Posted: October 27th, 2009 | Author: robincurry | Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: copywriting, css, design, fonts, jquery | Comments Off
I wonder if watching hours upon hours of children’s programming on television makes adults dumber too.
Popularity: 93% [?]
Posted: October 23rd, 2009 | Author: robincurry | Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: css, design, nosql, ruby | Comments Off
Approximately 1 month until Baby 2.0 ships in my household. Unlike software releases, baby releases tend to ship on time or early. Hopefully our MOM and POP servers are ready to scale.
- Do forms work in HTML emails?
I’d always wondered about this.
- SORT in Redis
Grumble grumble, I still haven’t bought into this NOSQL thing, but in case you have…
- The IE CSS Bug Which Cost Me A Month’s Salary
A cautionary tale. Moral – be sure to test in all browsers.
- Double-Load Guards in Ruby
If you see warnings about already initialized constants, this article is for you. Good tips to avoid this problem in the future as well.
- Treating User Myopia
Jeff Atwood highlights a problem with a user not understanding how to use Markdown on one of their forum sites, misses the forest for the trees and blames the user instead of the site’s use of Markdown, and a mob forms in the comments. Ah, Friday.
Popularity: 100% [?]
Posted: October 22nd, 2009 | Author: robincurry | Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: css, design, fonts, git, jquery, plugins, rails | Comments Off
Agonizing over whether to go desktop (27″ iMac) or laptop (17″ MBP) with my next computer purchase. Not that I have the cash for either at the moment. But if I did…
Popularity: 92% [?]
Posted: October 13th, 2009 | Author: robincurry | Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: craftsmanship, design, katas, rails, tools | Comments Off
It’s a no comment Monday.
Popularity: 100% [?]
Posted: October 8th, 2009 | Author: robincurry | Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: design, ruby, sinatra | Comments Off
When I was in college my motto was “Sleep is for after college.” I didn’t know about kids.
Popularity: 91% [?]
Posted: October 6th, 2009 | Author: robincurry | Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: design, rails, sass | Comments Off
New math 101: At a big corporation it is mathematically possible (and quite normal) for one to be assigned to allocate 50% of their time to each of 3 or more projects.
- Dr Nic ’s Install any HTML theme/template into your Rails app
Really interesting stuff from Dr. Nic.
- How to Gemify your Rails Plugins
A good walkthrough of the steps you would take to turn your Rails plugin into a gem.
- mustache
A new framework-agnostic view replacement. I’m admittedly a bit obtuse – I’m just not sure what makes this better than erb or haml (which i prefer these days due to the conciseness). But, I’m sure some will find this to be right up their alley.
- formtastic-sass
sass mixins for use with the formtastic Rails plugin – a DSL for building Rails forms.
- Graph Paper | Konigi
Cool printable graphs for sketching out your designs. Paper is divided into 24 columns (+ gutters in between), which is perfect for designing with grid frameworks like Blueprint.
Popularity: 94% [?]
Posted: September 30th, 2009 | Author: robincurry | Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: design, jquery, ruby | Comments Off
Glad to see improvements to Github performance after the Big Move. Hope it continues.
Popularity: 96% [?]
Posted: September 29th, 2009 | Author: robincurry | Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: design, jquery, programming | Comments Off
Duct tape programming turns out to be a sticky meme.
- jwz – that “duct tape” silliness
A “meh” response from the actual “Duct-tape programmer” to which Joel refers.
- Quick Screencasting Using Quicktime X in Mac Snow Leopard
Could be a handy way to make a quick screencast if you don’t want to shell out for more heavy duty software.
- Lazy Load Plugin for jQuery
Images outside of the browser viewport are loaded only when needed.
- Github Migration Architecture
Part 1 in a series of in-depth posts by Github’s migration team regarding their new architecture.
- Microsoft’s grinning robots or the Brotherhood of the Mac. Which is worse?
A self-loathing diatribe mostly about Microsoft and the Windows 7 Parties campaign. Some choice quotes in this one. I liked – “The idea is that you invite a group of friends – your real friends – to your home – your real home – and entertain them with a series of Windows 7 tutorials. So you show them how to burn a CD, how to make a little video, how to change the wallpaper, and how to, oh no, hang on it’s not supposed to do that, oh, I think it’s frozen, um, er, let me just, um, no that’s not it, um, er, um, er, so how’s it going with you and Kathy anyway, um, er, OK well see you around I guess.”
Popularity: 22% [?]
Posted: September 24th, 2009 | Author: robincurry | Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: design | Comments Off
The problem with the Duct Tape Programmer theory is that every programmer that’s too lazy to test or learn design patterns or the other hard stuff in programming thinks *he* is one of these Duct Tape heroes, when really he’s trying to hold his code together with Scotch tape, calling it Duct tape and shipping it.
- The Duct Tape Programmer – Joel on Software
“Duct tape programmers are pragmatic. Zawinski popularized Richard Gabriel’s precept of Worse is Better. A 50%-good solution that people actually have solves more problems and survives longer than a 99% solution that nobody has because it’s in your lab where you’re endlessly polishing the damn thing. Shipping is a feature. A really important feature.”
- The Duct Tape Programmer – Response from Uncle Bob
“Now don’t get me wrong. I’m the “Clean Code” guy. I want your code clean. I don’t want you making a mess. On the other hand, I want you to ship. I don’t want you gilding the lilly. I don’t want you wrapped up in endless polishing. I want you to ship, but I don’t want you to ship sh*t.”
- PRESS RELEASE: 37SIGNALS VALUATION TOPS $100 BILLION AFTER BOLD VC INVESTMENT
“In order to increase the value of the company, 37signals has decided to stop generating revenues. “When it comes to valuation, making money is a real obstacle. Our profitability has been a real drag on our valuation,” said Mr. Fried. “Once you have profits, it’s impossible to just make stuff up.”
Popularity: 22% [?]