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I'm guessing New Relic's website was not built using your tool. Posting a screenshot of their website on your marketing site implies that your tool was used to build it. A bit misleading in my opinion.


Yep my thoughts exactly. I would suggest making a demo page on webbify, and putting screenshots of different devices of that page (and even a link to it).


True that. Will do.


I switched to Illustrator and found I liked it better. But, I added an Omnigraffle version altho it's not perfect.


Wow, that's above and beyond. Thanks!


I'll debug it and preview again in Firefox. I built it fast and didn't properly test it before moving on to other work. When I do "real" work I do test in Firefox on all platforms.


Yea no problem! The product itself looks awesome btw.



Ok, Mac-head. I concede.


Thanks for the idea. I added a preview image.


The UI designer in me loves these. The UX designer in me says that replacing native UI elements is bad practice. Am I wrong?


I feel that way too, but I think most of my reaction is that it feels hard to fully test these kinds of elements and often really odd things happen on the edge cases with them...

but that might be an outdated sentiment. (it's just a feeling after all :D)


For example, the radio button confused me. I thought that it's a toggle button because of the tick mark.


How does this work? I assume all encrypted emails require both parties use the software, right? So, all my friends, associates, coworkers have to have GPGMail to read my encrypted emails?


GPGMail uses a very well known and white spread technology OpenPGP as its base. Everyone you want to use it with has to have a mail client which supports OpenPGP in one form or another, but there are many plugins out there, who add support for your favorite mail clients on windows and linux.

Enigmail for Thunderbird: http://www.enigmail.net/home/index.php

GPG4Win provide plugins for Outlook: http://gpg4win.org

Evolution on Linux has OpenPGP support built in.

FYI: Another term used for OpenPGP is gnupg or GPG, should you want to google for other solutions on other operating systems.


It's a typical crypto add-on for a mail client, yes: you can only exchange encrypted mail with other folks who can use PGP. That's pretty much how crypto works.

But to be clear, this is just an interface to the MacGPG backend, so it's not some proprietary format. Your friends, etc. don't need to use GPGMail in particular; any PGP implementation will be fine.


GPG uses asymmetric keypairs for encryption. You generate (at the same time), two different keys: a private key and a public key. The private key is your identity, which you can use to sign outgoing messages, and decrypt incoming messages. The public key, you share to your associates can be used to verify your signature, or encrypt messages only meant for you.

With asymmetricity, the public key is a key which can only encrypt the message, but even the sender cannot decrypt that same message again with that key. Only the single unshared private key can decrypt them.

This ofcourse means that all parties must have their own key pair, and the public keys have been shared between them. Also they must use a GPG compliant program to encrypt/decrypt or sign and verify the messages.


No, they just have to use GPG or PGP. GPGMail is just a front-end for those tools.


I'm curious if this works well across modern browsers (IE9+, Chrome, Safari, Firefox)?


Browser support? Any idea if this works in IE7/8?


No IE7/8 support because it doesn't do CSS generated content or the :before and :after pseudo-elements.


Am I missing something? What is in this CMS that is worth $1,500/month? Or is it just they can charge that because of who they are and who they're targeting (enterprise)?

I tested out the app and found it more complicated and not much more powerful than existing free or cheap CMSes.


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