Use Cases and Requirements for Standardizing Responsive Images
This document captures the use cases and requirements for standardizing a solution for responsive images
Use Cases and Requirements for Standardizing Responsive Images
This document captures the use cases and requirements for standardizing a solution for responsive images
“But is it really good ol’ ’shine?”
Josh Sanburn on the resurgence of moonshine — yes, moonshine:
As moonshine creeps into the mainstream, however, there are some in Appalachia who question whether a spirit that’s aboveboard — and regulated and taxed by the government – can truly be considered moonshine. It may be unaged whiskey. But is it really good ol’ ’shine?
“I think there are people out there who feel that if you’re paying taxes on it, it’s not moonshine,” says Ole Smoky’s Baker. “And sure, if you pay taxes, you lose a little bit of credibility. But I think most folks — certainly people who are familiar with how we make our products and people who have been to our distillery — they see that we do it the same way that it’s been done around here forever.”
Timed Notifications with CSS Animations | Codrops
Simple timed notifications created with CSS animations
Sass Style Guide by @chriscoyier
A style guide for building Sass files
More examples of really bad computer stuff from Hollywood.
Hollywood really botches the computer stuff.
Happy Memorial Day
A photo of my grandfather’s gravesite, taken Memorial Day weekend 2002
New Apple ad. Similar to the previous one; no narration, just shows people with an iPhone.
The new Flickr: Goodbye customers, hello ads | TechHive
Derek Powazek on the changes at Flickr:
Flickr’s design has been at war with whitespace since last year’s introduction of the “justified” view. This redesign ramps up that trend. Every pixel that could be filled with a photo has been, from corner to corner, often (but inconsistently) with infinite scrolling.
Until, that is, you scroll down an individual photo’s page, or wander into a part of the site that hasn’t been updated (like settings or uploading an avatar or the help forum). Then all of a sudden you’re back in Flickr’s old design, which is a jarring change. These pages will probably get updated eventually, but launching with these kind of omissions shows where Yahoo’s priorities lie, and it’s not with the community features that made Flickr famous.