Drizzle, popular MySQL database for multicore environments applications
Written by Bali Publisher
Drizzle is a community-driven open source project that is forked from the popular MySQL database. The Drizzle team has removed non-essential code, re-factored the remaining code and modernized the code base moving to C++. Drizzle, a lightweight fork of MySQL, released its first general availability version today. Drizzle is designed for multicore environments and cloud applications. Unlike NoSQL databases, Drizzle still uses structure queried language. Instead, it attempts to improve performance by cutting the database server down to its core.
An application called Fedena at Foradian Technologies has been developed a student management system for schools / educations. Fedena is the ideal solution for schools and campuses that want an easy means to manage all campus records. Fedena is the first open source school ERP based on Ruby on Rails developed so that anyone can customize Fedena and use it for their educational institution.
It is a one stop solution for all school management related issues and helps you manage student databases and all other activities online.
By using TinySlider Script is the easy way to create lightweight slideshow into any content and gracefully degrades without JavaScript support. TinySlider slideshow script can easily be customized to integrate with any website through CSS.
You can add any content to it, not just images the script also supports automatic rotation with the option to auto-resume, an active class on a navigation list if applicable, and a direction toggle (vertical or horizontal).
Add JavaScript WYSIWYG editor into Any Web Content
Written by Bali Publisher
With WYSIWYG editor you can edit your website content easyly. TinyEditor is a simple JavaScript WYSIWYG editor that is standalone script can handles most of the basic formatting needs and has some functionality built in to help keep the rendered markup as clean as possible and have been combined into a sprite so there are only a few HTTP requests for the editor.
Your web pages appear correctly and consistently in web browsers when you tell a web browser which version of HTML or XHTML you’re using by including what’s called a doctype declaration at the beginning of a web page. This doctype declaration is the first line in the HTML file, and not only defines what version of HTML you’re using (such as HTML 4.01 Transitional) but also points to the appropriate DTD file on the Web.