Typo, you're saying these prices aren't real: [link] ? What do you have to do to get the $83.40/year?
Cordelia ,'You're Welcome'
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Buy three years worth at once.
No, 3 years at once is $59.40 per year.
But I didn't know anywhere charged under $3 a year for a long term amount--either it's a long-time customer perk or a limited time now loss leader. Am I that out of touch? $6.95/month looks cheap to me.
I'm probably the one out of touch. Part of it is that I have 3 per year with a legacy account, but they won't do it for new ones. But I can find in that neighborhood for lower tier service, like Gator and ipage. Static html, no hosted email. . I may add a blog if I ever get time to blog again.
I've been using NearlyFreeSpeech for about a year for a static HTML site that I rarely fiddle with. So far it's been hassle-free and inexpensive.
So, anyone around who can give me a little help in using JavaScript to manipulate XML using the DOM?
I haven't done coding like that in a while, but I was a big fan of libraries like Prototype & jQuery when I did.
Well, I've been using jQuery somewhat for a while now (but not for this).
Briefly, what I want to do is take a node of an XML document, do an XSL transformation on it and then replace that node in the XML doc with the results of the transformation. But I'm kinda' getting confused about all the different JavaScript objects that pertain to XML, so I'm not sure I'm going about this the right way.
Currently the code does the changes to the node using Javascript to manipulate the DOM (with no XSL transformation). This works but can be slow. Using the XSL transformation would (I think) increase performance.
Is this something that jQuery could handle?
Hey Buffistae, I'm looking at a new phone. Does anybody have experience with or opinions on or anecdata about these three options?
Android LG Optimus One. (Totally sounds like a madeup Transformers character.)
LG Rumor Reflex. (Totally sounds like a mashup of Duran Duran titles.)
Samsung Nexus 4G. (Totally sounds like something made in Korea.)
Weird, that, Samsung sounding Korean.