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Tagged with “podcast” (54) activity chart

  1. FLP - Free Library Podcast | William Julius Wilson

    William Julius Wilson | There Goes the Neighborhood: Racial, Ethnic, and Class Tensions in Four Chicago Neighborhoods and Their Meaning for America
    Recorded 10/26/2006

    A MacArthur Prize Fellow and the recipient of the 1998 National Medal of Science, William Julius Wilson is Lewis P. and Linda L. Geyser University Professor at Harvard University. He is the author of Power, Racism, and Privilege; The Declining Significance of Race; The Truly Disadvantaged; When Work Disappears; and The Bridge Over the Racial Divide. His new book, There Goes the Neighborhood, is informed by his current studies of race and the social organization of neighborhoods, the effects of high-risk neighborhoods on adolescent social outcomes, and the effects of welfare reform on poor families and children.

    https://libwww.freelibrary.org/podcast/index.cfm?podcastID=179

    —Huffduffed by theJBJshow one month ago

  2. 35 – Scotcast Part One | The British History Podcast

    We’re catching up with what was going on beyond the Wall during all of this drama. And to start with, lets talk about how Scotland got its shape and talk a little about the early inhabitants who lived there.

    http://thebritishhistorypodcast.com/?p=258

    —Huffduffed by theJBJshow one month ago

  3. 5by5 | The Web Ahead #33: Back to Basics with Jen Robbins

    5by5 - The Web Ahead #33: Back to Basics with Jen Robbins

    The web at it’s basics is HTML and CSS. If you want to learn these fundamentals, where do you start? Jen Robbins joins Jen Simmons to lay out a road map.

    Jennifer Robbins has been a Web designer since 1993. She designed the web’s first commercial site, O’Reilly’s Global Network Navigator (GNN).

    http://5by5.tv/webahead/33

    —Huffduffed by theJBJshow 7 months ago

  4. 5by5 | The Web Ahead #38: Game Console Browsers with Anna Debenham

    5by5 - The Web Ahead #38: Game Console Browsers with Anna Debenham

    People are accessing the web from all kinds of devices these days, and will be from many more in the future. Anna Debenham joins Jen Simmons to talk about game consoles, both portable games and consoles that go with a television set, and the browsers they run. How might you want to adjust your website to work on these devices?

    Anna Debenham is a freelance front-end developer living in Brighton in the UK. She specializes in sites and web apps used in the education sector.

    Resources: Testing Websites in Game Console Browsers (http://www.alistapart.com/articles/testing-websites-in-game-console-browsers/)

    http://5by5.tv/webahead/38

    —Huffduffed by theJBJshow 7 months ago

  5. 5by5 | The Web Ahead #39: Dave Shea

    The Web Behind: Episode Three with Dave Shea

    Dave Shea joins Eric Meyer and Jen Simmons for the third episode of in The Web Behind series. They talk about the CSS Zen Garden, a website Dave created in 2003 which showed the world how radically-different designs could be with just CSS. Dave also reflects on the origins and lasting effects of the CSS Sprites technique he introduced to the world, and reminisces about the web design community of a decade ago.

    Dave Shea is a Canadian[1] web designer and co-author of The Zen of CSS Design: Visual Enlightenment for the Web. He is known for his work in web-standard development—from his design community project CSS Zen Garden to his active contributions at the Web Standards Project (WaSP). Shea is also a writer “for a large global audience of web designers and developers on his popular weblog, "Mezzoblue" and is the founder and creative director of Bright Creative in Vancouver, BC.

    http://5by5.tv/webahead/39

    —Huffduffed by theJBJshow 7 months ago

  6. 5by5 | The Web Ahead #37: Steven Champeon

    The Web Behind: Episode Two with Steven Champeon

    In this second episode of The Web Behind series with Eric Meyer, guest Steven Champeon talks about predecessors to HTML, the webdesign-L online community, the birth of the web standards project, how he coined the term "progressive enhancement" and much more.

    Steven Champeon pioneered the markup best practice of Progressive Enhancement that has been embraced by the web industry and adopted by organizations such as Microsoft, Yahoo!, and America Online. Steve is also the founder of the webdesign-L online community, founded in 1997 and 2300+ members strong. Champeon’s widely respected status as a "web guru" is evidenced by his impressive list of publications and speaking engagements. Champeon is a contributor to Unix Power Tools, 3rd edition, Cascading Style Sheets: Separating Content From Presentation, now in its second edition, as well as the author of the groundbreaking Building Dynamic HTML GUIs.

    http://5by5.tv/webahead/37

    —Huffduffed by theJBJshow 7 months ago

  7. 5by5 | The Web Ahead #35: John Allsopp

    The Web Behind: Episode One with John Allsopp

    John Allsopp joins Eric Meyer and Jen Simmons for this first episode in our “web behind” series — a look back at where the web came from and the people who created it. They talk about early web design tools, community groups that shaped the web, thinkers from the mid-20th century who shaped ideas about hypertext, and much more.

    Hailing from Sydney, Australia, John Allsopp by himself has seen and done more on the web than most web teams put together. First encountering the web in the early 1990s, he built one of the very first CSS tools, Style Master, and a number of other web development tools; published a wealth of information like support charts and free courses; wrote the deeply insightful and far-seeing article “A Dao of Web Design”; influenced the course of the Web Standards Project; and founded a successful international conference series that continues to this day.

    http://5by5.tv/webahead/35

    —Huffduffed by theJBJshow 7 months ago

  8. CSIROpod > There’s always the sun?

    Australia has abundant solar energy resources, but until now there has been very little publicly available research on how the variable nature of sunshine affects electricity networks.

    http://www.csiro.au/Portals/Multimedia/CSIROpod/Theres-always-the-sun.aspx

    —Huffduffed by theJBJshow 11 months ago

  9. 009: With Ethan Marcotte - ShopTalk

    This week we were joined by Ethan Marcotte, our chauffeur into the brave new world of responsive web design. We’ve been getting a good amount of questions about RWD, so we’ve saved the best ones up for a special espisode from the man himself. We talk about (roughly in order):

    Hot Links:
    StyleDocco (http://jacobrask.github.com/styledocco/)
    Adobe Shadow (http://labs.adobe.com/technologies/shadow/)
    SenchaTouch 2 (http://www.sencha.com/blog/announcing-sencha-touch-2/)
    The Non-Breaking Space Show Crossover (http://nonbreakingspace.tv/shoptalk-crossover-with-chris-coyier-and-dave-rupert/)
    The Industry Podcast (http://theindustry.cc/2012/03/06/2-responsive-sass-awkward-hugs/)

    Q&A:
    >What is responsive design?
    >When shouldn’t you use responsive design?
    >Using image sprites with responsive design?
    >Scaling images in responsive design
    >Responsive display advertising
    >Making the jQuery plugin DataTables responsive
    >Grid systems to help the transition into responsive design
    >Is hiding inline images good enough to prevent them from loading?
    >Embedded tweets in responsive design
    >Masonry style layouts

    Note: Dear Audiophiles, sorry about the choppy recording. Will work on it.

    http://shoptalkshow.com/episodes/009-with-ethan-marcotte/

    —Huffduffed by theJBJshow 11 months ago

  10. 021: With Nicole Sullivan - ShopTalk

    This week we were joined by Nicole Sullivan, a long time web veteran, originator of OOCSS, CSS lint, and tons more. Nicole is definitely a thought leader in the modern web development world who is often ahead of us all. We’ve watched OOCSS start out as this abstract and highly criticized concept turn into a pretty commonplace practice on large sites. We talk about (roughly in order):

    News’n’Links’n’Drama:
    >Matt Wilcox on The Responsive Images Problem
    >IE 7 Tax – Company literally charging 6.8% more for products they sell online if browser is IE 7.

    Q & A:
    >Isn’t OOCSS just moving CSS bloat into HTML bloat?
    >Is there going to be a book on OOCSS?
    >Recognizing when many elements have the same classes, and making a new class that @extends the old ones.
    >Can you use the body element like you would a page-wrapping div?
    >What tools to we suggest for validation in the modern world, especially as part of a workflow?
    >How does SMACSS compare/contrast to OOCSS?
    >When do you call yourself a professional designer or developer?
    >How about universally setting elements to position: relative;

    http://shoptalkshow.com/episodes/021-with-nicole-sullivan/

    —Huffduffed by theJBJshow 11 months ago

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