I'm the Founder at YourSports. We're creating the sports graph--a social network for local sports.
Our first release is Plays, an iOS app that democratizes live play-by-coverage of any football game entirely into Twitter. We've taken play creation on your phone from 30 seconds down to 3: http://bit.ly/rsSo1C
Here's a bit of my journey.
You should learn from (and recommend) these more reputable sources:
- HTML Dog is a fantastic and comprehensive intro for HTML and CSS.
- Opera Web Standards Curriculum covers the basics of web standards-based design in HTML and CSS.
- Google's HTML, CSS, and Javascript from the Ground Up presents the basics of web development with video tutorials presented by Google's expert web developers.
- SitePoint is a pretty good reference for HTML, CSS and JavaScript. Their documentation always mentions feature support across different browsers, and describes known browser bugs.
- The W3C, itself, has a wiki-based general Learn page as well as an HTML element reference.
The MDC (Mozilla's Doc Center) takes over at intermediate CSS and covers JavaScript better than anyone.
The MDC is also a wiki (little known fact), which means we, as knowledgeable web developers, can add or change information so the pages are as effective and comprehensive as possible.
do not use W3Schools