“Adactio: Links—Progressively enhance for a more resilient web :: jjenzz”
... works as a web developer in Hveragerði, Iceland, and writes about the web, digital publishing, and web/product development
These are his notes
“Adactio: Links—Progressively enhance for a more resilient web :: jjenzz”
“Adactio: Links—The Web’s Next Transition - Epic Web Dev by Kent C. Dodds”
“Everything in its write place: Cloud storage abstraction with Object Store - Dropbox”
An interesting solution to problems most organisations will thankfully never have.
“Wired.com: 20 years later - Stopdesign”
One thing I love about RSS feeds is when a blog comes to life after an 8 year hiatus, the post just pops up in your reader like nothing happened.
It’s really annoying when web.dev writes about tech that’s Chrome-only and not on a path towards standardisation as if it’s something standard and the other browsers are just being laggards.
“Understanding Your System Beats Recruiting People Every Time – Paul Taylor”
That thing where a blog you followed fifteen years ago, and whose feed is still in your feed reader and it suddenly comes back to life as a spam blog after a decade’s dormancy.
Sleep deprivation is not a sustainable strategy. And one rule of thumb that has serve me well since he was the editor of Wired is to ignore all advice given by Chris Anderson
“Michael Tsai - Blog - iOS Action Discoverability”
iOS usability is horrendous. It’s essentially impossible to discover or learn on your own.
“Adding Components to Eleventy with WebC—zachleat.com”
Interesting. Not sure if I would use it but, like everything Zach does, it does look interesting.
Always interesting to see somebody evangelise the four day work week who you know for a fact expects their direct reports to regularly work death-march style “to get things done”
“Unless you’re in the mafia, your company isn’t your family - Christian Heilmann”
“Descriptive engineering: not just for post-mortems – Dan Slimmon”
That thing where you think all of the “State of..” surveys are quite misguided but feel obligated to take them because, horror of horrors, tech believes in management by survey and you know this is going to be used to guide browser and standard development