longer like it much.
I have contributed to various web standards-related mailing lists,
with reviews and comments to web specifications like HTML5.
Additionally, I also worked on several projects of my own.
I am an Opera browser user, but
I work on the Firefox browser
for Mozilla. I also like Webkit and
KHTML. I am an Ubuntu Linux user - no dual-boot.
11 November 2008, 03:59
I constantly mention my work with WYSIWYG editors and the fact
I have my own CMS,
in talks with other people. So, today I am publishing information
about both projects:
-
Agnezar is the content
management system I am working on.
-
Awebitor is the HTML
editor I have.
I also updated other pages to link properly to both projects.
Any comments on my projects are welcome.
Published in:
agnezar,
awebitor,
cms,
html,
projects,
wysiwyg.
6 November 2008, 12:39
Today I finally managed to upload and release my latest project:
PaintWeb. Marius helped me with designing the GUI and with other suggestions.
PaintWeb is a
client-side Web application which allows users to draw online. It
makes use of some newer Web technologies, mainly
the HTML 5 Canvas 2D
context API. Currently,
it's in its infancy, but with lots of work planned ahead.
The major decision for me was to release this project as
open-source, under GPL v3. The project is
now hosted on the Google Code
servers.
Please contribute with feedback, bug reports and even code -
volunteers are welcome!
Lots of bugs in the Web application are already known, nonetheless
that shouldn't stop you from reporting them.
The Web application works in the latest versions of Opera, Firefox, Safari and Konqueror. Obviously, it also works with
any Gecko and WebKit based Web browsers.
Nightly builds of Firefox 3.1 and SVN trunk builds of WebKit have the best support for this Web
application.
I'd like to mention that the greatest surprise to me was that the
new Konqueror 4 has its own Canvas implemention. They've done a
really great job!
I am looking forward to publish more information about the project
and to continue work on it.
Update 3 days later: Back in september we
presented PaintWeb at a local university-organised seminar. Today
we have updated the presentation and we translated it to English as
well. Go ahead and download the English or Romanian
presentation.
Published in:
canvas,
gpl,
html5,
open-source,
paintweb,
projects,
talks.
7 May 2007, 13:25
I did publish my latest PHP script: the ReTidy page cleaner. The script
allows you to clean HTML documents exported from word processing
applications. For more details look at the ReTidy project page.
Published in:
html,
open-source,
projects,
retidy,
scripts.
15 April 2006, 06:19
Hello!
Even if I am not a ((very) big) fan of the whole widgets idea, I
saw the usefulness in using them for various quick info. Such as
weather and news aggregation.
There are too many per-site widgets, and weather widgets.
The new Widgets
competition organized by Opera motivated me to make this widget
:) - who wouldn't want that PC? Therefore, I present you the
Raggregator version 1. :D
Features:
- support for RSS 2.0 and Atom 1 feeds.
- I don't currently have support for all the 9
incompatible RSS versions.
- unlimited number of feeds.
- minimize any feed you want.
- few settings can be changed in the widget (if you edit
js/settings.js): number of maximum entries per feed, entry summary
length, default feeds, and scroll speed.
- easy internationalization. *All* strings are in js/messages.js.
Any new translations will be gladly posted. I won't currently add
the Romanian translation, I want to first finish the second version
of the widget.
I have many new features planned for the second version:
- better support for more feed versions and formats (maybe not
only RSS/Atom).
- the ability to show detailed information for each entry and
each feed (beyond the "what's new at a glance"). Something like a
... full-featured feed aggregator: satisfying all my news feed
aggregation needs.
- the "minimal mode" which will act like a news ticker (scrolling
the title of the feed entries).
- per-feed settings: auto-update interval, number of entries to
show, hide visited entries, hide in news ticker.
- maybe grouped entries, acting similar to Planet Planet. This would allow
the user to make a single group in which they can add as many feeds
as they want. All the feed entries would then be sorted by date,
showing *all* of them as one. This is something I'd prefer in many
cases.
- maybe title editing for each group, for each feed, so you can
change the title provided by the author of the feed.
- some display settings, like show dates on/off, show summaries,
colours, themes, font size, etc.
- the ability to reorder the feeds (move up/down).
- and more...
Based on the above ideas I want to have some really important
structure changes. I want the widget to be *the* aggregator. :)
After finishing the second widget version ... I might make a
site-version, not just a widget (something like the JavaScript
RSS/Atom parser by TarquinWJ). I won't keep it
Opera-only, *but* I won't do *any* compatibility-related changes.
I'll just stick to the web standards (if Firefox doesn't support
them, sorry). Internet Explorer is, without doubt, out of the
discussion.
Have fun using the current version. I hope I'll have time to make
the second version - the above ain't guaranteed. :P
Download the file: raggregator.zip.
I have submitted the widget to the competition today, in the very
last minutes. Yes, I've been very busy: I worked on this widget
only in the last couple of days.
The experience of making the widget was really interesting. Too bad
there's no support for alert, confirm and prompt within widgets. I
also found a bug: crash when using mouse gestures (in the latest
weekly build). The bug seems to affect any widget and any page. One
another, more serious, annoyance is in widgets you can't use the
title attribute for any element to show a nice tooltip. Do we have
to write our own tooltip scripts for anything simple?
Good luck to all participants in the competition.
P.S. All coding is done only by me. All design is done only by my
twin brother.
Update (2006/05/03): To err is human. I was
claiming this widget has support for Atom 2 feeds. There's no Atom
2. There's only Atom
1. Sorry guys. I don't know how I made this mistake, because I
always knew there's only Atom 1.
I found out about this mistake only now because M. David Peterson from atom-syntax mailing
list published a
message asking Opera staff to fix the description of my
widget.
I have contacted Gautam Chandna (from My
Opera staff) and he has fixed the description (the widget file is
OK, no need for updating).
For those wondering if I won the competition: no, I
didn't.
Published in:
opera,
projects,
widgets.
29 October 2005, 06:19
Hello!
Today I've finished my first UserJS for Opera 8+.
I named it ROBO Sticky
(no good inspiration for a better name). To download, install and
learn more about it, visit its "official" page.
The script is based on "Sticky-notes"
by Antonio Orlando. I simply didn't like his source code. :) It
adds a lot of "noise" in the DOM and I don't wonder why some people
already reported
it breaks Gmail.
My UserJS is almost an entire rewrite only for Opera, but it can be
made to work on Firefox. Along the way I've made a lot of
improvements, too many to list (bug fixes and nice behavior
improvements).
Published in:
opera,
projects,
userjs.