Who is Mrs. Riley?
(And, now that I've read the formatting options, what's the dif between <"em"> and <"i">? If none, is that standard or just here? The quotes are there because I obviously have no real knowledge of HTML and therefore do not know how to tell the computer that I'm just talking about the code not actually using it.)
(And should I change the subject to Silly Questions - plural?)
Thanks, Nick, for that explanation. But what about my first question:
Who is Mrs. Riley?
Yeah... who IS Mrs. Riley?
Anyone? :)
I'm so confused! Ben, help me out here. You have to know.
Mrs. Riley's bio was lost in a freak windstorm and needs to be rewritten... any takers?
I give up!
She is a woman who was tragically swallowed up by over 15000 picture cards... :) She graciously gave of herself, which is why the beta testing of this program that has been named for her, is completely free until Feb. 23rd (her birthday).
How's that??
haha awesome! Sounds like a good start. What was her childhood like to have led to such an unfortunate end?
Anyone else thinking of Alice in Wonderland after reading this?
LOL! I'll think on it. :)
Who ISN'T Mrs.Riley????
Features
Here's a few things you can do.
- Upload your own Photos
- Search the ever growing library of user made cards
- Find pictures on the web
- Use our library of 3000+ symbols
- Print straight from your browser
- Work from any online computer
Users
- Speech-Language Pathologists
- Teachers
- Parents
- Autism Specialists
- Occupational Therapists
- ESL Teachers
- Montessori Teachers
- Homeschoolers
- Professors
- Researchers
- Social Workers
About Mrs. Riley
Mrs. Riley was created so professionals, teachers, and parents could collaboratively make educational materials, starting with picture cards. If you've ever made a picture card with a custom image yourself, you know that it can be tedious. We understand and after going through it ourselves for so long, we decided to wrap the entire process into a single online application.








< i > is always italics. < em > is generally italics, but some web browsers may render it differently. < em > literally means "emphasis" and it's up to your browser as to how that emphasis is done.
Talking about code, html in particular can be tricky. You had the right idea adding "", but you can also use spaces as I have used here.