Webmonkey is back!
Webmonkey was a great resource for us when we the Web took off, and it was a shame to see it die out. Today we saw that Webmonkey has been re-born as Conde bought it back and put the content back online.
We have also republished the bulk of Webmonkey’s vast library of tutorials and reference guides on a wiki. With very few exceptions, every page in the tutorials, reference and code library sections of the site is publicly editable. We’re using MediaWiki’s open source software to host the content.
Some new things you’ll notice:
* Articles can be tagged and rated.
* Each page has its own backchannel for comments and discussion.
* Registered users get profile pages where they can talk about their projects and list the sites they’ve built.
* We’re still in the beta phase. Webmonkey is, and will continue to be, a constant work in progress. If you run into trouble, check the FAQ or drop us a line. We’ve set up a wiki page for bug tracking, so if you see something that doesn’t quite look right, let us know.
Welcome back. Now you can join the other Web monkeys out there (from Tamarin to ActionMonkey).
Read more on the source site
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