Links
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HTML DOM - Common tasks of managing HTML DOM with vanilla JavaScript
After so many years of needing jQuery for things, it’s taking a while for vanilla methods to stick in my brain. (via @simonw)
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More on service layers in Django
I’ve enjoyed this and the previous post. In-depth enough to be useful, not so much i can’t follow it.
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Is The Samuel Pepys Coronavirus Quote Genuine? | Londonist
This has been a mild pain in the arse.
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Comics — Jeffrey Alan Love
I love the comics and illustration work here. Shows what you can do with not much more than silhouettes. (via Warren Ellis)
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Inspiration & References
Occasionally I check in on how the development of Citybound, a SimCity-style game, is going, and noticed the developer shared this nice collection of resources.
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#158 The Case of the Missing Hit | Reply All
That is a gripping story (from “Super Tech Support” onwards). I am thankful for transcripts too. (via FaveJet)
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A Text Renaissance
For the “The Eighth Death of Blogging” section, half-way through, on the costs of a site being popular-ish, “a nightmare zone where monetization is janky and hard”.
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Alec Soth: Photographic Storytelling | Magnum Learn
$99 online video course, recommended by Craig Mod.
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Let’s Define CSS 4 · Issue #4770 · w3c/csswg-drafts
Interesting discussion (an actual civil discussion, on the internet!). (via Adactio)
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It’s A Digital Disease!
r/DataHoarder. This subreddit looks both interesting and enabling. (via Ask MetaFilter)
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Listen to your web pages
“Copy this into the console of any web page that is interactive and doesn’t do hard reloads. You will hear your DOM changes as different pitches of audio.” Lovely. (via Cal Henderson)
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An app can be a home-cooked meal
Robin Sloan. Comparing learning to code with learning to cook is a great metaphor. Seems so obvious now. (via Chris Heathcote)
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CapRover · Build your own PaaS in a few minutes!
Looks simple. Docker based, mainly for use on DigitalOcean. (via /r/django)
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The Fence, Issue 2, The Diary of Samuel Pepys, iPhone Addict
“This day by the grace of God it is six years that I have not read Mail Online, and I was never so happy as I am now. Up, betimes, and by tube to Westminster, greatly vexed that none had liked my tweet while I slept.” This is done well.
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Related subreddits based on your comments
Makes a nice graph of subreddits related to the one you choose. (via:imperica)
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Bandsintown | Live Music, Concert Tickets & Tour Dates
See what’s on in particular towns or cities. Not sure how it compares to Songkick, which I use via RSS. (via Ask MetaFilter)
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Darebee - Fitness On Your Terms.
Ad- and promotion-free, user-supported collection of fitness programmes. (via Ask MetaFilter)
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Inclusive Components
“Each post explores a common interface component and comes up with a better, more robust and accessible version of it.” (via @simonw)
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Criticism in the age of TikTok - YouTube
I enjoyed this video essay about how young people use video, on TikTok etc., both for the content and the form. (via @mildlydiverting)
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My Must-Have Apps, 2019 Edition - MacStories
There are so many “best apps” articles but Federico Viticci’s has lots I hadn’t heard of that sound interesting, and shows a lot of thought. (via Michael Tsai)
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Draw all roads in a city at once
More beautiful and interesting than I expected. Also, it maps counties, towns, villages, etc.
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All – Tiny Helpers
Loads of websites that each do one useful thing for web designers and developers. (via Waxy)
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Your own hosted blog, the easy, free, open way
How to host a blog on GitHub Pages, doing all creating, writing, editing, uploading on the GitHub website. (via Simon Willison and Waxy)
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OpenStreetMap Haiku
Very nice. Little poems using OSM data, the time of day and the current weather. Feels like just the start. (via Imperica)
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Vaughan Oliver’s Invitation to Decode
‘I’ve got clients who ask, “How can we have that now?” I say, “We don’t have that now. It builds with time; it also builds with the quality of the product.”’
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CHAMBER OF HORRORS – The King’s Shilling
A collection of awful recruitment ads and similar.
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Running in 2019 - Simon Wilson
A lovely post about running and being good to yourself. (via @benterrett)
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For tech-weary Midwest farmers, 40-year-old tractors now a hot commodity - StarTribune.com
I reckon this is useful for analogies with technologies other than tractors. (via @slavin_fpo)
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What do you call the parts of a story? Or: why can’t journalists spell “lead”? · The Ethically-Trained Programmer
More interesting than lede vs lead which, oddly, doesn’t even come up, except in a comment. (via Simon Willison)
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A short history of body copy sizes on the Web
I would like more histories of specific features of web design over the decades. (via Adactio)