I've looked at it in the past, but seriously cannot find a reason to stop using Prototype over jQuery http://prototypejs.org[^] However, i believe they can co-exist if needed.
BillBuilt
I've looked at it in the past, but seriously cannot find a reason to stop using Prototype over jQuery http://prototypejs.org[^] However, i believe they can co-exist if needed.
BillBuilt
Ok i just had to weigh in on this. Being a tech-savvy guy AND a musician AND a Metallica fan, i've always found this converstaion amazing. I was so mad at Metallica for bringing the lawsuit to Napster, considering they got famous, in no small part, by a bootleg tape that Lars himself released, and it got copied and copied and copied soooo much that they got noticed. As was their intent, no doubt, since no one would sign them. Stemming from that, i've always said that now, the music itself isn't enough to get people to buy the cd. They need some OTHER reason for someone to pay for the music that they can easily download or copy from a friend. Album art is a forgotton part of the equation, along with the other stuff inside (lyrics, other band pics, etc.) But now, even the covers are being packaged up with the songs too. What they need to do is make it collectible some how. Take Led Zepplin's In Throught The Out Door album. It was packaged in a brown paper package, hiding the cover art. Why? Because it was just a simple scene from inside a bar somewhere. Both the front and back. However, the front was from the view of, lets say, the bartender, and the back was from someone elses view. The reason for the brown paper packaging was, that there were a total of 8 people in the bar, with 2 views per album. You didnt know who's view you were getting until you bought the album and ripped off the paper. I'm sure they sold a ton of those albums from people trying to collect all 4!! Anyone remember Cheech and Chong's Still Smokin' album? Anyone remember what came with it? How about Alice Cooper's Muscle of Love album. Came in a cardboard box with a giant condem inside hahaha. Another one he did (In From the Outside) had popup characters in the inside cover (it opened up like it was a double album set). The Rolling Stones did an album (Goat's Head Soup, i believe-not a big Stones fan), in which the cover art was banned. Instead of reprinting new covers for all the existing albums not yet shipped, they just stuck a new one over the original. If you happen to have this album (original print) you might be able to peel off the newer cover to reveal the original cover, and would most likely be worth quite a bit of money. The band Tool sort of got this idea when they did the whole hologram thing with their cd cover and the sleeve. Without the actual store bought case, you'd never figure out whats going on in the sleeve art. If all anyone wants is the music, they wont ever care about the art, but if they want a piece of his