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The Apple Archive
The Apple Archive
Dedicated to the unsung studio designers, copywriters, producers, ADs, CDs, and everyone else who creates wonderful things. Dedicated to those who stayed up late and got up early to get on the family iMac to recreate event slides in Keynote. Thank you.
·applearchive.org·
The Apple Archive
Online Culture Wars
Online Culture Wars
The map Online Culture Wars is an overlay of hundreds of politicized memes, along with influential political figures and symbols. It is designed as a discussion starter, intended to visualize and contextualize the ongoing online culture wars, and some of the main political references, actors, and influencers.
·disnovation.org·
Online Culture Wars
Move Fast & Don’t Break Things by Scott Jehl
Move Fast & Don’t Break Things by Scott Jehl
So there’s this old saying in our industry that bold, and successful web development is about Moving Fast & Breaking Things. It comes from a more naive time on the web, when people were advocating being a little wreckless in the name of innovation. These days, the sentiment isn’t as celebrated.
·filamentgroup.com·
Move Fast & Don’t Break Things by Scott Jehl
Sion | Sono Motors
Sion | Sono Motors
An amazing and ethically/environmentally responsible car concept which might be much more than a concept next September.
·sonomotors.com·
Sion | Sono Motors
Pixels vs. Relative Units in CSS: why it’s still a big deal
Pixels vs. Relative Units in CSS: why it’s still a big deal
The most important reason for using responsive and unitless values in our CSS is for supporting our users that rely on zooming. If you read the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines, our users need to be able to zoom the viewport without loss of content or functionality, or restrictions imposed by CSS values or viewport scaling settings.
·24a11y.com·
Pixels vs. Relative Units in CSS: why it’s still a big deal
Opinion | Twelve Million Phones, One Dataset, Zero Privacy - The New York Times
Opinion | Twelve Million Phones, One Dataset, Zero Privacy - The New York Times
The Times Privacy Project obtained one such file, by far the largest and most sensitive ever to be reviewed by journalists. It holds more than 50 billion location pings from the phones of more than 12 million Americans as they moved through several major cities, including Washington, New York, San Francisco and Los Angeles.
·nytimes.com·
Opinion | Twelve Million Phones, One Dataset, Zero Privacy - The New York Times
Oh Shit, Git!?!
Oh Shit, Git!?!
Git is hard: screwing up is easy, and figuring out how to fix your mistakes is fucking impossible. Git documentation has this chicken and egg problem where you can't search for how to get yourself out of a mess, unless you already know the name of the thing you need to know about in order to fix your problem.
·ohshitgit.com·
Oh Shit, Git!?!
Another Blue Beanie Day
Another Blue Beanie Day
Thanks for showing up every day to try to make the web a little better. Thanks for your optimism, especially when it gets harder to stay positive. You make an inclusive web possible.
·zeldman.com·
Another Blue Beanie Day
Scaling SVG Elements
Scaling SVG Elements
The element is a telescope into another world.
·wattenberger.com·
Scaling SVG Elements
Variations on Theme: Reinventing Type on the Web
Variations on Theme: Reinventing Type on the Web
Variable fonts are an evolution of the OpenType font specification that allows a single file to contain all of the variations of width, weight, slant, italics, and virtually any other permutation of a typeface the type designer want’s to expose—all in a single file.
·css-tricks.com·
Variations on Theme: Reinventing Type on the Web
Dark patterns : quelle grille de lecture pour les réguler ?
Dark patterns : quelle grille de lecture pour les réguler ?
Alors que les designs trompeurs sont de plus en plus portés à l’attention du public, la question de leur possible régulation se pose, bien qu’il ne soit pas simple de démontrer le caractère fondamentalement manipulateur d’un élément composant une interface.
·linc.cnil.fr·
Dark patterns : quelle grille de lecture pour les réguler ?
Quitting Analytics
Quitting Analytics
Some time ago, I removed all the tracking from my personal site, and I haven’t missed it.
·garrettdimon.com·
Quitting Analytics
Font style matcher
Font style matcher
This tool helps you minimize the discrepancy (FOUC) by trying to match the fallback font and the intended webfont.
·meowni.ca·
Font style matcher
Accessibility Support
Accessibility Support
Will your code work with assistive technologies? This community-driven website aims to help inform developers about what is accessibility supported.
·a11ysupport.io·
Accessibility Support
Spacing, Grids and Layouts
Spacing, Grids and Layouts
The organization of space is key to every great design. Spatial systems, grids, and layouts provide rules that give your designs a consistent rhythm, constrain decision making, and help teams stay aligned. This foundational scaffolding is a requirement for all design systems. In this guide, we’ll walk through the basics of defining spatial base units, creating relationship rules with grids, and bringing it all together for modern UI layouts.
·designsystems.com·
Spacing, Grids and Layouts
“Variable Fonts and the Future of Web Typography” by Jason Pamental—An Event Apart video
“Variable Fonts and the Future of Web Typography” by Jason Pamental—An Event Apart video
Variable fonts include EVERY width, weight, slant, and other permutation of a typeface, all in a single file not much bigger than a regular font file. In this hour-long presentation captured live at An Event Apart Orlando 2018, Jason Pamental delves into the ins and outs of variable fonts, showing you not just how far the new capabilities can take us, but how to make use of them right away.
·aneventapart.com·
“Variable Fonts and the Future of Web Typography” by Jason Pamental—An Event Apart video
Jeremy Keith - Building The Web - View Source 2019
Jeremy Keith - Building The Web - View Source 2019
@adactio shares his insights on the current state of the web and web development and its complexity. Expectations of the web have changed : people expect the web to be terrible (especially on mobile). You can do more with less today, but we don't always choose to do so. Fondamental stuff is not (aways) a technology. The goal of any good framework or library should be to make itself redundant. Our priority should always be what is going to make life easier for the user. The worse thing we can do is to assume things are inevitable (FB, Google), but that is just the way things have turned out. They can change. Let's have the imagination of how things could be different. “I am afraid for the web. When I'm done with all this, and when I look around and all the people making websites look like me, then I think we will have failed.”
·youtube.com·
Jeremy Keith - Building The Web - View Source 2019