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Showing posts with label Vintage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vintage. Show all posts

August 3, 2011

1970s 'Boogie Nights' Inspiration...and world's greatest clip!

1970s 'Boogie Nights'  

 [[posterous-content:pid___2]][[posterous-content:pid___1]][[posterous-content:pid___3]][[posterous-content:pid___4]][[posterous-content:pid___5]][[posterous-content:pid___6]][[posterous-content:pid___7]][[posterous-content:pid___8]][[posterous-content:pid___9]][[posterous-content:pid___10]][[posterous-content:pid___11]][[posterous-content:pid___12]][[posterous-content:pid___13]][[posterous-content:pid___14]]Inspiration

had PTA

(Paul Thomas Anderson)

screened it!

[[posterous-content:pid___0]]


Paul Thomas Anderson

Paul Thomas Anderson is one of today’s most acclaimed and essential young filmmakers. He has swept the motion picture industry with a powerhouse trio of films that have breathed life and exuberance into an industry that is all too often ladened with films exhibiting massive deficiencies of originality and thought. PTA’s genuine love of filmmaking sets him apart from so many others.

PTA tends to keep himself out of the spotlight. Rarely will he pose for magazine covers or photo shoots. Details involving future projects and his personal life are often kept shrouded in secrecy. Informational pieces regarding his personal life and family history are few and far between. I’ve researched his background and unearthed a few brief factoids that are consistent amongst many sources. Included is information obtained from Cigarettes and Coffee, PTA’s unofficial website, which he often praises and contributes to.

Paul Thomas Anderson was born in Studio City, CA on January 1, 1970 to Bonnie and Ernie Anderson.

His father was a well-known voice actor who can be recognized for his work on America’s Funniest Home Videos and The Love Boat. He also created a character, Ghoulardi, who was a popular B Movie/ horror film host in the sixties. Unfortunately, Paul suffered a devastating blow when his father passed away in 1997 at the age of 73. Incidentally, he has since named his production company after his late father’s famous character Ghoulardi. PTA also has two brothers and four sisters. He is reputed to be estranged from his mother.

Academics never appealed to Paul. Being expelled from his elementary school for fighting and bad grades and his quick departure from Emerson College after two semesters demonstrated this. He also attended New York University Film School for two days before dropping out.

PTA moved on to begin his career by working as a production assistant on various television movies and game shows. After performing similar work for numerous low budget and independent films, PTA went on to write and shoot a short film titled, Cigarettes and Coffee. This 24-minute excursion into the world of film shorts made it’s premier at the 1993 Sundance Film Festival.

As a result of the buzz that Cigarettes and Coffee generated, he was afforded the opportunity to develop his first full-length motion picture, Hard Eight. It was screened at the 1996 Sundance Film Festival and the 1996 Cannes Film Festival. The picture received rave reviews for critics and audiences alike and Anderson was dubbed one of the most promising directors of 1997.

PTA lived up to the praise with his second feature, Boogie Nights. The critically acclaimed porn film-making milieu pulled in three Academy Award nominations, received the Boston Society of Film Critics Award for Best New Filmmaker and the PEN Center USA West Literary Award for Best Screenplay.

Anderson returned in late 1999 with his beautifully crafted mosaic of American life, Magnolia. It appeared on more than 80 critics’ top ten lists and pulled in over a dozen awards from all over the world, including a Golden Globe Award. It also received three Academy Award nominations.

What follows is an individual breakdown and commentary on each of PTA’s first three features.

“You know the first thing they should’ve taught you at hooker school? You get the money up front.”
-Sydney to Clementine.

Hard Eight was the feature film debut of Paul Thomas Anderson. Directed in a gritty film-noir style, it is the story of a professional gambler, his young protégé, and a slow cocktail waitress who are fighting to push back the demons of their past. It is set against the casino scene of Reno, Nevada (PTA has always held a fascination for Reno’s casino nightlife), and showcases a wonderful ensemble cast, which includes Phillip Baker Hall, John C. Reilly, Gwyneth Paltrow, Samuel L. Jackson, and Phillip Seymour Hoffman.

Hard Eight is based upon Anderson’s previous short film, Cigarettes and Coffee, which also starred Phillip Baker Hall. The short garnered a great deal of attention, especially from the Sundance Institute, and they eventually invited PTA to develop his first feature at one of their directors’ lab later that year. That project became Hard Eight.

The leading role was written specifically for Phillip Baker Hall, who attended the month long lab with Anderson. Each director attends the lab with two actors. John C. Reilly was the second actor to accompany Paul.

The Sundance directors’ Lab afforded Anderson and his actors an opportunity to develop the acting and concrete the storytelling. The actors experimented with their characters and improvised material.

When the time came to shoot the film, Anderson called upon casting director John Lyons to help in the casting of the remaining roles. Anderson was a huge fan of Gwyneth Paltrow. Lyons approached Paltrow with the script and she immediately accepted the role of Clementine.

Academy Award-nominated Samuel L. Jackson, who at that time was riding high on the success of his previous film, Pulp Fiction, took on the role of Jimmy. Anderson chose Jackson for his ability to epitomize the “classic bad guy” image.

Production began in January of 1995 on location in Reno where Anderson had had chosen when writing the screenplay. “I like Reno…unlike Las Vegas, which is always so hot, Reno has a winter and the feeling of a real city-it’s like an Old West town. I think shooting Hard Eight in Reno enabled me to capture a state of mind that I wanted for this film,” states PTA.

With its minimalist plot and shocking bursts of violence, this unheralded film appeared to be a well-kept secret until it began popping up on the top ten lists of several critics. Along with his follow-up feature, Boogie Nights, Hard Eight marked the arrival of a talented and promising new filmmaker.

“As a kid, I became obsessed by pornos. I searched them out, obsessing over the humor and the camp—how bad the acting was, how odd it all was. By the time I was sixteen…it actually became quite sad.”
-PTA in DETAILS, September 1997

Boogie Nights is one of the key films of the nineties and arguably the most exuberant and alive American movies in years. With its amazing kaleidoscope camerawork it echoes the Robert Altman of Nashville (his signature piece) and the Martin Scorsese of Goodfellas. The script was so well crafted that it attracted actors who would not normally consider taking on such lurid material.

Although Boogie Nights is loosely based upon the real life of porn legend John Holmes, it proves to be a classic Hollywood rise-and-fall fable. The film follows the lives of an extended family of pornographers in the late 70’s and early 80’s who aspire to revolutionize the adult entertainment industry. We are taken on a magnificent journey into a misunderstood world characterized by loneliness, defeat, and the occasional bout of hope.

At the center of the film is how the diverse canvas of characters comes together to form a family. They share in each other’s successes and downfalls. PTA does not judge his characters or condemn their lifestyle. Instead he invites the viewer to form his or her own opinions. And, once again, Anderson brings to the screen an amazing ensemble cast.

Mark Wahlberg plays the main character, Eddie Adams, who adopts the porn star pseudonym Dirk Diggler. The role was originally to be played Leonardo Dicaprio but he decided to take the leading role in Titanic, which proved to be beneficial not only for Dicaprio but also for Boogie Nights. Anderson later said that Wahlberg was definitely the right choice and that everyone was satisfied with Wahlberg’s decision to take the role.

Playing the Part of Jack Horner, the “family’s” father figure and omnipotent director, is veteran actor and Hollywood legend, Burt Reynolds. The father-figure image extended beyond the role of Jack Horner to Burt himself. He often felt like the elder statesman amongst a cast of predominantly younger actors. Referring to PTA, he jokes, “I got socks older than him.”

Julianne Moore plays Amber Waves, porn starlet extraordinaire and surrogate mother to her family of “damaged goods”. Moore was immediately drawn to the project. “Amber is fairly representative of the adult film actresses in that time period,” states Moore. “She’s given up all ties to anything else; she’s completely immersed in this world.”

Playing Jack and Amber’s other misled child, Rollergirl, is Heather Graham. Anderson had originally considered Graham for the part after seeing her remarkable breakthrough performance in Doug Liman’s Swingers. “I was uncertain as to whether or not she would consider a role that involved nudity since I’d never seen her take her clothes off in a film before…but I guess that’s just a typical dumb guy attitude,” says Anderson. Graham saw past the shock value and joined the project after minimal convincing.

Boogie Nights marks John C. Reilly’s third time working with PTA. He plays Reed Rothchild, porn actor, aspiring musician, and best friend to Dirk.

Actor William H. Macy, who plays production assistant Little Bill, describes the film perfectly: “For just a nanosecond, people thought adult entertainment was going to become a legitimate art form. Boogie Nights is a microcosm of that period of that time.”

“The book says, we might be through with the past, but the past ain’t through with us.”
-Jimmy Gator

Magnolia is a gripping mosaic of American life shown through a series of intertwined vignettes. It follows twelve main characters through one random day in the San Fernando Valley.

Anderson originally intended to write something “small and intimate” that could be shot in about thirty days. But his intention fell short as the story began to blossom and the characters became more complex. “I still think Magnolia is small and intimate,” states PTA. “It just took 200 pages and 90 days to get the right amount of small and intimate.”

A movie of this stature, with its operatic take on love, family, and unhappiness, called for a cast willing to push the envelope. Anderson wrote the script specifically for an ensemble of actors he knows and trusts, with a few new additions thrown into the mix.

At the center of the Magnolia tapestry is Earl Partridge, played by Jason Robards. Partridge is a dying man who is coming to grips with the mistakes he has made in his life and what he can do during his last days to right some of those wrongs. This was Robard’s first time working with PTA and found that playing a dead man was sort of prophetic since he himself had recently recovered from a near fatal illness.

One thing that Earl wants before he passes is to make good with his estranged son, Frank T.J. Mackey, the self-proclaimed “Master of the Muffin”. He is the Tony Robbins of seduction and this is exhibited in his high priced seminars aimed at lonely men looking to gain an advantage when it comes to the ladies. Tom Cruise, who also finds himself working with Anderson for the first time on Magnolia, plays Mackey. Cruise had approached Anderson about a possible partnership after viewing Boogie Nights. The two became fast friends.

Acting a liaison between father and son is Earl’s male nurse Phil Parma, played by Phillip Seymour Hoffman. Hoffman offers a very different portrayal of a caretaker as he is very much attached to Earl. He takes pride in his work and harbors a platonic love for his patient. Hoffman’s character is the only one in the film who isn’t trying to clean up anything. He’s not fighting with his past.

Also in love with Earl is his young wife Linda, played by Julianne Moore. She originally married the man for his money but has now fallen in love with him as his life draws to a close. She’s on a quest to make her marriage sincere by renouncing Earl’s will and all that comes with it.

Earl Partridge’s influence extends beyond his family to the host of his most popular game show: Jimmy Gator, played by Phillip Baker Hall, hosts “What Do Kids Know?” Despite his wholesome reputation in the eye of the public, his life is a moral and ethical mess. “Jimmy has ridiculed people and trampled on people all of his life, but has the public persona of being a kind and amiable father figure, full of good television cheer,” states Hall. “Now that he’s facing the end of his life, he’s being asked question he can’t (bring himself to) answer. He’s got like 12 hours to make 60 years right, to try to come to terms with his regrets and find forgiveness from his daughter.”

Among the many other characters that make up the finely woven fabric of the film are Jeremy Blackman, John C. Reilly, William H. Macy, Melora Walters, and Ricky Jay. While at three hours Magnolia is definitely not suited to everyone’s taste, those who exercise a bit of patience and allow the story to unfold are in for a special treat.

1970s 'Boogie Nights'     Inspiration had PTA (Paul Thomas Anderson) screened it! Paul Thomas Anderson Paul Thomas Anderson is one of today’s most acclaimed and essential young filmmakers. He has swept the motion picture industry with a powerhouse trio of films that have breathed life and exuberance ...»See Ya

July 27, 2011

8 X 30-Second Cumedy Filth-a-thon

30-Second Cumedy Filth-a-thon

uschi digart pastries

pastries
pastries
pastries_it_slipped_in.mp4.flv Watch on Posterous


cold detachment wet pussycat

fantasy world beach

fantasy world nigel

heart and mind are one 

not tonight marianne bouquet

 

1
pastries.mp4.flv Watch on Posterous
a
Content 2
uschi_digart_pastries.mp4.flv Watch on Posterous
b
Content 3
cold_detachment_wet_pussycat.mp4.flv Watch on Posterous
c
Content 4
fantasy_world_beach.flv Watch on Posterous
d
Content 5
fantasy_world_nigel.flv Watch on Posterous
e
Content 6
heart_and_mind_are_one.mp4.flv Watch on Posterous
not_tonight_marianne_bouquet.mp4.flv Watch on Posterous
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Author text

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30-Second Cumedy Filth-a-thon uschi digart pastries Author text See the full gallery on Posterous Lorem ipsum emphasised text dolor sit amet, strong text consectetur adipisicing elit, abbreviated text sed do eiusmod tempor acronym text incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut quoted text enim ...»See Ya

July 26, 2011

Tom Byron cougar frogginged

Tom Byron

(Cougar)

vcxbeach.mp4 Watch on Posterous
Traci_lords_what_gets_me_hot
Thorn_6500
Tiny_fbarmada_dog
Tnrlcmoutlinesconnect
(Frogginged

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Tom Byron ( Cougar ) vcxbeach.mp4 Watch on Posterous ( Frogginged ). ...»See Ya

June 12, 2011

Vintage Barber Brigitte Lahaie?

June 10, 2011

sockmodels

sockmodels_2.mp4 Watch on Posterous
8_b_657630
9_b_685714
41xzjss2cql
326_1000
332_1000
340_1000
sock_models.mp4 Watch on Posterous

sockmodels_2.mp4 Watch on Posterous sock_models.mp4 Watch on Posterous ...»See Ya

May 27, 2011

#1 Stylesheet Greatest CSShits (1994) PLUS...

#1 Stylesheet Greatest CSShits (1994)

PLUS More Historic Docs Posterous CAN'T ParseW3C Workshop on Style Sheets

 

I used the first stylesheet for this post, but then gave up  WHEN I REALIZED  POSTEROUS CAN NOT EVEN PARSE THE DECLARATION OF STYLE INDEPENDENCE from 1994

Este_document_es_honorado_4

White_template_with_just_lines

Woolly_outline-l

Wolly_css_goat_crop
Extern_0000
F1116ed33a7a9686e3768b7c4d1608
The W3C CSS Validation Service

W3C CSS Validator results for TextArea (CSS level 2.1)

Congratulations! No Error Found.

This document validates as CSS level 2.1 !

Valid CSS information

div, ul, dl, dt, dd, pre, ol, li, blockquote, address {
color : black;
a, address, blockquote, body, cite, code, dd, del, dfn, div, dl, dt, em, form, h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6, iframe, img, kbd, li, object, ol, , , samp, small, span, strong, sub, sup, ul, var, applet, big, center, dir, font, hr, menu, pre, abbr, acronym, bdo, button, fieldset, ins, label {
word-spacing : normal;
letter-spacing : normal;
text-transform : none;
text-decoration : none;
border-color : black;
border-style : none;
}
body {
color : black;
background : white;
}
em {
font-style : normal;
font-weight : bold;
color : black;
background : white;
}
strong {
font-style : italic;
background : white;
font-weight : bold;
color : black;
}
em strong, strong em {
text-transform : uppercase;
font-style : normal;
font-weight : bolder;
background : white;
color : red;
}
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font-weight : bold;
}
i {
font-style : italic;
}
.warning {
text-transform : none;
font-style : normal;
font-weight : bolder;
background : white;
color : red;
}
del {
text-decoration : line-through;
background : #f66;
}
ins {
text-decoration : underline;
background : yellow;
}
var, cite, dfn, .note {
font-style : italic;
}
address {
font-style : normal;
letter-spacing : 0.1em;
}
acronym {
font-variant : small-caps;
letter-spacing : 0.1em;
}
h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6, dt, th, thead, tfoot {
color : black;
background : white;
}
hr {
color : black;
}
#colophon {
display : none;
}
col, colgroup, table, tbody, td, tr {
color : black;
text-decoration : none;
border-color : black;
border-style : none;
background : white;
}
a:link {
text-decoration : none;
font-weight : bold;
color : #c00;
background : #ffc;
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a:visited {
text-decoration : none;
font-weight : bold;
color : #999;
background : #ffc;
}
a:active {
text-decoration : none;
font-weight : bold;
color : #f00;
background : #fc0;
}
a:hover {
text-decoration : none;
color : #c00;
background : #fc0;
a.offsite {
text-decoration : none;
font-weight : normal;
color : #c00;
background : #ffc;
body {
margin-top : 1.58em;
margin-left : 4%;
margin-right : 2%;
margin-bottom : 1.58em;
padding-top : 0;
padding-left : 0;
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padding-bottom : 0;
border-top : 0;
border-left : 0;
border-bottom : 0;
border-right : 0;
width auto;

Historical Style Sheet proposals

During the history of the Web there have been a number of style sheet proposals, and this page links to most of them. The proposals are roughly in chronological order. They contain ideas that current specifications build upon, and serve as background material.

Several of the above proposals were presented at a W3C workshop on style sheets in Paris Nov 6-7 1995. The notes are available.


Bert Bos, W3C Style Sheets Activity Lead
and Håkon Wium Lie, former W3C Style Sheets Activity Lead

Copyright  ©  1997-1999 W3C (MIT, INRIA, Keio ), All Rights Reserved. W3C liability, trademark, document use and software licensing rules apply. Your interactions with this site are in accordance with our public and Member privacy statements.

QACSS

 

I heart Validator logo

------------------------------------------------------
APPENDIX II Stylesheet Layout and Parsing Considerations -- (TECHNICAL DETAIL) -------------------------------------------- An example stylesheet follows the discussion of the various styles, and details the recommended layout of a stylesheet. Each element of the stylesheet is uniquely marked and the name of each style and style attribute has been chosen to be unique to the first two letters, which makes parsing the style-sheet a simple task. Parsing Rule #1: Lines which do not have as their first non-whitespace character either an '@' which signals the beginning of a new object definition or an alphabetic [a-zA-Z], will be ignored to the end of the line. Parsing Rule #2: Next we throw out all the newlines and scan the remaining buffer. An '@' (at-sign) signals the beginning of a new HTML object definition. Parsing Rule #3: After the '@' and possible intervening whitespace, we expect the name of an HTML object (eg. TITLE, H1, B, STRONG, etc.) Parsing Rule #4: After the name, and intervening whitespace, we expect at least two characters which signal the beginning of a style. Legal values are: fo, ju, co, br, ma, ve, in, li Parsing Rule #5: After the two character style specifier, scan to the '(' (open-paren) and ignore intervening data or whitespace. ... (I think you get the idea, but I'll fill this in later if necessary) ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- The style sheet workshop was held in Paris Nov 6-7. Here are the notes.
WWWW3C

W3C Workshop on Style Sheets

November 6-7, 1995

Paris, France


Organized by the World Wide Web Consortium and INRIA.


Workshop Profile

For background information on web style sheets, see the style sheet resource page.

Style sheets have the potential of adding style to the web without sacrificing device-independence or document structure. Instead of adding visual tags to HTML, style sheets attach presentational information to the structure of SGML and HTML documents.

The goal of the workshop is to present the current status of style sheets, and to provide a forum for discussing future development and deployment of style sheets on the web. We want to bring together browser implementors, content providers and the people behind current style sheet initiatives. The outcome of the workshop will help W3C focus its effors in this area. In particular, we hope the workshop will produce a list of short term objectives to standarization, and a list of volunteers from member organizations committed to providing a specified amount of their time to help bring these things about on a given timescale.

The workshop will run over two days. On the first day, presenters will describe proposed style sheet mechanisms, demonstrate current software, and outline their views on future deployment. On the second day, smaller discussion groups will identify work, specifications and code needed for style sheet deployment on the web.

Some likely discussion topics:

  • Which content providers are significant for style sheet deployment? Home page writers, newpapers, publishing houses? Web-site designers?
  • What are the requrements for a successful style sheet mechanism on the web?
  • The scope of style sheets mechanisms: should they handle UI aspects (toolbar, menus, window size, etc.), link behaviour (single/double click, drag), forms, etc.?
  • How does the concept of style sheets fit with alternate UI metaphors, e.g. outline editors, filtering agents, and virtual realities?
  • Is multiple style sheet formats beneficial or distracting?
  • How to resolve presentation preference conflicts between authors, publishers and readers?
  • Is time on the side of style sheets? If not, how much time do we have?
  • How to classify style sheets in as Internet Media types (MIME types). Can style sheets be a case study for content negotiation?
  • In HTML, how should styles be linked and embedded? STYLE element? STYLE attributes?
  • How can non-visual media be supported through style sheets.
  • How do the formatting models of the different proposals match? Is code-sharing possible?
  • How can we improve the robustness of style sheet implementations w.r.t. environment resources? E.g., should the output device provide alternate fonts and colors? Can lessons be learned from current DTP? Can one determine when a style rule is successful?
  • What support software is determinant for the success of style sheets? HTML browsers, SGML browsers, style sheet editors, DTP conversion tools, link management tools, off-line rendering software for high-quality printing, conversion tools between various style sheet formats?
  • Software: what should W3C make available, what can others contribute?
  • What needs to be done on a short time scale and who will do it?

Preliminary Agenda

Chair/facilitator: Steven Pemberton (CWI)

Monday 6 November:

We also invite presentations from W3C member companies. Please contact Håkon Lie (howcome@w3.org) if you want to present.

  • 09:00 Opening statement: Jean-Francois Abramatic (W3C/INRIA)
  • 09:10 Introduction Steven Pemberton (CWI)
  • 09:40 David Siegel "What do Web-site Designers Really Want?"
  • 10:15 Daniel Connolly (W3C/MIT) "Style Sheets as a Tool for Information Management"
  • 10:45 Coffee break
  • 11:00 James Clark "DSSSL and DSSSL Lite on the Web"
  • 11:45 Håkon Lie (W3C/INRIA) "Cascading Style Sheets"
  • 12:15 Cecile Roisin (INRIA, OPERA) "P: a Style Sheet Language for Structured Documents"
  • 12:45 Lunch
  • 13:45 Kevin Hughes (EIT) "Why I don't use HTML extensions"
  • 14:30 Dave Raggett (W3C/MIT/HP) "Style Sheet support for tables"
  • 15:00 Break
  • 15:15 William Perry (Spry) "Implementing Style Sheets in emacs-w3"
  • 15:45 George Williams (Navisoft) "Style Sheets in the NaviPress Browser/Editor"
  • 16:15 Break
  • 16:30 Glenn Adams (Stonehand/Unicode), "Style Sheets and International Text"
  • 17:00 Bert Bos (W3C/INRIA) "CSS level 2"
  • 17:30 Louis Weitzman (MIT Media Lab), "Beyond Style: Adaptive graphic articulation within HTML"
  • 18:00 End of presentations
There will be an informal workshop dinner Monday night.

Tuesday 7 November

  • 09:00 Brainstorming session. Goal: identifying topics for working sessions. Chair: Steven Pemberton
  • 10:00 Break
  • 10:30 Working session
  • 12:00 Lunch
  • 13:00 Report from working sessions
  • 15:00 Break
  • 15:30 Call to action: commitments for follow-up activities
  • 16:30-> Optional informal gatherings

Organizational information

Workshop chair: Steven Pemberton (CWI)
Program coordinator: Håkon Lie
Administrative coordinator: Josiane Roberts (Josiane.Roberts@inria.fr)

The workshop will take place at INRIA/Rocquencourt, close to Versailles outside Paris.

Unless otherwise arranged, workshop participants must book and pay their own travel and accomodation. Lunch, coffee and an informal dinner on Monday night will be covered by W3C.

The workshop is open for W3C member representatives (one per member), and researchers in the field can participate by invitation. There is no registeration fee. To register, please contact:

Josiane Roberts email: Josiane.Roberts@inria.fr phone: +33 1 39 63 51 02 fax:   +33 1 39 54 38 50  INRIA BP 105 Domaine de Voluceau Rocquencourt 78153 LE CHESNAY CEDEX FRANCE

howcome
APPENDIX III Use of Stylistic Hints or Suggestions - Typical Scenario -- (MUY TECHNICAL!!) -------------------------------------------------------- A renderer which understands the tag would use the URL to retrieve the stylesheet, and run it through the WWW style library, (libStyle.a -- to be supplied, currently in development.) Once the stylesheet has been loaded, when an HTML element is encountered within the document, the renderer has the option of calling the style library, asking for advice on how to render the specific element. For example: (scans all styles and renderer sets attributes) ***Renderer begins to scan document*** ***Renderer recognizes *** loadStyleSheet( {URL}); ***Renderer sees a tag in the document*** current = firstStyle( styles = queryStyleSheet( TITLE)); while( current) { switch( styleName( current)) { case FONT: { while( nextAttr( current)) { switch( attr) { case FAMILY: switch( attrValue(attr)) { case TIMES: ***Renderer decides what to do here*** case HELVETICA: case SYSTEM: case TYPEWRITER: default: } case SPACING: case SIZE: case WEIGHT: case SLANT: case FOREGROUND: case BACKGROUND: case LINE: case LONGNAME: default: } } break; } case JUSTIFY: break; case COLUMNS: break; case BREAK: break; case MARK: break; case VERTICAL: break; case INDENT: break; case LINK: break; default: ***Ignore -- Illegal style*** } current = nextStyle( styles); } Another example: (renderer sets attributes only for styles needed) ***Renderer begins to scan document*** ***Renderer recognizes *** loadStyleSheet( {URL}); ***Renderer sees a tag in the document*** switch( getValue(TITLE, FONT, FAMILY)) { *** renderer decides what to do here*** case UNKNOWN: case TIMES: case HELVETICA: case SYSTEM: case TYPEWRITER: } ***Renderer sees a <H1> tag in the document*** switch( getValue( H1, BREAK, STYLE)) { case UNKNOWN: case BEFORE: case AFTER: } <p class=center>Stylesheet Language Pei Y. Wei (wei@sting.berkeley.edu) Fri, 22 Oct 93 14:03:11 -0700 Messages sorted by: [ date ][ thread ][ subject ][ author ] Next message: Pei Y. Wei: "Stylesheet Language" Previous message: Alan Emtage: "Current documents" Hi. I'm working on a stylesheet library that will hopefully be useful for all W3 browsers. A prototype is implemented in viola, but before I get too far on this-- producing a more formal RFC and stand-alone library and testing code, I'd like to get people's impression on it. Particularly, any problem with the the syntax of the style description language? Here is a sample stylesheet: (HEAD,BODY fontSize=normal BGColor=white FGColor=black (H1 fontSize=largest BGColor=red FGColor=white) (H2 fontSize=large) (P) (A FGColor=red) (CMD,KBD,SCREEN,LISTING,EXAMPLE fontFamily=fixed) (BOLD,EMPH,STRONG fontWeight=bold) (I fontSlant=italic) (ADDRESS (P fontSlant=italic)) (OL (LI numStyle=roman (LI numStyle=number (LI numStyle=alpha) ) ) ) (FOOTNOTE fontSize=small (P) ) )<br> <div class=gallery>All, Could I suggest that rather that re-invent the wheel, we consider using an SGML DTD for specifying stylesheets. Below is Pei Wei's example reimplemented using an *existing* SGML DTD that was designed as a page description language. <outspec> <docdesc> <charlist> <font size="12pt" bckcol="white" fontcol="black"> </charlist> </docdesc> <e-i-c gi="h1"><font size="24pt" bckcol="red", fontcol="white"> </e-i-c> <e-i-c gi="h2"><font size="20pt" bckcol="red", fgcol="white"> </e-i-c> <e-i-c gi="a"><font fgcol="red"> </e-i-c> <e-i-c gi="cmd kbd screen listing example"><font style="monoser" _mce_style=""> </e-i-c> <e-i-c gi="bold emph strong"><font weight="bold"> </e-i-c> <e-i-c gi="i"><font posture="italic"> </e-i-c> <e-i-c gi="p" context="address"><font posture="italic"> </e-i-c> <e-i-c gi="li" context="ol"><counter style="romanlc" _mce_style=""> </e-i-c> <e-i-c gi="li" context="ol li ol"><counter style="alphalc" _mce_style=""> </e-i-c> <e-i-c gi="footnote"><font size="10pt"> </e-i-c> </outspec> (The e-i-c tag is element in context - I hope the rest are reasonably self evident). This compares to the example below in Pei Wei's original posting. (HEAD,BODY fontSize=normal BGColor=white FGColor=black (H1 fontSize=largest BGColor=red FGColor=white) (H2 fontSize=large) (P) (A FGColor=red) (CMD,KBD,SCREEN,LISTING,EXAMPLE fontFamily=fixed) (BOLD,EMPH,STRONG fontWeight=bold) (I fontSlant=italic) (ADDRESS (P fontSlant=italic)) (OL (LI numStyle=roman (LI numStyle=number (LI numStyle=alpha) ) ) ) (FOOTNOTE fontSize=small (P) ) ) There are several advantages to this - and several disadvantages. On the plus side: 1. It is SGML and so it can be validated with the tools some of us already use. 2. Once we have a public domain SGML editor, we can use that to write our stylesheet. 3. It is a standard already. The Formatting Output Specification Instance DTD is used as the page description language as part of the US Dod CALS initiative. 4. It is supported by several commercial SGML editors. 5. Given that it is a standard, implementations of tools supporting it may/will appear in the public domain. 6. As the requirements made of stylesheets expand (as they undoubtedly will) there is the framework already there to guide development. (The FOSI DTD has many features not demonstrated in the example above). 7. Why reinvent the wheel? On the minus side: 1. it is probably less easy to read. 2. it is therefore less easy to write without assistance. How about it? As something to mull over - *not* as a request to add these to the specification for style sheet as currently conceived, here are some of the other formatting attributes that the FOSI DTD includes: <presp> amount of space to render before element. | not currently handled <postsp> amount of space to render after element. | consistently by browsers <indent> left/right indent. <boxing> place box around element (I think Marc mentioned this). <textbrk> whether to break text at start/end of element, create new page etc. <quadding> left/right/center. And some more exotic options: <savetext> save copy of text. <usetext> place saved text in output stream. <enumerat> control the behaviour of element counters i.e. section numbers, list numbering etc. Steve. </html>

#1 Stylesheet Greatest CSShits (1994) PLUS More Historic Docs Posterous CAN'T ParseW3C Workshop on Style Sheets   I used the first stylesheet for this post, but then gave up  WHEN I REALIZED  POSTEROUS CAN NOT EVEN PARSE THE DECLARATION OF STYLE INDEPENDENCE from 1994 The W3C CSS Validation Service ...»See Ya

May 21, 2011

Who're Linnea Quigley and Why is she Doing This?

Who're Linnea Quigley?

and Why is she Doing This?






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Dogmeat
ONLY typo graphy post you'll need
¶s
ds
colophon
‘Dancing Girlfriend is Better’ ‘Brickhouse’ ¶ Weirdest videos you ever may see
¶Midnight Small-Caps Special¶
Country Roads made me cry
Super OBSCURE HTML '%%' Length Units
Blink and You'd Miss it! Don't use “custom DTDs”!
Hint.
Strange and wonderful dance
Ever gone broke in a big way Ever done the opposite of what the experts say
Swaggart Camp Meeting Medley
BOB DYLAN "A Complete UNKNOWN" JOHN LENNON BUS TOUR
If *Dylan were a font (*described myself as 'serif' today)

Dogmeat
ONLY typo graphy post you'll need
¶s
ds

Linnea_Quigley.mp4 Watch on Posterous

colophon
‘Dancing Girlfriend is Better’ ‘Brickhouse’ ¶ Weirdest videos you ever may see
¶Midnight Small-Caps Special¶
Country Roads made me cry
Super OBSCURE HTML '%%' Length Units
Blink and You'd Miss it! Don't use “custom DTDs”!
Hint.
Strange and wonderful dance
Ever gone broke in a big way Ever done the opposite of what the experts say
Swaggart Camp Meeting Medley
BOB DYLAN "A Complete UNKNOWN" JOHN LENNON BUS TOUR
If *Dylan were a font (*described myself as 'serif' today)

Dogmeat
ONLY typo graphy post you'll need
¶s
ds
colophon
‘Dancing Girlfriend is Better’ ‘Brickhouse’ ¶ Weirdest videos you ever may see
¶Midnight Small-Caps Special¶
Country Roads made me cry
Super OBSCURE HTML '%%' Length Units
Blink and You'd Miss it! Don't use “custom DTDs”!
Hint.
Strange and wonderful dance
Ever gone broke in a big way Ever done the opposite of what the experts say
Swaggart Camp Meeting Medley
BOB DYLAN "A Complete UNKNOWN" JOHN LENNON BUS TOUR
If *Dylan were a font (*described myself as 'serif' today)

Dogmeat
ONLY typo graphy post you'll need
¶s
ds
colophon
‘Dancing Girlfriend is Better’ ‘Brickhouse’ ¶ Weirdest videos you ever may see
¶Midnight Small-Caps Special¶
Country Roads made me cry
Super OBSCURE HTML '%%' Length Units
Blink and You'd Miss it! Don't use “custom DTDs”!
Hint.
Strange and wonderful dance
Ever gone broke in a big way Ever done the opposite of what the experts say
Swaggart Camp Meeting Medley
BOB DYLAN "A Complete UNKNOWN" JOHN LENNON BUS TOUR
If *Dylan were a font (*described myself as 'serif' today)

Dogmeat
ONLY typo graphy post you'll need
¶s
ds
colophon
‘Dancing Girlfriend is Better’ ‘Brickhouse’ ¶ Weirdest videos you ever may see
¶Midnight Small-Caps Special¶
Country Roads made me cry
Super OBSCURE HTML '%%' Length Units
Blink and You'd Miss it! Don't use “custom DTDs”!
Hint.
Strange and wonderful dance
Ever gone broke in a big way Ever done the opposite of what the experts say
Swaggart Camp Meeting Medley
BOB DYLAN "A Complete UNKNOWN" JOHN LENNON BUS TOUR
If *Dylan were a font (*described myself as 'serif' today)

Dogmeat
ONLY typo graphy post you'll need
¶s
ds
colophon
‘Dancing Girlfriend is Better’ ‘Brickhouse’ ¶ Weirdest videos you ever may see
¶Midnight Small-Caps Special¶
Country Roads made me cry
Super OBSCURE HTML '%%' Length Units
Blink and You'd Miss it! Don't use “custom DTDs”!
Hint.
Strange and wonderful dance
Ever gone broke in a big way Ever done the opposite of what the experts say
Swaggart Camp Meeting Medley
BOB DYLAN "A Complete UNKNOWN" JOHN LENNON BUS TOUR
If *Dylan were a font (*described myself as 'serif' today)

Dogmeat
ONLY typo graphy post you'll need
¶s
ds
colophon
‘Dancing Girlfriend is Better’ ‘Brickhouse’ ¶ Weirdest videos you ever may see
¶Midnight Small-Caps Special¶
Country Roads made me cry
Super OBSCURE HTML '%%' Length Units
Blink and You'd Miss it! Don't use “custom DTDs”!
Hint.
Strange and wonderful dance
Ever gone broke in a big way Ever done the opposite of what the experts say
Swaggart Camp Meeting Medley
BOB DYLAN "A Complete UNKNOWN" JOHN LENNON BUS TOUR
If *Dylan were a font (*described myself as 'serif' today)

Dogmeat
ONLY typo graphy post you'll need
¶s
ds
colophon
‘Dancing Girlfriend is Better’ ‘Brickhouse’ ¶
Weirdest videos you ever may see
¶Midnight Small-Caps Special¶
Country Roads made me cry
Super OBSCURE HTML '%%' Length Units
Blink and You'd Miss it! Don't use “custom DTDs”!
Hint.
Strange and wonderful dance
Ever gone broke in a big way Ever done the opposite
 of what the experts say
Swaggart Camp Meeting Medley
BOB DYLAN

Df8956e41cb41dd42db8dbeeaa33ccc5
"A Complete UNKNOWN" JOHN LENNON BUS TOUR
If *Dylan were a font (*described myself as 'serif' today)

Dogmeat
ONLY typo graphy post you'll need
¶s
ds
colophon
‘Dancing Girlfriend is Better’ ‘Brickhouse’ ¶ Weirdest videos you ever may see
¶Midnight Small-Caps Special¶
Country Roads made me cry
Super OBSCURE HTML '%%' Length Units
Blink and You'd Miss it! Don't use “custom DTDs”!
Hint.
Strange and wonderful dance
Ever gone broke in a big way Ever done the opposite of what the experts say
Swaggart Camp Meeting Medley
BOB DYLAN "A Complete UNKNOWN" JOHN LENNON BUS TOUR
If *Dylan were a font (*described myself as 'serif' today)

More Celebs and Who is Linnea Quigley?

Who're Linnea Quigley? and Why is she Doing This? } Dogmeat ONLY typo graphy post you'll need ¶s ds colophon ‘Dancing Girlfriend is Better’ ‘Brickhouse’ ¶ Weirdest videos you ever may see ¶Midnight Small-Caps Special¶ Country Roads made me cry Super OBSCURE HTML '%%' Length Units Blink and You'd Mis ...»See Ya

‘Dancing Girlfriend is Better’ ‘Brickhouse’ ¶ Weirdest videos you ever may see

‘Dancing Girlfriend is Better and Brickhouse¶

¶Conditions being tested

Dancing Girlfriend is Better and Brickhouse

Dancing Girlfriend is Better and Brickhouse

‘Dancing Girlfriend is Better and Brickhouse¶variant’  :

brickhouse.mp4 Watch on Posterous
font-variant: smal
dancergirlfriend_is_better.mp4 Watch on Posterous
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&lsquo;Dancing Girlfriend is Better and Brickhouse&para;variant&rsquo;&nbsp;

The ‘Dancing Girlfriend is Better and Brickhouse¶variant’  is an adaptation of‘Dancing Girlfriend and Brickhouse¶"variant’  entry of ‘Dancing Girlfriend is Better and Brickhouse¶variant’  by ‘Dancing Girlfriend is Better and Brickhouse¶variant’  ‘Dancing Girlfriend is Better and Brickhouse¶variant’ s, 2011, . 73).

‘Dancing Girlfriend is Better and Brickhouse¶ ¶Conditions being tested ¶ Dancing Girlfriend is Better and Brickhouse Dancing Girlfriend is Better and Brickhouse ‘Dancing Girlfriend is Better and Brickhouse¶variant’  : brickhouse.mp4 Watch on Posterous font-variant: smal dancergirlfriend_is_better.mp ...»See Ya