Spotify iPhone Application in action
This is Spotify’s in-development iPhone application. It’ll let you listen to Spotify from your iPhone
The online whiteboard of Kristofer Palmvik
This is Spotify’s in-development iPhone application. It’ll let you listen to Spotify from your iPhone
First presented at the Google Efficient Data Centers Summit, hosted at Google headquarters in Mountain View, CA on April 1, 2009.
Laser tag meets urban paintball in an epic battle against your friends, a heart pounding adventure that puts you and your iPhone or Android Phone directly in the line of fire.
Behind the scenes of the revolutionary new bootleg of the revolutionary new movie.
Awesome Mini Apple Store Tugs at Your Wallet Introduces children to the magic of Apple Includes store, figures, and 60+ accessories Use your own real iPhone 4 as the screen behind Steve Jobs in the Keynote Theater
IFS e-invoice solution powered by Pagero is the world's only ERP/workflow system that is fully integrated with a global network for secure document conversion and transfer.
SQL Kinection, an experimental project that allows you to control SQL Server 2012 with gestures using Microsoft Kinect. Watch as they create new databases and tables, conduct backups, drop databases, create Availability Groups, and perform manual fail overs -- all by using gestures!
The line between editorial content and advertising in news media is blurrier and blurrier. That’s not bullshit. It’s repurposed bovine waste
Problembaserat lärande (PBL) är en pedagogisk metod som lägger fokus på problemlösning. Utifrån ett givet scenario arbetar studenterna i små grupper där de själva ska komma fram till vilken kunskap som krävs för att lösa problemet. PBL används idag vid ett flertal utbildningar och universitet runt om i världen. Så även vid Linköpings Universitet. Trots detta känner många nya studenter sig osäkra på hur PBL fungerar. Detta ville psykologstudenten Nils Isacsson råda bot på. Han bestämde sig därför för att göra en film.
Most developers know enough about refactoring to write code that’s pretty good. They create short methods, and classes with one responsibility. They’re also familiar with a good handful of refactorings, and the code smells that motivate them.
JSConf is a series of JavaScript conferences from around the world and here we release the conference talk videos for free as fast as we can after every event.
I’ll explain how React is moving towards a minimal API surface area. Instead of providing many framework features, React is trying to utilize patterns, paradigms and JavaScript language features to accomplish the same tasks that other frameworks have dedicated APIs for.
Pete Hunt actually doesn't talk about the future of JavaScript layout systems. Instead, this talk is all about full-stack Flux.
In this specialization, you will learn how to design technologies that bring people joy, rather than frustration. You'll learn techniques for rapidly prototyping and evaluating interfaces; how to use these designs to get feedback from other stakeholders; how to conduct fieldwork unearth design ideas; principles of visual design; and how to perform and analyze experiments.
With Notegraphy, you can create beautifully formatted layouts in real-time. Be it a single word, or an entire novel, in only three steps -write, style and share-, your text will be ‘Always Beautiful’.
Repurposing HTML elements into custom widgets is common practice on the web, but making your widgets cross-platform and cross-device is another matter. HTML, CSS and JavaScript is only part of the story.
At React.js Conf last January, we introduced the idea of GraphQL: a data fetching language that allows clients to declaratively describe their data requirements. Let’s explore more of GraphQL, it’s core principles, how it works, and what makes it a powerful tool.
User experience is no longer just the remit of designers. Everything from server infrastructure, to API design, to button interactions, to the colours in the branding can effect the experience of the things we design and build.
Getting credential storage right is not easy. You may be using PKI correctly, you may be careful not to check passwords into your source code repository, but you need to put your secrets somewhere.
Feature flags are a quick win for development teams seeking a way to more rapidly release software but can create unexpected technical complexity.
British branding and design guru Paul Bennett explains that design doesn’t have to be about grand gestures, but can solve small, universal and overlooked problems.
Dropbox’s CSS codebase has grown to a considerable scale. Dan talks about how their CSS has grown, the pains of inheriting a large CSS codebase, and some of the approaches for refactoring and scaling CSS at scale.
Styleguides provide a useful means to visualize the components within your website, yet they are sometimes treated as second-class citizens that need extra work. In this talk I will discuss why component libraries are a good start and how that core idea can be expanded. I will show how to use a component library as a foundation for your application, how to formalise the transformation from data objects to visual components and why this helps speed up development and ensure visual consistency.
A somewhat hairy but totally barbaric look into building the behind the scenes site “Vikings – A World Revealed” for the History Channel. This talk will cover real world examples of how to use React to build performant, animation heavy, responsive sites while even getting designers involved on the development fun.
Plain text is boring. At Facebook, we want to give our users the ability to add mentions, emoticons, hashtags, styles, and embedded media within the content they share. The result is that nearly every input on Facebook requires rich text features.
Self-proclaimed “thought leader,” Pat Kelly gives his talk on “thought leadership” at the annual This Is That Talks in Whistler, B.C. In the seminar, Kelly covers: How to talk with your hands, how to get a standing ovation, and how to inspire people by saying nothing at all.
Nicolas Gruegoire. From AppSecEU 2015 in Amsterdam
A fun and interesting talk about the HTTP protocol, strategies for versioning APIs, etags and much more.
...or how bend npm3 to your will
Have you ever felt like a fraud and the whole world is going to find out that you’re really not as competent as other people think? Do you feel like your success is because of luck or timing but not your own skills? Then you are not alone! This concept is well known and is called the Impostor Syndrome. It’s not limited to software development but it’s very common in our field.
Not every piece of data on the page is critical to the user experience. The front-end of your site (i.e. front-end applications, templates, and user interface) needs to be designed to tolerate service outages.
We all know advertisers on the internet are stalking us, but Kirk Grogan shows us that marketers now have the power to change not just our buying behaviors, but our beliefs.
Cascadia Ruby Conf 2012 Therapeutic Refactoring by Katrina Owen
Let’s consider the time it takes to go from agreeing to do something to a customer receiving value. It may come as a surprise, but most of that time is not spent working. It’s spent waiting.
Som ett led i att hantera beroenden mellan olika team provade vi 2014 att genomföra en ”tech-sprint”, helt skilt från ordinarie produktbackloggar och helt utvecklardrivet. Tre år senare har konceptet vuxit till två årliga ”SVTi-sprintar”, där utvecklarna fortfarande helt ansvarar för innehållet – och resultatet mer handlar om innovation än att hantera beroenden.
Kevin Dame, Head of Product Visioning
The one compliment I do not like is "good girl", says entrepreneur, tech investor and equality advocate Camilla Lundin. By treating boys and girls differently we discourage girls from taking risks, so they are less likely to become entrepreneurs.
The Moment where Gary got established as a Sales Meme
Looking to shift from a project-based to a product-focused approach in the B2B SaaS space? This talk breaks down the eight common challenges companies face during this change.
In this episode of the Distributed podcast, host Jack Hannah chats with Tim Ottinger, aka the Agile Otter, about how to manage and organize the work. Among other things, Tim is a Senior Consultant at Industrial Logic, contributor to the book Clean Code, and active presence online. Jack and Tim explore various ways to work in teams instead of solo and the various benefits they offer.
So close and yet so far. We see similar behaviors in The Forest & The Desert, but with opposite meanings. Similar words but opposite meanings. Superficially similar goals but working out at completely different scales. What is The Forest? What is The Desert? Why are they so different, despite the similarities? And how can we get from crumbs to cake and stay there?
Code reviews are not about catching bugs. Modern code reviews are about socialization, learning, and teaching. How can you get the most out of a peer's code review and how can you review code without being seen as overly critical? Reviewing code and writing easily-reviewed features are skills that will make you a better developer and a better teammate. You will leave this talk with the tools to implement a successful code-review culture. You'll learn how to get more from the reviews you're already getting and how to have more impact with the reviews you leave.