document.write('<style type="text/css">.magnolia-linkroll h2 {font-size: 1em} .magnolia-linkroll dl, p.magnolia-byline  {font-size: .85em} .magnolia-linkroll dt {font-weight:bold; margin-bottom: .25em} .magnolia-linkroll dd {margin-left: 0; margin-bottom: 1em; font-size: .85em}</style><div class="magnolia-linkroll"><dl>	<dt class="magnolia-mark">		<a href="http://37signals.blogs.com/products/2008/09/new-in-basecamp.html" title="New in Basecamp: Post comments and attach files to to-dos and milestones" class="magnolia-link">			New in Basecamp: Post comments and attach files to to-dos and milestones		</a>	</dt>	<dd class="magnolia-description">Ever since Basecamp&#39;s inception, you could only post comments and attach files to messages. This means all discussions had to happen in the messages section. That was fine until you wanted to discuss a specific to-do item or a milestone. Today all that changes.</dd>	<dt class="magnolia-mark">		<a href="http://www.uxmatters.com/MT/archives/000317.php" title="When Role Playing Doesn’t Work: Seven Guidelines for Grounding Usability Testing in Participants’ Real Lives :: UXmatters" class="magnolia-link">			When Role Playing Doesn’t Work: Seven Guidelines for Grounding Usability Testing in Participants’ Real Lives :: UXmatters		</a>	</dt>	<dd class="magnolia-description">Usability testing makes use of a lot of role-playing scenarios like this one, and many findings and design recommendations result from participants’ responses to these scenarios. But an over-reliance on role playing when testing a product and making design recommendations can have major downsides and risks</dd>	<dt class="magnolia-mark">		<a href="http://sixrevisions.com/resources/cheat_sheets_for_web_designers/" title="Useful Cheat Sheets for Web Designers - Six Revisions" class="magnolia-link">			Useful Cheat Sheets for Web Designers - Six Revisions		</a>	</dt>	<dd class="magnolia-description">28 excellent, useful cheat sheets in various file formats for Photoshop, Dreamweaver, colors, typography, and other web-design related topics all in one page with pictures of each cheat sheet.</dd>	<dt class="magnolia-mark">		<a href="http://sixrevisions.com/css/20_websites_learn_master_css/" title="20 Websites To Help You Learn and Master CSS" class="magnolia-link">			20 Websites To Help You Learn and Master CSS		</a>	</dt>	<dd class="magnolia-description">This article features 20 excellent websites to help you “grok” CSS. There’s a wide range of websites included.</dd>	<dt class="magnolia-mark">		<a href="http://www.alistapart.com/articles/sprites2" title="A List Apart: Articles: CSS Sprites2 - It&#39;s JavaScript Time" class="magnolia-link">			A List Apart: Articles: CSS Sprites2 - It&#39;s JavaScript Time		</a>	</dt>	<dd class="magnolia-description">A sense of movement is often the differentiator between Flash-heavy web sites and standards-based sites. Flash interfaces have always seemed more alive—responding to the user&#39;s interactions in a dynamic way that standards-based web sites haven&#39;t been able to replicate.    Lately that&#39;s been changing, of course, with a resurgence in dynamic interface effects, helped along by JavaScript libraries that make it easy—libraries such as Prototype, Scriptaculous, Moo, YUI, MochiKit (and I could go on). It&#39;s high time to revisit the CSS Sprites technique from four years ago, and see if we can&#39;t interject a little bit of movement of our own.</dd></dl></div>')