#quickslide-dimmer { background-color: #333; opacity: 0.8; filter: alpha(opacity = 80); box-shadow: 0 0 9em #000 inset; }
Grrr! Why can't you be curious about things which are more useful! :(
Also... whoever created this thread... I keep looking at the status bar and thinking there are two damned unread messages! :'C
Hah, no, I was only dealing with them for a month or so before I left. I don't think we ever did figure out what we were supposed to do with them. They didn't even have a manufacturer label on them. I'm not even sure they were supplied by Fujitsu in the first place.
I have done programming in the past, yes, but that was about 10 years ago, and, except for one program, never anything involving a network.
<a href="big_img.jpg" rel="quickslide" title="THIS IS A CAPTION, RIGHT HERE" >foobar</a>I also changed the way the loading spinner thing is handled – there's no need to specify it in the options any more; instead you just use CSS:
#quickslide-popup-box.loading { background-image: url("loading-spinner.gif"); background-position: center; background-repeat: no-repeat; width: 16px; height: 16px; }http://caerphoto.com/quickslide/
Quick question. Not sure if it's my end (yj). Checked in Chrome 18 and FF 11 on Win7 and if an image used is a transparent PNG you can still see the loading spinner after it is loaded. Is it a case of the image generally hiding the spinner?
I've also noticed that FF doesn't resample scalled PNGs like Chrome does, eugh.