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Aaron Gustafson joins us back on PodRocket to talk about PWAs in 2023, the opportunities for AI in accessibility, and more. Links https://www.aaron-gustafson.com https://twitter.com/AaronGustafson https://www.linkedin.com/in/aarongustafson Tell us what you think of PodRocket We want to hear from you! We want to know what you love and hate about the podcast. What do you want to hear more about? Who do you want to see on the show? Our producers want to know, and if you talk with us, we'll send you a $25 gift card! If you're interested, schedule a call with us (https://podrocket.logrocket.com/contact-us) or you can email producer Kate Trahan at kate@logrocket.com (mailto:kate@logrocket.com) Follow us. Get free stickers. Follow us on Apple Podcasts, fill out this form (https://podrocket.logrocket.com/get-podrocket-stickers), and we'll send you free PodRocket stickers! What does LogRocket do? LogRocket combines frontend monitoring, product analytics, and session replay to help software teams deliver the ideal product experience. Try LogRocket for free today. (https://logrocket.com/signup/?pdr) Special Guest: Aaron Gustafson.
We talk to Aaron Gustafson, author, speaker, Principal Program Manager on the Microsoft Edge team, and long-time web standards advocate, about progressive web apps. Listen now. Links https://twitter.com/aarongustafson (https://twitter.com/aarongustafson) https://www.w3.org (https://www.w3.org) https://alistapart.com (https://alistapart.com) https://www.pwabuilder.com (https://www.pwabuilder.com) https://abookapart.com/products/design-for-safety (https://abookapart.com/products/design-for-safety) https://abookapart.com/products/going-offline (https://abookapart.com/products/going-offline) https://abookapart.com/products/progressive-web-apps (https://abookapart.com/products/progressive-web-apps) https://www.aaron-gustafson.com/publications (https://www.aaron-gustafson.com/publications) Contact us https://podrocket.logrocket.com/contact-us (https://podrocket.logrocket.com/contact-us) @PodRocketpod (https://twitter.com/PodRocketpod) What does LogRocket do? LogRocket combines frontend monitoring, product analytics, and session replay to help software teams deliver the ideal product experience. Try LogRocket for free today. (https://logrocket.com/signup?pdr) Special Guest: Aaron Gustafson.
Aaron Gustafson is a Principal Program Manager on the Microsoft Edge team, focused on their work on Progressive Web Apps and developer UX. He's also a spec editor at the W3C and Editor-in-chief of A List Apart. Aaron joins Luke and Jonathan to talk about the Open Web and share his perspective (and some guidance) with the WordPress community.
Aaron Gustafson is a Principal Program Manager on the Microsoft Edge team, focused on their work on Progressive Web Apps and developer UX. He’s also a spec editor at the W3C and Editor-in-chief of A List Apart. Aaron joins Luke and Jonathan to talk about the Open Web and share his perspective (and some guidance) […]
Tanto tempo nelle live per intrattenere: puo' essere il mio modello ?Se riusciamo a interagire insieme si'.Cosa ne pensi di quello che ho registrato per te oggi ?Ti aspetto sul gruppo Telegram o in chat privata.Caffe20.it: dal 2008 la visione d'insieme sulla tecnologia. Il podcast piu' longevo d'Italia- Sito: www.caffe20.it- Email: info@caffe20.it- News Telegram: t.me/caffe20- Feed rss: www.caffe20.it/rssDonazioni e membership riservate:- Donazioni: www.caffe20.it- Contenuti riservati: https://it.tipeee.com/caffe20it/Community:- Il gruppo dei caffeinomani: t.me/caffe20groupDirette quotidiane annunciate sul gruppo Telegram:- Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/iusondemand- Twitter: https://twitter.com/IusOnDemand- Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/IusOnDemand- YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/IusOnDemand/videos- Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/watch/live/- Voice conference sul canale Telegram del Caffe20: t.me/caffe20groupHardware:- Webcam 60fps: https://amzn.to/3i3xBc7- Webcam 30fps: https://amzn.to/3p5g4BG- Microfono USB da scrivania: https://amzn.to/3yTcjUn- Microfono USB portatile: https://amzn.to/3p6sSI6- Microfono direzionale smartphone e tablet tramite jack: https://amzn.to/3fBp6Dy- Macchina fotografica: https://amzn.to/3p3dpZoLibri preferiti:- Checklist di Atul Gawande, https://amzn.to/34zaE8O- Artificiale intelligence di. Alessandro Vitale: https://amzn.to/3uBJtVk- Web design adattivo di Aaron Gustafson: https://amzn.to/3uBJKYmChi siamo:- Caffe20.it il podcast piu' longevo d'Italia: - dal 2008 senza interruzioni; - host Valentino Spataro;- oltre 2.000 episodi;- ogni mattina un nuovo episodio.Podcast (anche per Alexa):- Caffe20.it : - tecnologia e visione d'insieme- caffe20.it/rss - Privacykit.it : - Podcast privacy (un minuto ogni pochi giorni)- https://www.spreaker.com/show/the-privacy-podcast_1- Diritto per podcaster:- A domanda, risposta- https://www.spreaker.com/show/diritto-e-podcasterContatti:- IusOnDemand srl- Email: info@caffe20.it- Messaggistica diretta: t.me/iusondemand- Sito aziendale: iusondemand.com
Condizioni d'uso fermano tutto ? Sonos chiede al legislatore di fare qualcosa ...https://www.smartworld.it/tecnologia/sonos-google-amazon-alexa-assistant-nellocchio-del-ciclone.htmlCaffe20.it: dal 2008 la visione d'insieme sulla tecnologia. Il podcast piu' longevo d'Italia- Sito: www.caffe20.it- Email: info@caffe20.it- News Telegram: t.me/caffe20- Feed rss: www.caffe20.it/rssDonazioni e membership riservate:- Donazioni: www.caffe20.it- Contenuti riservati: https://it.tipeee.com/caffe20it/Community:- Il gruppo dei caffeinomani: t.me/caffe20groupDirette quotidiane annunciate sul gruppo Telegram:- Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/iusondemand- Twitter: https://twitter.com/IusOnDemand- Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/IusOnDemand- YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/IusOnDemand/videos- Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/watch/live/- Voice conference sul canale Telegram del Caffe20: t.me/caffe20groupHardware:- Webcam 60fps: https://amzn.to/3i3xBc7- Webcam 30fps: https://amzn.to/3p5g4BG- Microfono USB da scrivania: https://amzn.to/3yTcjUn- Microfono USB portatile: https://amzn.to/3p6sSI6- Microfono direzionale smartphone e tablet tramite jack: https://amzn.to/3fBp6Dy- Macchina fotografica: https://amzn.to/3p3dpZoLibri preferiti:- Checklist di Atul Gawande, https://amzn.to/34zaE8O- Artificiale intelligence di. Alessandro Vitale: https://amzn.to/3uBJtVk- Web design adattivo di Aaron Gustafson: https://amzn.to/3uBJKYmChi siamo:- Caffe20.it il podcast piu' longevo d'Italia: - dal 2008 senza interruzioni; - host Valentino Spataro;- oltre 2.000 episodi;- ogni mattina un nuovo episodio.Podcast (anche per Alexa):- Caffe20.it : - tecnologia e visione d'insieme- caffe20.it/rss - Privacykit.it : - Podcast privacy (un minuto ogni pochi giorni)- https://www.spreaker.com/show/the-privacy-podcast_1- Diritto per podcaster:- A domanda, risposta- https://www.spreaker.com/show/diritto-e-podcasterContatti:- IusOnDemand srl- Email: info@caffe20.it- Messaggistica diretta: t.me/iusondemand- Sito aziendale: iusondemand.com
Il mitico WikiHow spiega le tre procedure: https://www.wikihow.com/Reinstall-WindowsE' interessante scoprire che Windows cerca di salvare i dati, ma io non ci credo molto.Pero' reinstallare Windows 10 e' possibile, e credo che la licenza venga recuperata.Se pero' qualcuno vi chiede di farlo ... negate tutto, sempre, ad oltranza !Ps: non e' necessario avere un vicino con il trapano ... ! Basta a me ...Corsi:- Creare podcast dal primo giorno: https://area.caffe20.it/corso/podcasting-creare-podcast-dal-primo-giorno/- Gestione delle password: https://www.udemy.com/course/accedere-a-pc-e-telefoni-in-caso-di-emergenza/?referralCode=06539C8A7F5243EB757F- Le basi del GDPR: https://www.udemy.com/course/le-basi-operative-del-gdpr/?referralCode=0724D923EDC9EA48438C- Diritto d'autore per influencer: https://www.udemy.com/course/copyright-creators/?referralCode=14DDBCF36BA3D6509D76- Software della CNIL per realizzare le DPIA: https://www.iusondemand.com/doc/Guida_video_in_italiano_all_uso_del_software_della_CNIL_con_esempi_di_DPIA---95361Caffe20.it: dal 2008 la visione d'insieme sulla tecnologia. Il podcast piu' longevo d'Italia- Sito: www.caffe20.it- Email: info@caffe20.it- News Telegram: t.me/caffe20- Feed rss: www.caffe20.it/rssDonazioni e membership riservate:- Donazioni: www.caffe20.it- Contenuti riservati: https://it.tipeee.com/caffe20it/Community:- Il gruppo dei caffeinomani: t.me/caffe20group- Discord: https://discord.gg/Y4s7972Dirette quotidiane annunciate sul gruppo Telegram:- Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/iusondemand- Twitter: https://twitter.com/IusOnDemand- Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/IusOnDemand- YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/IusOnDemand/videos- Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/watch/live/- Voice conference sul canale Telegram del Caffe20: t.me/caffe20groupHardware:- Webcam 60fps: https://amzn.to/3i3xBc7- Webcam 30fps: https://amzn.to/3p5g4BG- Microfono USB da scrivania: https://amzn.to/3yTcjUn- Microfono USB portatile: https://amzn.to/3p6sSI6- Microfono direzionale smartphone e tablet tramite jack: https://amzn.to/3fBp6Dy- Macchina fotografica: https://amzn.to/3p3dpZoLibri preferiti:- Checklist di Atul Gawande, https://amzn.to/34zaE8O- Artificiale intelligence di. Alessandro Vitale: https://amzn.to/3uBJtVk- Web design adattivo di Aaron Gustafson: https://amzn.to/3uBJKYmChi siamo:- Caffe20.it il podcast piu' longevo d'Italia: - dal 2008 senza interruzioni; - host Valentino Spataro;- oltre 2.000 episodi;- ogni mattina un nuovo episodio.
Hai un prodotto, lo stati ancora creando per presentarlo al meglio. E pensi a tutti i consigli che improvvisamente sono tutto e l'opposto di tutto, ma non sono validi per problemi fiscali o legali.E allora, come muoverti ?Questo e' il momento di stringere e mettere a fuoco quello in cui tu credi: nel prodotto e nella sua capacità di risolvere concreti problemi ai tuoi clienti.Fidelizzazione ? Forse. Dico una eresia ? Ni. Ci vuole. Ma non necessariamente come tutti dicono.Corsi:- Creare podcast dal primo giorno: https://area.caffe20.it/corso/podcasting-creare-podcast-dal-primo-giorno/- Gestione delle password: https://www.udemy.com/course/accedere-a-pc-e-telefoni-in-caso-di-emergenza/?referralCode=06539C8A7F5243EB757F- Le basi del GDPR: https://www.udemy.com/course/le-basi-operative-del-gdpr/?referralCode=0724D923EDC9EA48438C- Diritto d'autore per influencer: https://www.udemy.com/course/copyright-creators/?referralCode=14DDBCF36BA3D6509D76- Software della CNIL per realizzare le DPIA: https://www.iusondemand.com/doc/Guida_video_in_italiano_all_uso_del_software_della_CNIL_con_esempi_di_DPIA---95361Caffe20.it: dal 2008 la visione d'insieme sulla tecnologia. Il podcast piu' longevo d'Italia- Sito: www.caffe20.it- Email: info@caffe20.it- News Telegram: t.me/caffe20- Feed rss: www.caffe20.it/rssDonazioni e membership riservate:- Donazioni: www.caffe20.it- Contenuti riservati: https://it.tipeee.com/caffe20it/Community:- Il gruppo dei caffeinomani: t.me/caffe20group- Discord: https://discord.gg/Y4s7972Dirette quotidiane annunciate sul gruppo Telegram:- Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/iusondemand- Twitter: https://twitter.com/IusOnDemand- Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/IusOnDemand- YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/IusOnDemand/videos- Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/watch/live/- Voice conference sul canale Telegram del Caffe20: t.me/caffe20groupHardware:- Webcam 60fps: https://amzn.to/3i3xBc7- Webcam 30fps: https://amzn.to/3p5g4BG- Microfono USB da scrivania: https://amzn.to/3yTcjUn- Microfono USB portatile: https://amzn.to/3p6sSI6- Microfono direzionale smartphone e tablet tramite jack: https://amzn.to/3fBp6Dy- Macchina fotografica: https://amzn.to/3p3dpZoLibri preferiti:- Checklist di Atul Gawande, https://amzn.to/34zaE8O- Artificiale intelligence di. Alessandro Vitale: https://amzn.to/3uBJtVk- Web design adattivo di Aaron Gustafson: https://amzn.to/3uBJKYmChi siamo:- Caffe20.it il podcast piu' longevo d'Italia: - dal 2008 senza interruzioni; - host Valentino Spataro;- oltre 2.000 episodi;- ogni mattina un nuovo episodio.
Puntatona straordinaria.Ester Memeo e' una bravissima podcaster, entusiasta del mezzo e con una voce fantastica.Abbiamo parlato del piu' e del meno ma poi ci siamo buttati a leggere un testo che ho scelto per l'occasione, un po' a caso, un po' perche' Fedro e' sempre attuale.E' una fiaba sull'invidia, di Fedro.La rana vuole essere piu' grande del bue, e se ne vanta con tutti, finche' ... scoppia !Ora il testo e' banale, ma ci siamo divertiti a confrontare nel nostre due voci e riflettere su quanto sia impossibile copiare o anche solo imitare un podcast: la voce e l'intenzione sono sempre unici, e cambiano ogni momento.In chiusura abbiamo parlato dei RING, una idea geniale per far conoscere i podcast degli amici ai nostri lettori, semplicemente condividendo un vocale di 30 secondi nel gruppo Telegram frequentato dai podcaster.Insomma: 15 minuti di lucida follia, con il botto finale ! Quello della Rana ... Caffe20.it podcast: la visione d'insieme sulla tecnologia- Sito: www.caffe20.it- Email: info@caffe20.itDonazioni e membership riservate:- Donazioni: www.caffe20.it- Donazioni e contenuti riservati: https://it.tipeee.com/caffe20it/- Corsi e contenuti premium: area.caffe20.itCorsi:- Podcasting: creare podcast dal primo giorno: https://area.caffe20.it/corso/podcasting-creare-podcast-dal-primo-giorno/Community:- Il gruppo dei caffeinomani: t.me/caffe20group- Discord: https://discord.gg/Y4s7972Annunci novità:- News Telegram: t.me/caffe20- Feed rss: www.caffe20.it/rssDirette quotidiane annunciate sul gruppo Telegram:- Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/iusondemand- Twitter: https://twitter.com/IusOnDemand- Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/IusOnDemand- YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/IusOnDemand/videos- Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/watch/live/- Voice conference sul canale Telegram del Caffe20: t.me/caffe20groupConsulenze:- Privacy: www.privacykit.it- Ecommerce: www.ecommercekit.it- Diritto di internet: www.civile.it/internet- Checkup siti: www.sitieassistenza.itPodcast (anche per Alexa):- Caffe20.it : - tecnologia e visione d'insieme- caffe20.it/rss - Privacykit.it : - Podcast privacy (un minuto ogni pochi giorni)- https://www.spreaker.com/show/the-privacy-podcast_1- Diritto per podcaster:- A domanda, risposta- https://www.spreaker.com/show/diritto-e-podcasterHardware:- Webcam 60fps: https://amzn.to/3i3xBc7- Webcam 30fps: https://amzn.to/3p5g4BG- Microfono USB da scrivania: https://amzn.to/3yTcjUn- Microfono USB portatile: https://amzn.to/3p6sSI6- Microfono direzionale smartphone e tablet tramite jack: https://amzn.to/3fBp6Dy- Macchina fotografica: https://amzn.to/3p3dpZoLibri preferiti:- Checklist di Atul Gawande, https://amzn.to/34zaE8O- Artificiale intelligence di. Alessandro Vitale: https://amzn.to/3uBJtVk- Web design adattivo di Aaron Gustafson: https://amzn.to/3uBJKYmChi siamo:- Caffe20.it il podcast piu' longevo d'Italia: - dal 2008 senza interruzioni; - host Valentino Spataro;- oltre 2.000 episodi;- ogni mattina un nuovo episodio.Contatti:- IusOnDemand srl- Email: info@caffe20.it- Messaggistica diretta: t.me/iusondemand- Sito aziendale: iusondemand.com
Come si parla di algoritmi sui mass media ?Male. Con diffidenza, terrore e rassegnazione.Pero' il nostro algoritmo legge prelegge postlegge e ci dice che ...Fonti: - https://www.ilgiornale.it/news/politica/arriva-lalgoritmo-che-ci-dir-se-ci-comportiamo-evasori-1952809.html- https://www.autoritedelaconcurrence.fr/fr/communiques-de-presse/lautorite-de-la-concurrence-sanctionne-google-hauteur-de-220-millions-deurosCaffe20.it podcast: la visione d'insieme sulla tecnologia- Sito: www.caffe20.it- Email: info@caffe20.itDonazioni e membership riservate:- Donazioni: www.caffe20.it- Donazioni e contenuti riservati: https://it.tipeee.com/caffe20it/- Corsi e contenuti premium: area.caffe20.itCorsi:- Podcasting: creare podcast dal primo giorno: https://area.caffe20.it/corso/podcasting-creare-podcast-dal-primo-giorno/Community:- Il gruppo dei caffeinomani: t.me/caffe20group- Discord: https://discord.gg/Y4s7972Annunci novità:- News Telegram: t.me/caffe20- Feed rss: www.caffe20.it/rssDirette quotidiane annunciate sul gruppo Telegram:- Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/iusondemand- Twitter: https://twitter.com/IusOnDemand- Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/IusOnDemand- YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/IusOnDemand/videos- Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/watch/live/- Voice conference sul canale Telegram del Caffe20: t.me/caffe20groupConsulenze:- Privacy: www.privacykit.it- Ecommerce: www.ecommercekit.it- Diritto di internet: www.civile.it/internet- Checkup siti: www.sitieassistenza.itPodcast (anche per Alexa):- Caffe20.it : - tecnologia e visione d'insieme- caffe20.it/rss - Privacykit.it : - Podcast privacy (un minuto ogni pochi giorni)- https://www.spreaker.com/show/the-privacy-podcast_1- Diritto per podcaster:- A domanda, risposta- https://www.spreaker.com/show/diritto-e-podcasterHardware:- Webcam 60fps: https://amzn.to/3i3xBc7- Webcam 30fps: https://amzn.to/3p5g4BG- Microfono USB da scrivania: https://amzn.to/3yTcjUn- Microfono USB portatile: https://amzn.to/3p6sSI6- Microfono direzionale smartphone e tablet tramite jack: https://amzn.to/3fBp6Dy- Macchina fotografica: https://amzn.to/3p3dpZoLibri preferiti:- Checklist di Atul Gawande, https://amzn.to/34zaE8O- Artificiale intelligence di. Alessandro Vitale: https://amzn.to/3uBJtVk- Web design adattivo di Aaron Gustafson: https://amzn.to/3uBJKYmChi siamo:- Caffe20.it il podcast piu' longevo d'Italia: - dal 2008 senza interruzioni; - host Valentino Spataro;- oltre 2.000 episodi;- ogni mattina un nuovo episodio.Contatti:- IusOnDemand srl- Email: info@caffe20.it- Messaggistica diretta: t.me/iusondemand- Sito aziendale: iusondemand.comDicono di noi:- Gianluigi: "se domani dovrò prendere decisioni importanti sarà grazie anche a te se saprò vedere le cose nell'insieme"- Gianluigi: "Caffe20 è il senso critico verso i mezzi informatici, oltre il marketing"I link ad Amazon sono affiliati
Sempre online ? No. Difenditi, ecco le mie tecnicheCaffe20.it podcast: la visione d'insieme sulla tecnologia- Sito: www.caffe20.it- Email: info@caffe20.itDonazioni e membership riservate:- Donazioni: www.caffe20.it- Donazioni e contenuti riservati: https://it.tipeee.com/caffe20it/- Corsi e contenuti premium: area.caffe20.itCorsi:- Podcasting: creare podcast dal primo giorno: https://area.caffe20.it/corso/podcasting-creare-podcast-dal-primo-giorno/Community:- Il gruppo dei caffeinomani: t.me/caffe20group- Discord: https://discord.gg/Y4s7972Annunci novità:- News Telegram: t.me/caffe20- Feed rss: www.caffe20.it/rssDirette quotidiane annunciate sul gruppo Telegram:- Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/iusondemand- Twitter: https://twitter.com/IusOnDemand- Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/IusOnDemand- YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/IusOnDemand/videos- Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/watch/live/- Voice conference sul canale Telegram del Caffe20: t.me/caffe20groupConsulenze:- Privacy: www.privacykit.it- Ecommerce: www.ecommercekit.it- Diritto di internet: www.civile.it/internet- Checkup siti: www.sitieassistenza.itPodcast (anche per Alexa):- Caffe20.it : - tecnologia e visione d'insieme - caffe20.it/rss - Privacykit.it : - Podcast privacy (un minuto ogni pochi giorni) - https://www.spreaker.com/show/the-privacy-podcast_1- Diritto per podcaster: - A domanda, risposta - https://www.spreaker.com/show/diritto-e-podcasterHardware:- Webcam 60fps: https://amzn.to/3i3xBc7- Webcam 30fps: https://amzn.to/3p5g4BG- Microfono USB da scrivania: https://amzn.to/3yTcjUn- Microfono USB portatile: https://amzn.to/3p6sSI6- Microfono direzionale smartphone e tablet tramite jack: https://amzn.to/3fBp6Dy- Macchina fotografica: https://amzn.to/3p3dpZoLibri preferiti:- Checklist di Atul Gawande, https://amzn.to/34zaE8O- Artificiale intelligence di. Alessandro Vitale: https://amzn.to/3uBJtVk- Web design adattivo di Aaron Gustafson: https://amzn.to/3uBJKYmChi siamo:- Caffe20.it il podcast piu' longevo d'Italia: - dal 2008 senza interruzioni; - host Valentino Spataro;- oltre 2.000 episodi;- ogni mattina un nuovo episodio.Contatti:- IusOnDemand srl- Email: info@caffe20.it- Messaggistica diretta: t.me/iusondemand- Sito aziendale: iusondemand.comDicono di noi:- Gianluigi: "se domani dovrò prendere decisioni importanti sarà grazie anche a te se saprò vedere le cose nell'insieme"- Gianluigi: "Caffe20 è il senso critico verso i mezzi informatici, oltre il marketing"I link ad Amazon sono affiliati
Immudb e oceanbase.Cosa fanno ? Non cambiano nulla, oppure si autoriparano...!Caffe20.it podcast: la visione d'insieme sulla tecnologiaEcco le risorse:- Donazioni: www.caffe20.it- Corsi e contenuti premium: area.caffe20.it- Sito: www.caffe20.it- Email: info@caffe20.itCommunity:- Il gruppo dei caffeinomani: t.me/caffe20groupAnnunci novità:- News Telegram: t.me/caffe20- Feed rss: www.caffe20.it/rssDirette quotidiane annunciate sul gruppo Telegram:- Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/iusondemand/?lipi=urn%3Ali%3Apage%3Ad_flagship3_feed%3BZKVcPke4RQagEYLDcaAa7g%3D%3D- Twitter: https://twitter.com/IusOnDemand- Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/IusOnDemand- YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/IusOnDemand/videos- Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/watch/live/- Voice conference sul canale Telegram del Caffe20: t.me/caffe20groupConsulenze:- Privacy: www.privacykit.it- Ecommerce: www.ecommercekit.it- Diritto di internet: www.civile.it/internet- Checkup siti: www.sitieassistenza.itPodcast (anche per Alexa):- Caffe20.it : - tecnologia e visione d'insieme- caffe20.it/rss - Privacykit.it : - Podcast privacy (un minuto ogni pochi giorni)- https://www.spreaker.com/show/the-privacy-podcast_1- Diritto per podcaster:- A domanda, risposta- https://www.spreaker.com/show/diritto-e-podcasterHardware:- Webcam 60fps: https://amzn.to/3i3xBc7- Webcam 30fps: https://amzn.to/3p5g4BG- Microfono USB da scrivania: https://amzn.to/3yTcjUn- Microfono USB portatile: https://amzn.to/3p6sSI6- Microfono direzionale smartphone e tablet tramite jack: https://amzn.to/3fBp6Dy- Macchina fotografica: https://amzn.to/3p3dpZoLibri preferiti:- Checklist di Atul Gawande, https://amzn.to/34zaE8O- Artificiale intelligence di. Alessandro Vitale: https://amzn.to/3uBJtVk- Web design adattivo di Aaron Gustafson: https://amzn.to/3uBJKYmChi siamo:- Caffe20.it il podcast piu' longevo d'Italia: - dal 2008 senza interruzioni; - host Valentino Spataro;- oltre 2.000 episodi;- ogni mattina un nuovo episodio.Contatti:- IusOnDemand srl- Email: info@caffe20.it- Messaggistica diretta: t.me/iusondemand- Sito aziendale: iusondemand.comDicono di noi:- Gianluigi: "se domani dovrò prendere decisioni importanti sarà grazie anche a te se saprò vedere le cose nell'insieme"- Gianluigi: "Caffe20 è il senso critico verso i mezzi informatici, oltre il marketing"I link ad Amazon sono affiliati
Special guest and long-time web standards advocate Aaron Gustafson joins the program. He's the author of the seminal book [Adaptive Web Design](https://adaptivewebdesign.info), and we discuss the challenges and opportunities made available with today's Progressive Web Apps.
Special guest and long-time web standards advocate Aaron Gustafson joins the program. He's the author of the seminal book [Adaptive Web Design](https://adaptivewebdesign.info), and we discuss the challenges and opportunities made available with today's Progressive Web Apps.
This week Aaron Gustafson joins us to talk about progress enhancement and how it can make everyone's lives easier. It is becoming more and more important to make apps accessible and performant regardless of what browser, OS or network your end users have. Aaron provides several examples and suggestions on incorporating progress enhancement into your development. Join us and learn how we can make the web for everyone. Panel Shawn Clabough Caleb Wells Wai Liu Guest Aaron Gustafson Links Interface Experience Maps Progressive Misconceptions Delivering Critical Information & Services App & Browser Testing Made Easy Cross Browser Testing Cloud Picks Caleb- Google Fi Wai-World War Z by Max Brooks Shawn- Project Diablo II Shawn- .NET Conf 2020
This week Aaron Gustafson joins us to talk about progress enhancement and how it can make everyone's lives easier. It is becoming more and more important to make apps accessible and performant regardless of what browser, OS or network your end users have. Aaron provides several examples and suggestions on incorporating progress enhancement into your development. Join us and learn how we can make the web for everyone. Panel Shawn Clabough Caleb Wells Wai Liu Guest Aaron Gustafson Links Interface Experience Maps Progressive Misconceptions Delivering Critical Information & Services App & Browser Testing Made Easy Cross Browser Testing Cloud Picks Caleb- Google Fi Wai-World War Z by Max Brooks Shawn- Project Diablo II Shawn- .NET Conf 2020
We're taking a look at the brand new version of Microsoft Edge and its Chromium based rendering engine. What does that change mean for web developers, and how does the death of Microsoft's own rendering engine impact the web? Drew McLellan talks to Microsoft's Aaron Gustafson and Stephanie Stimac to find out.
This is a talk from “beyond tellerrand // Berlin 2019”. Aaron Gustafson presents “Conversational Semantics” at the sixth #btconf in Berlin.
In this episode, Adam talks to Aaron Gustafson about authoring semantic HTML in the context of web applications, where choosing the right element can be a lot more complicated than it seems. Topics include: Can you have more than one "h1" on page? How important is heading order? Why not everything that looks like a heading should necessarily be a heading Why you may want to include invisible headings in some situations What the document outline is and how your use of headings impacts it How to make your heading levels dynamic to make your components more flexible What a "sectioning context" is Can you have multiple "article" elements on one page? What even is an "article" anyways? How to use elements like "section" and "aside" properly Should navigation items be in lists? Why Aaron can't remember the last time he used a "span" Sponsors: DigitalOcean, get your free $50 credit at do.co/fullstack Cloudinary, sign up and get 300,000 images/videos, 10GB of storage and 20GB of monthly bandwidth for free Links: Aaron's personal website HTML5 Element Flowchart from html5 Doctor
Sponsors: Netlify Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry small plan CacheFly Host: Charles Max Wood Special Guest: Aaron Gustafson Episode Summary This episode of Views on Vue comes to you live from Microsoft Ignite. Charles Max Wood talks to Aaron Gustafson who has been a Web Developer for more than 20 years and is also the Editor in Chief at “A List Apart”. Aaron gives a brief background on his work in the web community, explains to listeners how web standardization has evolved over time, where Progressive Web Apps (PWAs) come from, where and how can they be installed, differences between them and regular websites and their advantages. They then delve into more technical details about service workers, factors affecting the boot up time of JavaScript apps, best practices and features that are available with PWAs. Aaron mentions some resources people can use to learn about PWAs, talks about how every website can benefit from being a PWA, new features being introduced and the PWA vs Electron comparison. In the end, they also talk about life in general, that understanding what people have gone through and empathizing with them is important, as well as not making judgements based on people’s background, gender, race, health issues and so on. Links Creating & Enhancing Netscape Web Pages A List Apart A Progressive Roadmap for your Progressive Web App Windows Dev Center – Progressive Web Apps MDN web docs PWA Stats PWA Stats Twitter Aaron’s website Aaron’s Twitter https://www.facebook.com/ViewsonVue https://twitter.com/viewsonvue Picks Aaron Gustafson: Homegoing Zeitoun Charles Max Wood: Armada
Sponsors: Netlify Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry small plan CacheFly Host: Charles Max Wood Special Guest: Aaron Gustafson Episode Summary This episode of Views on Vue comes to you live from Microsoft Ignite. Charles Max Wood talks to Aaron Gustafson who has been a Web Developer for more than 20 years and is also the Editor in Chief at “A List Apart”. Aaron gives a brief background on his work in the web community, explains to listeners how web standardization has evolved over time, where Progressive Web Apps (PWAs) come from, where and how can they be installed, differences between them and regular websites and their advantages. They then delve into more technical details about service workers, factors affecting the boot up time of JavaScript apps, best practices and features that are available with PWAs. Aaron mentions some resources people can use to learn about PWAs, talks about how every website can benefit from being a PWA, new features being introduced and the PWA vs Electron comparison. In the end, they also talk about life in general, that understanding what people have gone through and empathizing with them is important, as well as not making judgements based on people’s background, gender, race, health issues and so on. Links Creating & Enhancing Netscape Web Pages A List Apart A Progressive Roadmap for your Progressive Web App Windows Dev Center – Progressive Web Apps MDN web docs PWA Stats PWA Stats Twitter Aaron’s website Aaron’s Twitter https://www.facebook.com/ViewsonVue https://twitter.com/viewsonvue Picks Aaron Gustafson: Homegoing Zeitoun Charles Max Wood: Armada
Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for $100 credit Triplebyte Clubhouse CacheFly Panel Charles Max Wood Joined by special guest: Aaron Gustafson Episode Summary This episode of JavaScript Jabber comes to you live from Microsoft Ignite. Charles Max Wood talks to Aaron Gustafson who has been a Web Developer for more than 20 years and is also the Editor in Chief at “A List Apart”. Aaron gives a brief background on his work in the web community, explains to listeners how web standardization has evolved over time, where Progressive Web Apps (PWAs) come from, where and how can they be installed, differences between them and regular websites and their advantages. They then delve into more technical details about service workers, factors affecting the boot up time of JavaScript apps, best practices and features that are available with PWAs. Aaron mentions some resources people can use to learn about PWAs, talks about how every website can benefit from being a PWA, new features being introduced and the PWA vs Electron comparison. In the end, they also talk about life in general, that understanding what people have gone through and empathizing with them is important, as well as not making judgements based on people’s background, gender, race, health issues and so on. Links Creating & Enhancing Netscape Web Pages A List Apart A Progressive Roadmap for your Progressive Web App Windows Dev Center - Progressive Web Apps MDN web docs PWA Stats PWA Stats Twitter Aaron’s website Aaron’s Twitter https://www.facebook.com/javascriptjabber/ https://twitter.com/JSJabber Picks Aaron Gustafson: Homegoing Zeitoun Charles Max Wood: Armada
Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for $100 credit Triplebyte Clubhouse CacheFly Panel Charles Max Wood Joined by special guest: Aaron Gustafson Episode Summary This episode of JavaScript Jabber comes to you live from Microsoft Ignite. Charles Max Wood talks to Aaron Gustafson who has been a Web Developer for more than 20 years and is also the Editor in Chief at “A List Apart”. Aaron gives a brief background on his work in the web community, explains to listeners how web standardization has evolved over time, where Progressive Web Apps (PWAs) come from, where and how can they be installed, differences between them and regular websites and their advantages. They then delve into more technical details about service workers, factors affecting the boot up time of JavaScript apps, best practices and features that are available with PWAs. Aaron mentions some resources people can use to learn about PWAs, talks about how every website can benefit from being a PWA, new features being introduced and the PWA vs Electron comparison. In the end, they also talk about life in general, that understanding what people have gone through and empathizing with them is important, as well as not making judgements based on people’s background, gender, race, health issues and so on. Links Creating & Enhancing Netscape Web Pages A List Apart A Progressive Roadmap for your Progressive Web App Windows Dev Center - Progressive Web Apps MDN web docs PWA Stats PWA Stats Twitter Aaron’s website Aaron’s Twitter https://www.facebook.com/javascriptjabber/ https://twitter.com/JSJabber Picks Aaron Gustafson: Homegoing Zeitoun Charles Max Wood: Armada
Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for $100 credit Triplebyte Clubhouse CacheFly Panel Charles Max Wood Joined by special guest: Aaron Gustafson Episode Summary This episode of JavaScript Jabber comes to you live from Microsoft Ignite. Charles Max Wood talks to Aaron Gustafson who has been a Web Developer for more than 20 years and is also the Editor in Chief at “A List Apart”. Aaron gives a brief background on his work in the web community, explains to listeners how web standardization has evolved over time, where Progressive Web Apps (PWAs) come from, where and how can they be installed, differences between them and regular websites and their advantages. They then delve into more technical details about service workers, factors affecting the boot up time of JavaScript apps, best practices and features that are available with PWAs. Aaron mentions some resources people can use to learn about PWAs, talks about how every website can benefit from being a PWA, new features being introduced and the PWA vs Electron comparison. In the end, they also talk about life in general, that understanding what people have gone through and empathizing with them is important, as well as not making judgements based on people’s background, gender, race, health issues and so on. Links Creating & Enhancing Netscape Web Pages A List Apart A Progressive Roadmap for your Progressive Web App Windows Dev Center - Progressive Web Apps MDN web docs PWA Stats PWA Stats Twitter Aaron’s website Aaron’s Twitter https://www.facebook.com/javascriptjabber/ https://twitter.com/JSJabber Picks Aaron Gustafson: Homegoing Zeitoun Charles Max Wood: Armada
Explore Progressive Web Apps (PWA), a new class of apps that deliver native platform experiences to enhance performance, resilience, installation, and engagement with apps. Aaron Gustafson, Principal Program Manager from the Microsoft Edge browser team, tells you what PWAs are, shows you where to find them, and explains how to build them. You'll also get a look at the most recent PWA addition: the brand new Office app.
In the final episode of Season 2, we go to the movies, and Hallie brings six questions about films from Pixar Animation Studios. We also chat about French geography, fashion, and a living legend of film composing, before crowning the Quiz and Hers Season 2 Champion in a moment so dramatic, it would make Hollywood proud. Theme music: "Thinking it Over" by Lee Rosevere, licensed under CC BY 2.0 Original photo credit: Aaron Gustafson, licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0 E-Mail: quizandhers@gmail.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/quizandhers/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/quizandhers Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/quizandhers/
Panel: Charles Max Wood (DevChat T.V.) Special Guests: Aaron Gustafson In this episode, the Chuck talks with Aaron Gustafson who is a web-standards and accessibility advocate working at Microsoft. Aaron and Chuck talk about PWAs and the ins and outs of these progressive web apps. Check out today’s episode to hear more! Show Topics: 0:36 – Chuck: Our guest is Aaron, say HI! 0:41 – Aaron: Hi! I have been working on the web for 20 plus years. I am working on the Edge team for accessibility among other things. I have done every job that you can do on the web. 1:08 – Chuck: That is one of OUR publications? 1:14 – Aaron: No the communities. I joined the staff as editor in chief for 1.5 year now. It’s a nice side project to do. 1:36 – Chuck: I thought it was a commercial thing. 1:40 – Aaron: No it’s volunteer. 1:52 – Chuck: Talk about your web background? 2:02 – Aaron: I remember the first book I got (title mentioned). My first job on the web (cash) I was the content manager in Florida and this was in 1999. Gel Macs just came out. I relocated from FL to CT and worked for other companies. I got into CSS among other things. It’s been a wild ride and done it all. 3:52 – Chuck: Let’s talk about web standards? 4:05 – Aaron: It depends on the organization and what the spec is and where it originates. It’s interesting to see how HTML developed back in the day. When standardization started working then everything started to converge. Everything is a little different now. Some specs come out from companies that... (Apple, Responsive Images, and Grid are mentioned among other things.) 7:37 – Chuck: We set up to talk about PWAs. Where did PWAs come from? 7:57 – Aaron: Modern web design, best web applications. Being secure. One of the underpinnings came out from Google and they have been supporters of that. Firefox is working on installation as well. The Chrome implementation is weird right now, but it becomes an orphaned app. It’s like the old chrome apps where in Windows you can install from the Microsoft store. But the case of Chrome you don’t have to go through the store. 10:14 – Chuck asks a question. 10:24 – Aaron answers. 11:53 – Chuck: What makes it a progressive web app rather than a regular website? 12:05 – Aaron: The definition is running on HTPS and... Aaron defines the terms that Chuck asks at 11:53. 12:43 – Aaron: Of course you can push forward if it makes sense from the baseline. 12:56 – Chuck: We have an Angular podcast, and we talked about PWAs and nobody had a good definition for it. 13:18 – Aaron. 13:22 – Chuck: What are the pros of having a PWA? Let’s start with the basics first. 13:33 – Aaron: The ability to control how you react to the network. We development is challenging maybe in other areas because of the lack of control and how your code gets to your users. Any special needs that YOU might have. Aaron goes into detail on this topic. 17:14 – Chuck: Is the service worker the star for PWAs? 17:20 – Aaron: In a way, kind of. Aaron goes into detail on this topic. Share 2 is mentioned, too. 19:42 – Chuck: If the service worker intermediates between the browser and the page / Internet would it make sense to have your worker have it load and then load everything else? Cause you have those Web Pack now. 20:14 – Aaron: Some people would consider it but I wouldn’t necessarily. I am not a fan for that. If anything goes wrong then nothing loads. I remember back when... 22:23 – Aaron: That is a lot of overhead. 22:34 – Chuck: I am wondering what is the best practice? How do you decide to pull in a service worker and then move into more complicated issues? 22:53 – Aaron: Progressive Web App where they talk about their evolution about this. 25:17 – Advertisement – Fresh Books! Code: DEVCHAT. 26:25 – Chuck: In order to be a PWA you don’t need to have a push notification. 26:38 – Aaron: I don’t think anyone would want a push notification from me. 27:12 – Chuck: What features do PWAs have? 27:18 – Aaron: Features? None of them really, other than push notifications, it’s just standard it’s going to make an App feel more App “y”. If that’s something you want to do. It’s up to you to determine that. There is going to be like push notifications – sending person new updates about the order. If you were a new site you want to make sure you are not doing a push notifications on everything cause that would be too much. Exercising care with the capabilities with what the users are doing on your computer. This is a person that you are dealing with. We need to seem less needy. Give users control of how they want to use it. For example, Twitter will give you that control per user. 30:56 – Chuck: Could you also do it for different parts of the page? 31:01 – Aaron: It’s different scopes. Your servicer worker has different scopes and it needs to be in the root folder or the JavaScript folder. You can have different workers but they will come from different scopes. 31:32 – Chuck gives a hypothetical example. 31:50 – You can do a bunch of different service workers. 32:11 – Chuck: This is why we create different hierarchies in our code. 32:26 – Chuck: Is there a good point where people can be more informed with PWAs? 32:40 – Aaron: PWA stats website and Twitter account with Cloud 4. 33:22 – Chuck asks a question. 33:26 – Aaron: Yes. If you are a photographer you don’t want to cash all of your photos on someone’s hard drive. We have to be good stewards of what is operating on people’s hard drives. Even something as simple as a blog can benefit from being a PWA. 35:01 – Chuck: Are there new things that are being added to a PWA? 35:12 – Aaron: A new feature is the background sync. Aaron: What is native and what is web? 36:33 – Chuck: Yeah it can detect a feature in your machine. Dark mode is... 36:48 – Aaron: It would be nice to see things standardized across the board. 37:00 – Chuck: How does this play into Electron or Android or...? Do those need to be PWAs? 37:16 – Aaron: It depends on what you are building. So I talked with people through Slack and they want total control. If you r desire is to shift the same experience then Electron can make a lot of sense. They will have to pay a premium, though, your users. If you are aware of that then go the Electron route. But for most cases then Electron might be overkill for you. You don’t need that extra overhead. 39:55 – Aaron continues. Aaron: I think the major benefit of PWA is... 41:15 – Chuck: The other angle to that is that in an Electron app does it make sense to use a PWA things? 41:23 – Aaron: Yes that makes sense. 41:34 – Unless for some reason you need to unlock into an older version, which I hope is not the case b/c of security reasons. 41:55 – Aaron continues. 42:34 – Chuck: Where can we find you? 42:35 – Aaron mentions Twitter and other sites. See Links! 43:02 – Advertisement – Get A Coder Job! Links: Ruby on Rails Angular PWA States Website PWA Twitter Electron Aaron’s Website Aaron’s LinkedIn Aaron’s Twitter Aaron’s GitHub Aaron’s YouTube Channel Aaron’s Medium Get A Coder Job Charles Max Wood’s Twitter Sponsors: Get a Coder Job Cache Fly Fresh Books Kendo UI Picks: Aaron Home Going by Yaa Gyasi Zeitoun What is the What Affect Conf. Charles Armada
Panel: Charles Max Wood (DevChat T.V.) Special Guests: Aaron Gustafson In this episode, the Chuck talks with Aaron Gustafson who is a web-standards and accessibility advocate working at Microsoft. Aaron and Chuck talk about PWAs and the ins and outs of these progressive web apps. Check out today’s episode to hear more! Show Topics: 0:36 – Chuck: Our guest is Aaron, say HI! 0:41 – Aaron: Hi! I have been working on the web for 20 plus years. I am working on the Edge team for accessibility among other things. I have done every job that you can do on the web. 1:08 – Chuck: That is one of OUR publications? 1:14 – Aaron: No the communities. I joined the staff as editor in chief for 1.5 year now. It’s a nice side project to do. 1:36 – Chuck: I thought it was a commercial thing. 1:40 – Aaron: No it’s volunteer. 1:52 – Chuck: Talk about your web background? 2:02 – Aaron: I remember the first book I got (title mentioned). My first job on the web (cash) I was the content manager in Florida and this was in 1999. Gel Macs just came out. I relocated from FL to CT and worked for other companies. I got into CSS among other things. It’s been a wild ride and done it all. 3:52 – Chuck: Let’s talk about web standards? 4:05 – Aaron: It depends on the organization and what the spec is and where it originates. It’s interesting to see how HTML developed back in the day. When standardization started working then everything started to converge. Everything is a little different now. Some specs come out from companies that... (Apple, Responsive Images, and Grid are mentioned among other things.) 7:37 – Chuck: We set up to talk about PWAs. Where did PWAs come from? 7:57 – Aaron: Modern web design, best web applications. Being secure. One of the underpinnings came out from Google and they have been supporters of that. Firefox is working on installation as well. The Chrome implementation is weird right now, but it becomes an orphaned app. It’s like the old chrome apps where in Windows you can install from the Microsoft store. But the case of Chrome you don’t have to go through the store. 10:14 – Chuck asks a question. 10:24 – Aaron answers. 11:53 – Chuck: What makes it a progressive web app rather than a regular website? 12:05 – Aaron: The definition is running on HTPS and... Aaron defines the terms that Chuck asks at 11:53. 12:43 – Aaron: Of course you can push forward if it makes sense from the baseline. 12:56 – Chuck: We have an Angular podcast, and we talked about PWAs and nobody had a good definition for it. 13:18 – Aaron. 13:22 – Chuck: What are the pros of having a PWA? Let’s start with the basics first. 13:33 – Aaron: The ability to control how you react to the network. We development is challenging maybe in other areas because of the lack of control and how your code gets to your users. Any special needs that YOU might have. Aaron goes into detail on this topic. 17:14 – Chuck: Is the service worker the star for PWAs? 17:20 – Aaron: In a way, kind of. Aaron goes into detail on this topic. Share 2 is mentioned, too. 19:42 – Chuck: If the service worker intermediates between the browser and the page / Internet would it make sense to have your worker have it load and then load everything else? Cause you have those Web Pack now. 20:14 – Aaron: Some people would consider it but I wouldn’t necessarily. I am not a fan for that. If anything goes wrong then nothing loads. I remember back when... 22:23 – Aaron: That is a lot of overhead. 22:34 – Chuck: I am wondering what is the best practice? How do you decide to pull in a service worker and then move into more complicated issues? 22:53 – Aaron: Progressive Web App where they talk about their evolution about this. 25:17 – Advertisement – Fresh Books! Code: DEVCHAT. 26:25 – Chuck: In order to be a PWA you don’t need to have a push notification. 26:38 – Aaron: I don’t think anyone would want a push notification from me. 27:12 – Chuck: What features do PWAs have? 27:18 – Aaron: Features? None of them really, other than push notifications, it’s just standard it’s going to make an App feel more App “y”. If that’s something you want to do. It’s up to you to determine that. There is going to be like push notifications – sending person new updates about the order. If you were a new site you want to make sure you are not doing a push notifications on everything cause that would be too much. Exercising care with the capabilities with what the users are doing on your computer. This is a person that you are dealing with. We need to seem less needy. Give users control of how they want to use it. For example, Twitter will give you that control per user. 30:56 – Chuck: Could you also do it for different parts of the page? 31:01 – Aaron: It’s different scopes. Your servicer worker has different scopes and it needs to be in the root folder or the JavaScript folder. You can have different workers but they will come from different scopes. 31:32 – Chuck gives a hypothetical example. 31:50 – You can do a bunch of different service workers. 32:11 – Chuck: This is why we create different hierarchies in our code. 32:26 – Chuck: Is there a good point where people can be more informed with PWAs? 32:40 – Aaron: PWA stats website and Twitter account with Cloud 4. 33:22 – Chuck asks a question. 33:26 – Aaron: Yes. If you are a photographer you don’t want to cash all of your photos on someone’s hard drive. We have to be good stewards of what is operating on people’s hard drives. Even something as simple as a blog can benefit from being a PWA. 35:01 – Chuck: Are there new things that are being added to a PWA? 35:12 – Aaron: A new feature is the background sync. Aaron: What is native and what is web? 36:33 – Chuck: Yeah it can detect a feature in your machine. Dark mode is... 36:48 – Aaron: It would be nice to see things standardized across the board. 37:00 – Chuck: How does this play into Electron or Android or...? Do those need to be PWAs? 37:16 – Aaron: It depends on what you are building. So I talked with people through Slack and they want total control. If you r desire is to shift the same experience then Electron can make a lot of sense. They will have to pay a premium, though, your users. If you are aware of that then go the Electron route. But for most cases then Electron might be overkill for you. You don’t need that extra overhead. 39:55 – Aaron continues. Aaron: I think the major benefit of PWA is... 41:15 – Chuck: The other angle to that is that in an Electron app does it make sense to use a PWA things? 41:23 – Aaron: Yes that makes sense. 41:34 – Unless for some reason you need to unlock into an older version, which I hope is not the case b/c of security reasons. 41:55 – Aaron continues. 42:34 – Chuck: Where can we find you? 42:35 – Aaron mentions Twitter and other sites. See Links! 43:02 – Advertisement – Get A Coder Job! Links: Ruby on Rails Angular PWA States Website PWA Twitter Electron Aaron’s Website Aaron’s LinkedIn Aaron’s Twitter Aaron’s GitHub Aaron’s YouTube Channel Aaron’s Medium Get A Coder Job Charles Max Wood’s Twitter Sponsors: Get a Coder Job Cache Fly Fresh Books Kendo UI Picks: Aaron Home Going by Yaa Gyasi Zeitoun What is the What Affect Conf. Charles Armada
Panel: Charles Max Wood (DevChat T.V.) Special Guests: Aaron Gustafson In this episode, the Chuck talks with Aaron Gustafson who is a web-standards and accessibility advocate working at Microsoft. Aaron and Chuck talk about PWAs and the ins and outs of these progressive web apps. Check out today’s episode to hear more! Show Topics: 0:36 – Chuck: Our guest is Aaron, say HI! 0:41 – Aaron: Hi! I have been working on the web for 20 plus years. I am working on the Edge team for accessibility among other things. I have done every job that you can do on the web. 1:08 – Chuck: That is one of OUR publications? 1:14 – Aaron: No the communities. I joined the staff as editor in chief for 1.5 year now. It’s a nice side project to do. 1:36 – Chuck: I thought it was a commercial thing. 1:40 – Aaron: No it’s volunteer. 1:52 – Chuck: Talk about your web background? 2:02 – Aaron: I remember the first book I got (title mentioned). My first job on the web (cash) I was the content manager in Florida and this was in 1999. Gel Macs just came out. I relocated from FL to CT and worked for other companies. I got into CSS among other things. It’s been a wild ride and done it all. 3:52 – Chuck: Let’s talk about web standards? 4:05 – Aaron: It depends on the organization and what the spec is and where it originates. It’s interesting to see how HTML developed back in the day. When standardization started working then everything started to converge. Everything is a little different now. Some specs come out from companies that... (Apple, Responsive Images, and Grid are mentioned among other things.) 7:37 – Chuck: We set up to talk about PWAs. Where did PWAs come from? 7:57 – Aaron: Modern web design, best web applications. Being secure. One of the underpinnings came out from Google and they have been supporters of that. Firefox is working on installation as well. The Chrome implementation is weird right now, but it becomes an orphaned app. It’s like the old chrome apps where in Windows you can install from the Microsoft store. But the case of Chrome you don’t have to go through the store. 10:14 – Chuck asks a question. 10:24 – Aaron answers. 11:53 – Chuck: What makes it a progressive web app rather than a regular website? 12:05 – Aaron: The definition is running on HTPS and... Aaron defines the terms that Chuck asks at 11:53. 12:43 – Aaron: Of course you can push forward if it makes sense from the baseline. 12:56 – Chuck: We have an Angular podcast, and we talked about PWAs and nobody had a good definition for it. 13:18 – Aaron. 13:22 – Chuck: What are the pros of having a PWA? Let’s start with the basics first. 13:33 – Aaron: The ability to control how you react to the network. We development is challenging maybe in other areas because of the lack of control and how your code gets to your users. Any special needs that YOU might have. Aaron goes into detail on this topic. 17:14 – Chuck: Is the service worker the star for PWAs? 17:20 – Aaron: In a way, kind of. Aaron goes into detail on this topic. Share 2 is mentioned, too. 19:42 – Chuck: If the service worker intermediates between the browser and the page / Internet would it make sense to have your worker have it load and then load everything else? Cause you have those Web Pack now. 20:14 – Aaron: Some people would consider it but I wouldn’t necessarily. I am not a fan for that. If anything goes wrong then nothing loads. I remember back when... 22:23 – Aaron: That is a lot of overhead. 22:34 – Chuck: I am wondering what is the best practice? How do you decide to pull in a service worker and then move into more complicated issues? 22:53 – Aaron: Progressive Web App where they talk about their evolution about this. 25:17 – Advertisement – Fresh Books! Code: DEVCHAT. 26:25 – Chuck: In order to be a PWA you don’t need to have a push notification. 26:38 – Aaron: I don’t think anyone would want a push notification from me. 27:12 – Chuck: What features do PWAs have? 27:18 – Aaron: Features? None of them really, other than push notifications, it’s just standard it’s going to make an App feel more App “y”. If that’s something you want to do. It’s up to you to determine that. There is going to be like push notifications – sending person new updates about the order. If you were a new site you want to make sure you are not doing a push notifications on everything cause that would be too much. Exercising care with the capabilities with what the users are doing on your computer. This is a person that you are dealing with. We need to seem less needy. Give users control of how they want to use it. For example, Twitter will give you that control per user. 30:56 – Chuck: Could you also do it for different parts of the page? 31:01 – Aaron: It’s different scopes. Your servicer worker has different scopes and it needs to be in the root folder or the JavaScript folder. You can have different workers but they will come from different scopes. 31:32 – Chuck gives a hypothetical example. 31:50 – You can do a bunch of different service workers. 32:11 – Chuck: This is why we create different hierarchies in our code. 32:26 – Chuck: Is there a good point where people can be more informed with PWAs? 32:40 – Aaron: PWA stats website and Twitter account with Cloud 4. 33:22 – Chuck asks a question. 33:26 – Aaron: Yes. If you are a photographer you don’t want to cash all of your photos on someone’s hard drive. We have to be good stewards of what is operating on people’s hard drives. Even something as simple as a blog can benefit from being a PWA. 35:01 – Chuck: Are there new things that are being added to a PWA? 35:12 – Aaron: A new feature is the background sync. Aaron: What is native and what is web? 36:33 – Chuck: Yeah it can detect a feature in your machine. Dark mode is... 36:48 – Aaron: It would be nice to see things standardized across the board. 37:00 – Chuck: How does this play into Electron or Android or...? Do those need to be PWAs? 37:16 – Aaron: It depends on what you are building. So I talked with people through Slack and they want total control. If you r desire is to shift the same experience then Electron can make a lot of sense. They will have to pay a premium, though, your users. If you are aware of that then go the Electron route. But for most cases then Electron might be overkill for you. You don’t need that extra overhead. 39:55 – Aaron continues. Aaron: I think the major benefit of PWA is... 41:15 – Chuck: The other angle to that is that in an Electron app does it make sense to use a PWA things? 41:23 – Aaron: Yes that makes sense. 41:34 – Unless for some reason you need to unlock into an older version, which I hope is not the case b/c of security reasons. 41:55 – Aaron continues. 42:34 – Chuck: Where can we find you? 42:35 – Aaron mentions Twitter and other sites. See Links! 43:02 – Advertisement – Get A Coder Job! Links: Ruby on Rails Angular PWA States Website PWA Twitter Electron Aaron’s Website Aaron’s LinkedIn Aaron’s Twitter Aaron’s GitHub Aaron’s YouTube Channel Aaron’s Medium Get A Coder Job Charles Max Wood’s Twitter Sponsors: Get a Coder Job Cache Fly Fresh Books Kendo UI Picks: Aaron Home Going by Yaa Gyasi Zeitoun What is the What Affect Conf. Charles Armada
Panel: Charles Max Wood (DevChat T.V.) Special Guests: Aaron Gustafson In this episode, the Chuck talks with Aaron Gustafson who is a web standards and accessibility advocate working at Microsoft. Aaron and Chuck talk about PWAs and the ins and outs of these progressive web apps. Check out today’s episode to hear more! Show Topics: 0:36 – Chuck: Our guest is Aaron, say HI! 0:41 – Aaron: Hi! I have been working on the web for 20 plus years. I am working on the Edge team for accessibility among other things. I have done every job that you can do on the web. 1:08 – Chuck: That is one of OUR publications? 1:14 – Aaron: No the communities. I joined the staff as editor in chief for 1.5 year now. It’s a nice side project to do. 1:36 – Chuck: I thought it was a commercial thing. 1:40 – Aaron: No it’s volunteer. 1:52 – Chuck: Talk about your web background? 2:02 – Aaron: I remember the first book I got (title mentioned). My first job on the web (cash) I was the content manager in Florida and this was in 1999. Gel Macs just came out. I relocated from FL to CT and worked for other companies. I got into CSS among other things. It’s been a wild ride and done it all. 3:52 – Chuck: Let’s talk about web standards? 4:05 – Aaron: It depends on the organization and what the spec is and where it originates. It’s interesting to see how HTML developed back in the day. When standardization started working then everything started to converge. Everything is a little different now. Some specs come out from companies that... (Apple, Responsive Images, and Grid are mentioned among other things.) 7:37 – Chuck: We set up to talk about PWAs. Where did PWAs come from? 7:57 – Aaron: Modern web design, best web applications. Being secure. One of the underpinnings came out from Google and they have been supporters of that. Firefox is working on installation as well. The Chrome implementation is weird right now, but it becomes an orphaned app. It’s like the old chrome apps where in Windows you can install from the Microsoft store. But the case of Chrome you don’t have to go through the store. 10:14 – Chuck asks a question. 10:24 – Aaron answers. 11:53 – Chuck: What makes it a progressive web app rather than a regular website? 12:05 – Aaron: The definition is running on HTPS and... Aaron defines the terms that Chuck asks at 11:53. 12:43 – Aaron: Of course you can push forward if it makes sense from the baseline. 12:56 – Chuck: We have an Angular podcast, and we talked about PWAs and nobody had a good definition for it. 13:18 – Aaron. 13:22 – Chuck: What are the pros of having a PWA? Let’s start with the basics first. 13:33 – Aaron: The ability to control how you react to the network. We development is challenging maybe in other areas because of the lack of control and how your code gets to your users. Any special needs that YOU might have. Aaron goes into detail on this topic. 17:14 – Chuck: Is the service worker the star for PWAs? 17:20 – Aaron: In a way, kind of. Aaron goes into detail on this topic. Share 2 is mentioned, too. 19:42 – Chuck: If the service worker intermediates between the browser and the page / Internet would it make sense to have your worker have it load and then load everything else? Cause you have those Web Pack now. 20:14 – Aaron: Some people would consider it but I wouldn’t necessarily. I am not a fan for that. If anything goes wrong then nothing loads. I remember back when... 22:23 – Aaron: That is a lot of overhead. 22:34 – Chuck: I am wondering what is the best practice? How do you decide to pull in a service worker and then move into more complicated issues? 22:53 – Aaron: Progressive Web App where they talk about their evolution about this. 25:17 – Advertisement – Fresh Books! Code: DEVCHAT. 26:25 – Chuck: In order to be a PWA you don’t need to have a push notification. 26:38 – Aaron: I don’t think anyone would want a push notification from me. 27:12 – Chuck: What features do PWAs have? 27:18 – Aaron: Features? None of them really, other than push notifications, it’s just standard it’s going to make an App feel more App “y”. If that’s something you want to do. It’s up to you to determine that. There is going to be like push notifications – sending person new updates about the order. If you were a new site you want to make sure you are not doing a push notifications on everything cause that would be too much. Exercising care with the capabilities with what the users are doing on your computer. This is a person that you are dealing with. We need to seem less needy. Give users control of how they want to use it. For example, Twitter will give you that control per user. 30:56 – Chuck: Could you also do it for different parts of the page? 31:01 – Aaron: It’s different scopes. Your servicer worker has different scopes and it needs to be in the root folder or the JavaScript folder. You can have different workers but they will come from different scopes. 31:32 – Chuck gives a hypothetical example. 31:50 – You can do a bunch of different service workers. 32:11 – Chuck: This is why we create different hierarchies in our code. 32:26 – Chuck: Is there a good point where people can be more informed with PWAs? 32:40 – Aaron: PWA stats website and Twitter account with Cloud 4. 33:22 – Chuck asks a question. 33:26 – Aaron: Yes. If you are a photographer you don’t want to cash all of your photos on someone’s hard drive. We have to be good stewards of what is operating on people’s hard drives. Even something as simple as a blog can benefit from being a PWA. 35:01 – Chuck: Are there new things that are being added to a PWA? 35:12 – Aaron: A new feature is the background sync. Aaron: What is native and what is web? 36:33 – Chuck: Yeah it can detect a feature in your machine. Dark mode is... 36:48 – Aaron: It would be nice to see things standardized across the board. 37:00 – Chuck: How does this play into Electron or Android or...? Do those need to be PWAs? 37:16 – Aaron: It depends on what you are building. So I talked with people through Slack and they want total control. If you r desire is to shift the same experience then Electron can make a lot of sense. They will have to pay a premium, though, your users. If you are aware of that then go the Electron route. But for most cases then Electron might be overkill for you. You don’t need that extra overhead. 39:55 – Aaron continues. Aaron: I think the major benefit of PWA is... 41:15 – Chuck: The other angle to that is that in an Electron app does it make sense to use a PWA things? 41:23 – Aaron: Yes that makes sense. 41:34 – Unless for some reason you need to unlock into an older version, which I hope is not the case b/c of security reasons. 41:55 – Aaron continues. 42:34 – Chuck: Where can we find you? 42:35 – Aaron mentions Twitter and other sites. See Links! 43:02 – Advertisement – Get A Coder Job! Links: Ruby on Rails Angular PWA States Website PWA Twitter Electron Aaron’s Website Aaron’s LinkedIn Aaron’s Twitter Aaron’s GitHub Aaron’s YouTube Channel Aaron’s Medium Get A Coder Job Charles Max Wood’s Twitter Sponsors: Get a Coder Job Cache Fly Fresh Books Kendo UI Picks: Aaron Home Going by Yaa Gyasi Zeitoun What is the What Affect Conf. Charles Armada
Panel: Charles Max Wood (DevChat T.V.) Special Guests: Aaron Gustafson In this episode, the Chuck talks with Aaron Gustafson who is a web standards and accessibility advocate working at Microsoft. Aaron and Chuck talk about PWAs and the ins and outs of these progressive web apps. Check out today’s episode to hear more! Show Topics: 0:36 – Chuck: Our guest is Aaron, say HI! 0:41 – Aaron: Hi! I have been working on the web for 20 plus years. I am working on the Edge team for accessibility among other things. I have done every job that you can do on the web. 1:08 – Chuck: That is one of OUR publications? 1:14 – Aaron: No the communities. I joined the staff as editor in chief for 1.5 year now. It’s a nice side project to do. 1:36 – Chuck: I thought it was a commercial thing. 1:40 – Aaron: No it’s volunteer. 1:52 – Chuck: Talk about your web background? 2:02 – Aaron: I remember the first book I got (title mentioned). My first job on the web (cash) I was the content manager in Florida and this was in 1999. Gel Macs just came out. I relocated from FL to CT and worked for other companies. I got into CSS among other things. It’s been a wild ride and done it all. 3:52 – Chuck: Let’s talk about web standards? 4:05 – Aaron: It depends on the organization and what the spec is and where it originates. It’s interesting to see how HTML developed back in the day. When standardization started working then everything started to converge. Everything is a little different now. Some specs come out from companies that... (Apple, Responsive Images, and Grid are mentioned among other things.) 7:37 – Chuck: We set up to talk about PWAs. Where did PWAs come from? 7:57 – Aaron: Modern web design, best web applications. Being secure. One of the underpinnings came out from Google and they have been supporters of that. Firefox is working on installation as well. The Chrome implementation is weird right now, but it becomes an orphaned app. It’s like the old chrome apps where in Windows you can install from the Microsoft store. But the case of Chrome you don’t have to go through the store. 10:14 – Chuck asks a question. 10:24 – Aaron answers. 11:53 – Chuck: What makes it a progressive web app rather than a regular website? 12:05 – Aaron: The definition is running on HTPS and... Aaron defines the terms that Chuck asks at 11:53. 12:43 – Aaron: Of course you can push forward if it makes sense from the baseline. 12:56 – Chuck: We have an Angular podcast, and we talked about PWAs and nobody had a good definition for it. 13:18 – Aaron. 13:22 – Chuck: What are the pros of having a PWA? Let’s start with the basics first. 13:33 – Aaron: The ability to control how you react to the network. We development is challenging maybe in other areas because of the lack of control and how your code gets to your users. Any special needs that YOU might have. Aaron goes into detail on this topic. 17:14 – Chuck: Is the service worker the star for PWAs? 17:20 – Aaron: In a way, kind of. Aaron goes into detail on this topic. Share 2 is mentioned, too. 19:42 – Chuck: If the service worker intermediates between the browser and the page / Internet would it make sense to have your worker have it load and then load everything else? Cause you have those Web Pack now. 20:14 – Aaron: Some people would consider it but I wouldn’t necessarily. I am not a fan for that. If anything goes wrong then nothing loads. I remember back when... 22:23 – Aaron: That is a lot of overhead. 22:34 – Chuck: I am wondering what is the best practice? How do you decide to pull in a service worker and then move into more complicated issues? 22:53 – Aaron: Progressive Web App where they talk about their evolution about this. 25:17 – Advertisement – Fresh Books! Code: DEVCHAT. 26:25 – Chuck: In order to be a PWA you don’t need to have a push notification. 26:38 – Aaron: I don’t think anyone would want a push notification from me. 27:12 – Chuck: What features do PWAs have? 27:18 – Aaron: Features? None of them really, other than push notifications, it’s just standard it’s going to make an App feel more App “y”. If that’s something you want to do. It’s up to you to determine that. There is going to be like push notifications – sending person new updates about the order. If you were a new site you want to make sure you are not doing a push notifications on everything cause that would be too much. Exercising care with the capabilities with what the users are doing on your computer. This is a person that you are dealing with. We need to seem less needy. Give users control of how they want to use it. For example, Twitter will give you that control per user. 30:56 – Chuck: Could you also do it for different parts of the page? 31:01 – Aaron: It’s different scopes. Your servicer worker has different scopes and it needs to be in the root folder or the JavaScript folder. You can have different workers but they will come from different scopes. 31:32 – Chuck gives a hypothetical example. 31:50 – You can do a bunch of different service workers. 32:11 – Chuck: This is why we create different hierarchies in our code. 32:26 – Chuck: Is there a good point where people can be more informed with PWAs? 32:40 – Aaron: PWA stats website and Twitter account with Cloud 4. 33:22 – Chuck asks a question. 33:26 – Aaron: Yes. If you are a photographer you don’t want to cash all of your photos on someone’s hard drive. We have to be good stewards of what is operating on people’s hard drives. Even something as simple as a blog can benefit from being a PWA. 35:01 – Chuck: Are there new things that are being added to a PWA? 35:12 – Aaron: A new feature is the background sync. Aaron: What is native and what is web? 36:33 – Chuck: Yeah it can detect a feature in your machine. Dark mode is... 36:48 – Aaron: It would be nice to see things standardized across the board. 37:00 – Chuck: How does this play into Electron or Android or...? Do those need to be PWAs? 37:16 – Aaron: It depends on what you are building. So I talked with people through Slack and they want total control. If you r desire is to shift the same experience then Electron can make a lot of sense. They will have to pay a premium, though, your users. If you are aware of that then go the Electron route. But for most cases then Electron might be overkill for you. You don’t need that extra overhead. 39:55 – Aaron continues. Aaron: I think the major benefit of PWA is... 41:15 – Chuck: The other angle to that is that in an Electron app does it make sense to use a PWA things? 41:23 – Aaron: Yes that makes sense. 41:34 – Unless for some reason you need to unlock into an older version, which I hope is not the case b/c of security reasons. 41:55 – Aaron continues. 42:34 – Chuck: Where can we find you? 42:35 – Aaron mentions Twitter and other sites. See Links! 43:02 – Advertisement – Get A Coder Job! Links: Ruby on Rails Angular PWA States Website PWA Twitter Electron Aaron’s Website Aaron’s LinkedIn Aaron’s Twitter Aaron’s GitHub Aaron’s YouTube Channel Aaron’s Medium Get A Coder Job Charles Max Wood’s Twitter Sponsors: Get a Coder Job Cache Fly Fresh Books Kendo UI Picks: Aaron Home Going by Yaa Gyasi Zeitoun What is the What Affect Conf. Charles Armada
Progressive Web Apps have been hailed as the next big leap forward in building web applications. In this episode we’re joined by Aaron Gustafson from Microsoft to talk all about PWA’s and the future of the web. Guests: Aaron Gustafson - @AaronGustafson Panelists: Ryan Burgess - @burgessdryan Augustus Yuan - @augburto Jem Young - @JemYoung Stacy London - @stacylondoner Picks: Aaron Gustafson - Seeing White Aaron Gustafson - Uncivil Aaron Gustafson - Homegoing Ryan Burgess - Ng-Atlanta Ryan Burgess - Culture Code Augustus Yuan - Celeste Augustus Yuan - Bao Jem Young - Supreme Brick Jem Young - LoFi Hip Hop Jem Young - Farfetch Stacy London - Wrong Days by Sun Glitters Stacy London - Atome de danse by Mark Romboy Stacy London - Aaron Gustafson
Show Description****************Aaron Gustafson is here to help us wrap our heads around the web standards project (WaSP), the W3C, and how it all relates to progressive web apps (PWA) and progressive enhancement. We talk about how standards come to be, how a PWA differs from a web view, why a company might choose Electron, and […]
Dean Hume is building Progressive Web Apps (PWAs). Show Notes: Book: Fast ASP.NET Websites by Dean Hume Book: Progressive Web Apps by Dean Hume (currently in early access preview) Betting on the Web: Starbucks PWA Node.js / Express.js HTTPS / HTTP2 Workbox.js - framework to store your website’s files locally on your user devices Chrome Progressive Web Apps Visual Studio Code Google Developers Website Mozilla Developer Portal Aaron Gustafson (blog post on A List Apart) Dean Hume's website Google web team members Dean Hume is on Twitter. Want to be on the next episode? You can! All you need is the willingness to talk about something technical. Theme music is "Crosscutting Concerns" by The Dirty Truckers, check out their music on Amazon or iTunes.
In this episode we talk about the Progressive Enhancement approach to web design and development with Aaron Gustafson. He talks us through some of the advantages of adopting Progressive Enhancement (PE) versus more traditional approaches. We also discuss barriers that might prevent us using PE and Aaron makes some useful recommendations. A much more in-depth discussion of the topic is available in Aaron's book 'Adaptive Web Design: Crafting Rich Experiences with Progressive Enhancement'. This week's jukebox picks are definitely going on the Relative Paths Alt Playlist! I started with 'Bambro Koyo Ganda (featuring Innov Gnawa)' by Bonobo. Mark then gave us 'Kick Jump Twist' by Sylvan Esso. Brilliant and needed an immediate second listen. Finally Aaron hit us with post-punk classic 'Teen Age Riot' by Sonic Youth, and a great story. He also urged us to check out The Chameleons following his Instagram vid of 'Script Of The Bridge' on deck. Subscribe and keep in touch: iTunes - https://relativepaths.uk/it Stitcher - https://relativepaths.uk/st SoundCloud - https://relativepaths.uk/sc AudioBoom - https://relativepaths.uk/ab Twitter - https://twitter.com/relativepaths Facebook - https://facebook.com/relativepaths The music we use for various intro bits, stings and outro is ‘Vitreous Detachment’ by Origamibiro, used with kind permission. – Ben Links: Aaron's response to Josh Korr – https://www.aaron-gustafson.com/notebook/insert-clickbait-headline-about-progressive-enhancement-here Aaron's site – https://www.aaron-gustafson.com The True Cost of Progressive Enhancement – http://blog.easy-designs.net/archives/the-true-cost-of-progressive-enhancement Aaron's book (which I'm still reading during coffee breaks!) – https://adaptivewebdesign.info
Descripcion del programa Ulises Gascón, Desarrollador Open Source y especializado en JavaScript, Node, Python nos cuenta su opinión sobre la importancia del software libre. Hablaremos sobre como puede aportar el Open Source a la sociedad, sobre si se ha de cobrar o no por el Software Libre. Espero que os sirva de utilidad para aprender y poder afrontar nuevos retos. ¡Peace, Love and Open Source! Encuesta para pedir Feedback Posibles topics, entrevistados y duración del programa Recomendaciones Preguntas rápidas: Ulises Gascón Quién me ha inspirado: Rick Waldron Recomiéndanos un recurso: Mozilla Developer Network Recomiéndanos a un invitado: Ángel Corral ¿Qué tema te gustaría que tratásemos?: Internet of Things y Virtual Reality Contacta con: Ulises Gascón LinkedIn de Ulises Gascón Twitter de Ulises Gascón Blog de Ulises Gascón Links del programa Open Source Backbone.js Genome.js Aaron Gustafson Belén Albeza Angular.js Redhat PHP Node.js Left-pad JS.io Git Github Recomendaciones de Nacho Open Source Organization EventPoints Contacta con el programa Web de WeCodeSign Twitter de WeCodeSign eMail de WeCodeSign Web de Ignacio Villanueva Twitter de Ignacio Villanueva
Aaron Gustafson inspires us to build a web for all people. He encourages us to keep an open mind about perspectives that are different than our own. He motivates us to keep focused on context when it comes to the users we’re designing for. He also challenges us to plant seeds of growth in others […]
What does it take to make the web more accessible? Carl and Richard talk to Aaron Gustafson about his years of work helping to create and support standards for accessibility on the web - all kinds of accessibility. While supporting visual and hearing impaired is important, there are so many more aspects to accessibility, especially today where those capabilities translate into new devices that make focus on speech or other completely different UI paradigms. The good news is, the tooling is getting better (check the links on the web page) to make it easy for you to keep accessibility in your mind as you code - don't bolt on at the end!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
What does it take to make the web more accessible? Carl and Richard talk to Aaron Gustafson about his years of work helping to create and support standards for accessibility on the web - all kinds of accessibility. While supporting visual and hearing impaired is important, there are so many more aspects to accessibility, especially today where those capabilities translate into new devices that make focus on speech or other completely different UI paradigms. The good news is, the tooling is getting better (check the links on the web page) to make it easy for you to keep accessibility in your mind as you code - don't bolt on at the end!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
Jeremy Osborn is the Academic Director of Aquent Gymnasium, an innovative MOOC for designers, developers and marketing professionals, and the author of popular books on web technology and design software, including his latest, HTML5 Digital Classroom. He and Jeffrey Zeldman discuss the rapidly changing landscape of modern web design; how to keep learning and stay inspired; remembering the human being you're designing for, and the joy of stress cases. Links for this episode:JeremyOsborn.comTwitter: Jeremy OsbornWeb Design is Hard w/ Jeffrey Zeldman and Aaron Gustafson Books by Jeremy OsbornThe GymnasiumBrought to you by: Braintree (To learn more visit BraintreePayments.com/BigWebShow).
Where does progressive enhancement fit in the web today? Developer Aaron Gustafson, author of Adaptive Web Design, returns to the show to update us on how progressive enhancement fits for today’s mobile web design & development workflow. Not only do we go through the technical specifics of progressive enhancement, we chat about how design and user experience work hand-in-hand alongside the business benefits inherent when building an inclusive site or app. < Download MP3 > < Listen on ctrlclickcast.com > Show Notes: Adaptive Web Design Aaron Gustafson The Web Isn’t Uniform Designing with Progressive Enhancement 15 Years of Dao Progressive Enhancement: Zed’s Dead, Baby Zed's dead, baby Inside FastBoot: The Road to Server-Side Rendering Isomorphic JavaScript Siri Cortana Alexa The Full StackOverflow Developer by Christian Heilmann Build Conference Pew: Chapter 1: A Portrait of Smartphone Ownership Offline First IOT HTML5 Rocks: Service Worker Introduction Pattern Lab Resources Interface Experience Maps Deque Sluggo’s North Vegetarian Cafe Lil Simz Leave us a review on iTunes Review our show on Stitcher Sponsored By
Fredrik talks to Aaron Gustafson about web standards. His origin story, how he got into web standards. How the standards work and who should get involved. The problems with prefixes and how we use them. This episode was recorded during the developer conference Øredev 2015, where Aaron gave two talks. Thank you Cloudnet for sponsoring our VPS! Comments, questions or tips? We are @kodsnack, @tobiashieta, @oferlund och @bjoreman on Twitter, have a page on Facebook and can be emailed on info@kodsnack.se if you want to write something longer. We read everything you send. If you like Kodsnack we would love a review in iTunes! Links Frameset Quark Dreamweaver Fetch Eric Meyer DOM level 0 A list apart Jeffrey Zeldman XHTML COMDEX Molly Holzschlag South by southwest Filemaker Jeff Veen Jen Robbins - Web design in a nutshell Jeremy Keith Andy Budd Richard Rutter Clearleft The web standards project Glenda Simms Derek Featherstone W3C TPAC Indesign Pagemaker CSS shapes Web platform incubator community group SVG Network information API - seems to have been shut down Vendor prefixes Edge - Microsoft’s successor to Internet explorer Alex Russell on vendor prefixes and their problems WHATWG - Web hypertext application technology working group Web SQL Firefox phones did not last Zork Basecamp Harvest Adaptive web design, second edition Aaron’s two talks Titles You’re the web standards guy Who falls into web standards and how does it happen? Between midnight and 5 a.m. Things were starting to stabilize a bit on the web The only way to build a solid foundation The web standards bug Before coming to the web In the trenches every day making web pages Help make other specs better Vendor prefixes have bitten us in the ass We don’t experience the web the way everyone else does I can’t believe I want them to make their ads more accessible
Longtime web developer, lecturer, and web standards evangelist Aaron Gustafson and host Jeffrey Zeldman discuss the newly published update to Aaron's best-selling industry classic “love letter to the web,” Adaptive Web Design: Crafting Rich Experiences With Progressive Enhancement, 2nd Edition (New Riders, 2015). Topics covered include: Aaron's superhero origin story as a creator of progressively enhanced websites and applications; "we're not building things we haven't built on the web before;" "creating opportunities for people outside your comfort zone;" development in the world of Node.js; "every interface is a conversation;" "visual design is an enhancement;" "interaction is an enhancement;" nerding out over early web terminal interfaces; Microsoft, Opera, and more. Save 35% off Aaron Gustafson's Adaptive Web Design: Crafting Rich Experiences With Progressive Enhancement, 2nd Edition when you enter discount code AARON35 at checkout. Links for this episode:About Aaron GustafsonAdaptive Web Design Second Edition (“95% new material”)Read the first chapter free (PDF)First Edition, May 2011 (read the entire first edition free) Web Standards SherpaNotebook: Aaron's blogEngagements: Aaron's speaking page, using Quantity Queries"Quantity Queries for CSS" by Heydon Pickering in A List ApartA List Apart: articles by Aaron GustafsonEric Meyer's "CSS Design: Going to Print" in A List ApartWhatsAppBrought to you by: Braintree (To learn more, and for your first $50,000 in transactions fee-free, go to BraintreePayments.com/BigWebShow) DreamHost (Visit the link to sign up and make sure to use the code THEBIGWEBSHOW395 at checkout and you'll get top rated web hosting for just $3.95/month and a free domain name). Thinkful (Learn to build websites & apps in 3 months and get 20% off when you visit Thinkful.com/bigwebshow)
Longtime web developer, lecturer, and web standards evangelist Aaron Gustafson and host Jeffrey Zeldman discuss the newly published update to Aaron’s best-selling industry classic “love letter to the web,” Adaptive Web Design: Crafting Rich Experiences With Progressive Enhancement, 2nd Edition (New Riders, 2015). Topics covered include: Aaron's superhero origin story as a creator of progressively enhanced websites and applications; "we’re not building things we haven't built on the web before;" "creating opportunities for people outside your comfort zone;" development in the world of Node.js; "every interface is a conversation;" "visual design is an enhancement;" "interaction is an enhancement;" nerding out over early web terminal interfaces; Microsoft, Opera, and more. Save 35% off Aaron Gustafson’s Adaptive Web Design: Crafting Rich Experiences With Progressive Enhancement, 2nd Edition when you enter discount code AARON35 at checkout.
Progressive Enhancement is a core principle of the web. But these days it seems a lot of folks don't quite understand what it's about. Aaron Gustafson joins Jen Simmons to break it down, and explain why and how your website should be built using the principles of Progressive Enhancement.
Jeffrey Zeldman's guest is web developer and long-time standards evangelist Aaron Gustafson (@AaronGustafson), author of Adaptive Web Design. The two web design and development veterans discuss web design then and now; why Flipboard's 60fps web launch is anti-web and anti-user; Genesis's "Land of Confusion" video, and other bad ideas from the 1980s; design versus art; the demise and sendoff of Web Standards Sherpa; how the web community differs from other creative communities; and the 2nd Edition of Aaron's book, coming from New Riders this year. Links for this episode:A Bit About Aaron GustafsonAdaptive Web Design: Crafting Rich Experiences with Progressive EnhancementResponsive Issues Community GroupEasy Designs - Web Design, Development & ConsultingWeb Standards SherpaCode & CreativityWebStandardsProject (@wasp) | TwitterA List Apart: For People Who Make WebsitesGenesis - Land Of Confusion [Official Music Video] - YouTubeSponsored by An Event Apart (The design conference for people who make websites).
Jeffrey Zeldman's guest is web developer and long-time standards evangelist Aaron Gustafson (@AaronGustafson), author of Adaptive Web Design. The two web design and development veterans discuss web design then and now; why Flipboard's 60fps web launch is anti-web and anti-user; Genesis's "Land of Confusion" video, and other bad ideas from the 1980s; design versus art; the demise and sendoff of Web Standards Sherpa; how the web community differs from other creative communities; and the 2nd Edition of Aaron's book, coming from New Riders this year.
Responsive web design is widely regarded as a must when designing for multiple devices. With just one code base, instead of multiple sites, you can more efficiently make use of your resources. But, how your design looks is only a piece of the overall experience for a user. Having it be able to adapt to different browsers and technology can fully round out the interaction.
In this edition of the podcast I get to speak with Aaron about all kinds of things from responsive images to element queries, progressive enhancement to dumb javascript and tonnes of helpful tips in between it all.
Responsive web design seems to come up in every other discussion or article about UX these days. And rightfully so as it’s an elegant way to make sure your design adapts to the multitude of devices on the market. But with the Internet of Things looming, it’s becoming more than just the visuals of your site that are of major concern. How your content displays on a car dashboard, “can a watch handle this page weight?”, or “is this refrigerator JavaScript enabled?” are not unrealistic issues moving forward.
Carl and Richard talk to Aaron Gustafson about web standards and progressive enhancement. Aaron is part of the Web Standards Project and so the conversation starts off about it's role in the maintenance of web standards - resisting the fragmentation of features in various browsers. From there, Aaron digs into adaptive web design through progressive enhancement. What does it take to retrofit a legacy web page into more current techniques? Aaron talks about a variety of strategies to help you get a great mobile web experience. Also listen for comparisons of native, hybrid and web-based mobile applications!
This week Jim talks to Aaron Gustafson about adaptive web design, the Chattanooga tech scene, and Web Standards Sherpa.
It’s difficult to predict how users will access your designs and your content. More and more, people are connecting to the internet through some sort of mobile device. Using the latest advances in HTML and CSS can leave aspects of your site incompatible with some browsers. How do you ensure that you’re providing a good experience to your users over a broad spectrum of scenarios?
Forms. We all have to make ‘em, but few of us love ‘em. Aaron Gustafson believes that this is because we don’t understand them. In this session, we will explore forms from top to bottom, examining how they work and how their components can be incorporated with other elements to maximize accessibility, improve semantics, and allow for more flexible styling. You’ll get to see the complete picture with forms, including error, warning and formatting messages, styling and its implications, as well as best practices for manipulation with Javascript and Ajax. After getting hooked on the web in 1996 and spending several years pushing pixels and bits for the likes of IBM and Konica Minolta, Aaron Gustafson decided to focus full-time on his own web consultancy, Easy! Designs LLC. Aaron is a member of the Web Standards Project (WaSP) and the Guild of Accessible Web Designers (GAWDS). He also serves as Technical Editor for A List Apart, is a contributing writer for Digital Web Magazine, and is quickly building a library of writing and editing credits in meatspace. He has graced the stage at numerous conferences including An Event Apart, COMDEX, SXSW, and The Ajax Experience and is frequently called on to provide web standards training in both the public and private sector. Licensed as Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.5 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5/).