Zombie Webmonkey: Back From the Dead?
Mirkon writes "Back in mid-February, the news was broken that Webmonkey, one of the web's most prominent web development tutorial and reference resources, was "shut down," in that no new content would be delivered. A little over four months later - though Wired News (another child of Webmonkey's parent company, Terra Lycos) says nothing, and the Webmonkey Blog (hosted on Tripod, another Terra Lycos subsidiary) hasn't seen an update since January - the Webmonkey home page boldly declares: "We're totally back! Webmonkey is alive and kicking, serving up new articles all hot-n-fresh like a stack of banana pancakes. With syrup." Is this the end of the end for Webmonkey?"
Take a look at A List Apart, they're a bit into CSS but that's a Good Thing really.
I don't need no steenkin' webmonkey.
"hehe, website" - Homer Simpson
So that begs the question - what online resources are you using? I'm fond of w3schools myself.
"Capital punishment makes the state into a murderer. Imprisonment makes the state into a gay dungeon-master"
and forgot to update the copyright dates everywhere?
The year in a copyright notice tells when a work was first published. If each individual article is a separate work, then of course some works might have been first published in 2003.
Honestly, I use google 75% of the time. I also use w3schools, and frequent alistapart, Microsoft,
Builder.com, and my favorite devX.