FireText Text Message to Screen Entertainment (html)

FireText Text Message to Screen Entertainment (html)
Encourage your guests to interact. FireText Text Message to Screen Entertainment allows your clients to send short text messages to the screens in your nightclub. While guests are having fun chatting and flirting on the projection screens you are simultaneously building a database of mobile numbers. Give your customers a whole new experience with FireText’s variety of Text Message to Screen Entertainment Features: Text Message to Screen, Text Message Voting, Private Flirt Messaging, Text to Win, Bulk Text Messaging, Text Message Song Requests, Text Message Birthday Shout Outs. FireText Text Message to Screen Entertainment is specially designed for Nightclubs, Pubs and Live Events, but any business can benefit from FireText as our features like Text 2 Win & Bulk Text Messaging are used by Clothing Stores, Juice Bars to Fitness Clubs. Find FireText Text Message to Screen Entertainment Products in Shopping Malls and in the World’s Super Clubs.

Strip and Clean HTML and Attributes, but Allow certain tags and attributes?

Strip and Clean HTML and Attributes, but Allow certain tags and attributes?
Hello, Has anyone found a good solution for filtering the input from web forms to allow a small subset of explicitly defined HTML and Attributes, but excising any of the non-allowed. Basically, I would like to be able to specify an “allow” list that might contain B, I, U, TABLE, TD, TR. and a large number of attributes, excluding, of course, onmouse*! I believe I could do this with Html Agility Pack: http://www.codeplex.com/htmlagilitypack But, I wondered if anyone had written or come across something that is forward only and does not parse the content into a tree the way that Agility Pack does, since I’m not really concerned with well-formedness, just that absolutely no potentially descructive script or object tags or attributes get through. Thank you, Josh

New Outlook Won’t Use IE To Render HTML (Slashdot)

New Outlook Won’t Use IE To Render HTML (Slashdot)
loconet writes to tell us about a little surprise coming in Outlook 2007: it will render HTML email using the MS Word engine, dropping the use of IE for this purpose. This represents a body-check to the movement towards Web standards. Whatever you think about HTML email, lots of it gets generated, and those generating it won’t be able to use CSS any more, and may stop pushing for more widespread …