Links
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Huddle/PhantomCSS
“A CasperJS module for automating visual regression testing with PhantomJS and Resemble.js. For testing Web apps, live style guides and responsive layouts.” (via @tomstuart)
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Twython — Twython 3.1.2 documentation
“Actively maintained, pure Python wrapper for the Twitter API. Supports both normal and streaming Twitter APIs” Probably more up to date than whatever I was using before. For future reference.
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WAI-ARIA 1.0 Authoring Practices - Design Patterns
Lots of different types of web interface control and the accessibility interactions, roles, states, etc they should have, with links to examples.
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Web Components punch list | The Paciello Group – Your Accessibility Partner (WCAG 2.0/508 audits, VPAT, usability and accessible user experience)
A handy checklist for when making new interface components on the web, to improve their accessibility.
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Alice Bartlett: Burn your select tags - EpicFEL 2014 - YouTube
Good talk from Alice about user research resulting in GDS avoiding HTML select tags and creating alternatives.
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The Old Guard – Rands in Repose
On the pattern of a group of people staring something and, as it expands, new people join and try to understand and codify the accumulated knowledge that is used by the original group through instinct alone. And the conflict that results. (via Tom Taylor)
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The Making of a Coat #1 - Introduction on Vimeo
Currently 24 (short) videos about the process of making a bespoke coat (suit jacket). (via Made by Hand)
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dotfiles/.osx at master · mathiasbynens/dotfiles
An example script for setting loads of OS X system and application preferences. Although I so rarely set up a new computer, I quite enjoy doing it manually. But still, it hadn’t occurred to me to do this before. (via @tomstuart)
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IE-friendly mobile-first CSS with Sass 3.2
Via previous link, on serving separate, slightly different, stylesheets for old IEs and everything else.
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Responsive grid system which works in IE6 | Technology at GDS
Using SCSS. And not an ugly hack. Having been thinking about grids/page structure at work recently, and needing to support old browsers, this is handy. (via @benterrett)
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Listening Post Ten Years On ← modes.io
This was already one of my favourite pieces of art, and reading how clever it is behind the scenes, and how they’ve been updating it (it can now run on data from Twitter, rather than just IRC and forums), it’s even more so. (via @iamdanw)
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Office Role-Play? Meet The People Who Pretend To Work At An Office Together | Fast Company | Business + Innovation
On a Facebook group, and more, of people who pretend to work in an office together, like Pretend Office. (via @hondanhon)
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L-vocalization - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A couple of times I’ve tried to find the term for this (pronouncing an ‘l’ in a word a bit more like ‘w’), and failed. Now I’ve got it.
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REDbot: <>
Shows and reports on HTTP headers. Handy sometime, I’m sure. (via Infovore)
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diamond geezer - Friday, October 03, 2014
On the branding of ‘Midtown’ in London, and other sponsored rebrandings. Some comments date ‘Midtown’ back quite a while in some industries. (via Londonist)
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The Top 10 Essays Since 1950
I’ve previously read 4 of 10, all of which were brilliant. (via Kottke)
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Learning Susy | Zell Liew
This ($39) book’s good if you’re struggling to get to grips with Susy, the SASS/CSS layout framework. Does a nice job of explaining things in a way that makes more sense than the documentation.
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Phil Gyford’s Things
A snapshot of my earliest home on the web, which I started sometime early 1995. This version from December 1996. The ~fabius section was, in retrospect, an early attempt at blogging, although I didn’t manage much.
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After the flood | Journal
Max Gadney on ten things learned after three years in business. Includes “No Hobbies” and “No Babyfoot”. Focus.
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What We Talk About When We Talk About What We Talk About When We Talk About Making | Quiet Babylon
On “independent creators”, who is part of “our community”, who isn’t. Makes me want an at least partly explicit socialist / social democratic tech conference. Although it’d probably be unbearable.
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PuPHPet - Online GUI configurator for Puppet & Vagrant
“A simple GUI to set up virtual machines for Web development.”
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The Eggcorn Database
“This site is devoted to collecting the kind of unusual English spellings that have come to be called eggcorns.” Great reading. (via @joroach)
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The Boring Designer
On why the most boring design is often the best one. Yes. (via @paulpod)
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13 Ways Designers Screw Up Client Presentations — Medium
Lots of good tips, easily extrapolated to non-designers presenting work to clients too. (via @antimega)
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James Ferguson illustrations | The New York Review of Books
I love these watercolour(?) caricatures/portraits, the solidity of them. (I also love that the NYRB’s search results can generate results like this for one of their illustrators.)
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Git: The Safety Net for Your Projects · An A List Apart Article
I liked this as a clear and pragmatic guide to some Git stuff. Kind of the next steps once someone’s got to grips with add/commit/pull/push.
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A Watch Guy’s Thoughts On The Apple Watch After Seeing It In The Metal (Tons Of Live Photos) — HODINKEE - Wristwatch News, Reviews, & Original Stories
Interesting to read about the Apple Watch as a highish-end watch, ignoring the software. It compares well. A good point is raised though - traditional watches will last a long time, but how short will the life of an Apple Watch be? (via @GreatDismal)
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Twitter - @PennyRed - “So where’s good to live in Scotland?…”
“…I require: weird friendly people, goths, lefties, bookshops, coffee, not too much sun, internet.” Answers are mostly “Edinburgh” or “Glasgow”.
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benbalter/jekyll-auth
Only let people in your organisation (ie, have a GitHub account that’s part of a specified GitHub organisation) access your static Jekyll website hosted on Heroku.