same effect observed here, can't raise any fuss though... -----Original Message----- From: Jason Levine <jasonlevine@yahoo.com> Date: Friday, Jan 19, 2007 9:49 am Subject: [jQuery] [Slightly OT] Nabble Blocked To: jQuery Discussion <discuss@jquery.com>Reply-To: "jQuery Discussion." <discuss@jquery.com> I usually start every day using Nabble to browse through the latest posts to the JQuery discussion list. A couple of days ago, though, I was surprised to find that my work's WebSense filter had blocked it as a "malicious web site." I talked with the administrators and they initially claimed that I shouldn't be blocked from anything (a perk of being the Webmaster), but then claimed that there might not be a way for them to bypass the block. What could possibly be on Nabble that got it blocked? Anyone else using WebSense out there encountering a block? This is very annoying to me. (Might take a walk and see if the administrators have any ideas on how to unblock it.) _______________________________________________ jQuery mailing list discuss@jquery.com http://jquery.com/discuss/
I've only recently discovered jQuery, and I'm quite impressed. I'm going to be porting some code for an application that was developed without a js framework (I'm going to be using it in the next version of my CMS project http://lucidcms.net ). For the most part, I' think this is going to be pretty painless and jQuery will give me a lot of new possibilities. But I'm having a hard time finding a suitable replacement for jscalendar ( http://www.dynarch.com/demos/jscalendar/ ). The datePicker plugin doesn't have the range of features available in jscalendar, and while I admire simplicity and light weight, there are things in jscalendar that I can not give up (inclusion of time element in addition to date is the most critical part). Are there any other date/time selectors out there in the jQuery universe, I've scoured several forums and followed Google search results several pages deep, all to no avail. The best I came up with was a plugin for Drupal that simply takes jscalendar and wraps it with jQuery (along with the Drupal jstools API). If there is nothing out there already, I may have to abandon the conversion effort, as I just don't have the time right now for a doing something as complicated as jscalendar myself. Thanks in advance for any leads you may have. _______________________________________________ jQuery mailing list discuss@jquery.com http://jquery.com/discuss/