This site is written using standard HTML 4.01, CSS2, ECMAscript, and the W3C DOM level 2 or the Internet Explorer DHTML DOM. The site design is user-customizable: the site color scheme can be chosen from eight schemes, and the site text size can be chosen from seven sets of sizes. The design menu can be accessed from the upper navigation bar, at the top right of every page. This user design is persistent: the site uses browser cookies to save the user’s design choices from view to view. The site has been tested with several browsers. The site is entirely functional with Microsoft Internet Explorer version 6.0, and almost entirely functional with Netscape Navigator 7.01. The site’s dynamic elements are non-functional in Opera 7.0 as Opera does not have sufficient DOM support to permit user customization of the site design. The site is usable, although without its dynamic elements, in the Lynx text browser.
This site has been labeled with ICRA to reflect its suitability for all ages. This site has been designed in conformance with the W3C accessibility standards. If you find any accessibility problems with the site, or have any suggestions for improving the accessibility of the site, please inform the author.
The site design is generic and any copyright on the overall site design, site colors, and site “look and feel” is hereby disclaimed and released into the public domain. However, the site text, illustrations, CSS, and ECMAscript are all Copyright © 2002 and 2003, Brian Hetrick; and the site name is a trademark of Brian Hetrick. If you find the presentation techniques used in this site useful, please ask the author for permission before copying the CSS and/or ECMAscript; you do not, of course, need anyone’s permission to create your own CSS and/or ECMAscript that may be in full or in part inspired by this site. If you quote the site in a fair use context or otherwise refer to the site, please include a link to the home page of the site (http://www.brianhetrick.com/palm/) in addition to any “deep” links or links to individual pages. The site home page URL has a far greater probability of staying valid through site reorganizations than the URLs of individual pages.
Thank you.
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Copyright © 2003 Brian Hetrick
Page last updated 15 July 2003.