For ASP.NET
- Super Simple Auto Spriting, Minification and Bundling solution
- No need to tell RequestReduce where your resources are
- Your CSS and Javascript can be anywhere - even on an external host
- RequestReduce finds them at runtime automatically
The Sitecore Social Connected module contains several independent tools:
Social Connector allows website visitors to log in your website using credentials from their social network accounts. Your website receives more information about the visitor from the social network profile. You can use it to personalize the website.
Social Publishing allows posting automatic updates to the social networks along with publishing Sitecore items.
Putting Like and Tweet buttons on the webpage. You can put the buttons as Sitecore controls and track users' activity using Sitecore analytics.
"EpicEditor is an embeddable JavaScript Markdown editor with split fullscreen editing, live previewing, automatic draft saving, offline support, and more. For developers, it offers a robust API, can be easily themed, and allows you to swap out the bundled Markdown parser with anything you throw at it. "
Backstretch is a simple jQuery plugin that allows you to add a dynamically-resized background image to any page. It will stretch any image to fit the page, and will automatically resize as the window size changes.
jQuery.carouFredSel is a plugin that turns any kind of HTML element into an infinite, circular carousel. It can scroll one or multiple items simultaneously, horizontal or vertical, automatically, by pressing buttons or keys on the keyboard.
1 Bit Audio Player is a very simple and lightweight Adobe Flash MP3 player with automatic JavaScript insertion. It's main purpose is to act as a quick in-page preview for audio files you link to from your website or blog.
Generate an anonymous alias that will forward to your real email address. It will automatically be deleted after either your set time or message limit has been reached.
By default, all popular Web browsers assume the HTTP protocol. In doing so, the software prepends the 'http://' onto the requested URL and automatically connect to the HTTP server on port 80. Why then do many pages explictly set http on all hypertext links? Surely it is easier to type "domain.com" than "http://domain.com".
HTTP is also deprecated due to the ever-evolving web: The HyperText Transfer Protocol is no longer used to transfer hypertext. It is increasingly becoming used a means to transfer any content over port 80. Thus the definition "http" no longer means anything in the context of a URL since you are unlikely to be requesting hypertext.
As the web evolves, next generation protocols will begin to replace http. By explicitly using "http://domain.com" in your links you are forcing your viewers of the future into using an obsolete protocol. By using "//domain.com" you will guarantee the protocol of tomorrow will work with your pages of today.
Succinctly, use of the http protocol is redundant and time consuming to communicate. The internet, media, and society are all better off without it.
Map Icons Collection is a set of more than 700 free icons to use as placemarks for your POI (Point of Interests) locations on your maps. You can use them on Google Maps with the "My places / My maps" feature or automatically by using the Google Maps API.
OpenCalais Integration module allows you to to automatically discover semantic relations between your content, Create relevant tags in the Sitecore Taxonomy and tag your content with those by integrating the Sitecore Taxonomy Module, WeBlog Module or any Sitecore item based taxonomy seamlessly with OpenCalais service without additional development.
The service is open for commercial and non-commercial use and is free if you don't need to tag more than 50,000 documents a day. The service is easy to apply in your project with this module and almost effortless if you're already using the Sitecore's Shared Source Taxonomy Module.
CSSrefresh is a small, unobstructive javascript file that monitors the CSS-files included in your webpage. As soon as you save a CSS-file, the changes are directly implemented, without having to refresh your browser.