Pod-POM-View-HTML-Filter-0.03Pod-POM-View-HTML-Filter-0.03Pod-POM-View-HTML-Filter-0.03 07/28/2004 11:32 PM This is a GrokNews Entry: (what is grok?)Pod-POM-View-HTML-Filter-0.03Grok Headline matches for Pod-POM-View-HTML-Filter-0.03Pod-POM-View-HTML-Filter-0.01Pod-POM-View-HTML-Filter-0.01 07/26/2004 05:35 AM Pod-POM-View-HTML-Filter-0.02Pod-POM-View-HTML-Filter-0.02 07/26/2004 10:36 AM HTML-Template-Filter-Dreamweaver-1.01HTML-Template-Filter-Dreamweaver-1.01 12/09/2003 06:06 PM Office 2000 HTML FilterOffice 2000 HTML Filter 08/27/2004 05:37 PM Office 2000 HTML Filter 2.0: This is a handy little tool. Once you have completed editing an HTML document in Word 2000 or Excel 2000, you can use the Office HTML Filter to remove the Office-specific markup tags from the final copy of the HTML document. I took a 45-page Microsoft whitepaper on remote OS installations, saved it as HTML, then ran it through this tool. File size was reduced by almost half, and the result looked perfect in Firefox. In fact, you'd be hard-pressed to tell if you were viewing it in Firefox or Word itself. The HTML markup is quite good, and the app adds an "Export To" menu in Word, so you can create HTML direct from Word without an extra step. Here's some detail of exactly what it does — what it removes and what it doesn't. The thing installs as a DLL which is called from Word VBA, which tells me there's got to be a way to script it. I think you could put this on your server, allow users to upload Word files, convert them to clean HTML on the fly, then present them on your Web site. If you like this idea, try Dean Allen's Word HTML Cleaner. One day he needs to open this up as a Web service. Click here to comment on this entry kses - PHP HTML/XHTML filterkses - PHP HTML/XHTML filter 02/07/2005 01:57 AM kses 0.2.2 out now View HTML Only Images IncludeView HTML Only Images Include 03/28/2005 11:00 PM onlyimg-0.2.1 released Whew: HTML View/Source Not in JeopardyWhew: HTML View/Source Not in Jeopardy 08/27/2004 01:27 PM Brendan Eich offers welcome reassurances in a posting entitled "Ev eryone remain calm" -- an explanation of the (thankfully) short-lived idea to remove the ability to view the HTML source code of a Mozilla-based Web page. He says, in part: Throughout the explosive growth of the web, View / Source has played a crucial role, hard to appreciate if you dumb down your user model based on myopic hindsight and a static analysis of the majority cohort of "end users". Anyway, I wanted to reassure everyone, from our top Gecko hackers to interested web developers to enthusiastic surfers, that Firefox is not about to implode into a bare-bones, ultra-minimalist browser that those important hackers, et al., can't use. Firefox cannot be "all things to all people" without at least some people having to configure an extension or two, but the default features should support the crucial user bases.(Via Dave Winer) Vulns: WebCT Campus Edition HTML Tags
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