Indyplanets / tags / javascript

Tagged with “javascript” (12) activity chart

  1. No Excuse: Web Designers Who Can’t Code

    Some of the most important design decisions happen in code. In 2009, I gave a talk at the Build conference in Belfast with what I thought was a fairly uncontroversial premise: web designers should write code. Since then, the subject has sparked more than a few debates, including a particular heated pile-on when Elliot Jay Stocks tweeted that he was "shocked that in 2010 I’m still coming across ‘web designers’ who can’t code their own designs. No excuse." In a recent interview, Jonathan Ive said "It’s very hard to learn about materials academically, by reading about them or watching videos about them; the only way you truly understand a material is by making things with it." He’s talking about product design, but the principle is just as relevant to the Web (if not more so). "The best design explicitly acknowledges that you cannot disconnect the form from the material—the material informs the form…. Because when an object’s materials, the materials’ processes and the form are all perfectly aligned…. People recognize that object as authentic and real in a very particular way." As our industry grows and roles get more specialized, it’s possible to become a "web designer" without more than a cursory understanding of the fundamental building materials of the Web: the code. Is this just the price of progress? Are the days of the web craftsman soon to be in the past? Or is a hybrid approach to web design and development something worth preserve?

    • Jenn Lukas
    • Ethan Marcotte
    • Ryan Sims
    • Wilson Miner

    —Huffduffed by Indyplanets 2 years ago

  2. Jeremy Keith on Ajax design considerations

    Jeremy Keith from Clearleft discusses his session at 2008’s UI13 conference called Ajax Design Considerations that Tim attended. What do UX professionals need to know about Ajax to best make use of it in websites and web applications? And why is Jeremy’s title at Clearleft currently "Lineman for the County"?

    From http://www.designcritique.net/index.php?post_id=531611

    —Huffduffed by Indyplanets 3 years ago

  3. Even Faster Web Sites

    Steve is the author of High Performance Web Sites and the creator of YSlow, the Firebug extension. Now working at Google, Steve discusses the next set of best practices he’s developed, including advanced techniques for loading JavaScript, where not to place inline scripts, and the importance of using multiple domains to improve web performance.

    Steve Souders, Google

    —Huffduffed by Indyplanets 3 years ago

  4. Douglas Crockford - Ajax security

    Douglas Crockford talks about the broken security model of the browser at Web Directions South 2008.

    http://www.webdirections.org/resources/douglas-crockford-ajax-security/

    —Huffduffed by Indyplanets 3 years ago

  5. Interview with PPK about mobile web development

    An interview with PPK after a tech talk in the Yahoo offices in the UK. We covered mobile web development, testing ideas, libraries, web standards and conference talks.

    http://www.archive.org/details/InterviewWithPpkAboutMobileWebDevelopment

    —Huffduffed by Indyplanets 3 years ago

  6. Jeremy Keith {27} Still Brighton at 3am

    In issue #27, we keep Jeremy Keith awake at 3am, discussing Clearleft, Javascript, Huffduffer, Microformats and Salter Cane.

    http://www.creativexpert.com/2009/06/23/jeremy-keith-27-still-brighton-at-3am/

    —Huffduffed by Indyplanets 3 years ago

  7. Eric Freaking Meyer

    In issue #26, we speak with Eric Freaking Meyer about CSS, Web Standards, Google IO, the Death of IE6, Javascript and the web as a platform.

    http://www.creativexpert.com/2009/06/15/eric-meyer-26-the-css-ninja-pirate-tells-all/

    —Huffduffed by Indyplanets 3 years ago

  8. Browser Wars III: The Platform Wins

    We’re doing so darn much with the Web platform these days, from cross-domain access mechanisms to new drawing and graphics tools. But in the end, we still have to deal with different web browsers. This discussion brings the leads from Mozilla (Firefox), Microsoft (IE), Google (Chrome) and Opera (Opera) together for yet another incendiary discussion about the future of the web.

    Skip to the end if you you want to hear the good stuff.

    From http://www.sxsw.com/node/1632

    —Huffduffed by Indyplanets 4 years ago

  9. SXSW - More Secrets of JavaScript Libraries

    From http://www.sxsw.com/node/1453

    In a reprise from last year’s popular panel - the JavaScript libraries authors are getting together again to impart their what they’ve learned from their experience in developing solid, world-class, JavaScript libraries. Covering everything from advanced aspects of the JavaScript language, to handling cross-browser issues, all the way up to packaging and distribution. A complete set of knowledge for a JavaScript developer.

    John Resig, Mozilla Corporation

    Andrew Dupont, Prototype JavaScript Framework

    Nate Koechley

    Becky Gibson, IBM

    —Huffduffed by Indyplanets 4 years ago

  10. FLOSS Weekly 55: jquery

    "jQuery, a lightweight JavaScript library emphasizing JavaScript and HTML interaction." http://thisweekintech.com/floss55

    —Huffduffed by Indyplanets 4 years ago

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