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Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Henrik Joreteg This week on My JavaScript Story, Charles speaks with Henrik Joreteg. Henrik has been on JavaScript Jabber previously discussing &yet back in December of 2014 on episode 137. He has since then left &yet and now does independent consulting and works on his own projects. He first got into programming when he started a company that created online video tours for houses and he needed to teach himself programming in order to create the website. They talk about what led him to JavaScript, what he’s proud of contributing to the community, what he is working on now, and much more! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: JavaScript Jabber Episode 137 &yet How did you first get into programming? Liked computers as a child but didn’t want to spend his life on it originally Studied Business in college Create house touring video company Adobe ColdFusion How were you exposed to JavaScript? Gig as a ColdFusion developer jQTouch, jQuery, and Django Interested in building app-like experiences What have you done with JavaScript that you are proud of? Want to push the web into an app-like space Helped to create Ampersand.js Wrote Human JavaScript Created Simple WebRTC Promote web as an application platform What are you working on now? Redux and React New book: Human Redux Independent consulting Speedy.gift Redux-bundler And much, much more! Links: JavaScript Jabber Episode 137 JavaScript Jabber &yet JavaScript jQTouch jQuery Django Human JavaScript Ampersand.js Simple WebRTC Human Redux Redux React Speedy.gift Redux-bundler Henrik’s GitHub Joreteg.com @HenrikJoreteg Sponsors: Loot Crate FreshBooks Picks Charles Hogwarts Battle React Dev Summit JS Dev Summit Newspaper Theme on Themeforest Get a Coder Job Course Henrik Preact Parcel.js Rollup.js Space repetition systems Anki
Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Henrik Joreteg This week on My JavaScript Story, Charles speaks with Henrik Joreteg. Henrik has been on JavaScript Jabber previously discussing &yet back in December of 2014 on episode 137. He has since then left &yet and now does independent consulting and works on his own projects. He first got into programming when he started a company that created online video tours for houses and he needed to teach himself programming in order to create the website. They talk about what led him to JavaScript, what he’s proud of contributing to the community, what he is working on now, and much more! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: JavaScript Jabber Episode 137 &yet How did you first get into programming? Liked computers as a child but didn’t want to spend his life on it originally Studied Business in college Create house touring video company Adobe ColdFusion How were you exposed to JavaScript? Gig as a ColdFusion developer jQTouch, jQuery, and Django Interested in building app-like experiences What have you done with JavaScript that you are proud of? Want to push the web into an app-like space Helped to create Ampersand.js Wrote Human JavaScript Created Simple WebRTC Promote web as an application platform What are you working on now? Redux and React New book: Human Redux Independent consulting Speedy.gift Redux-bundler And much, much more! Links: JavaScript Jabber Episode 137 JavaScript Jabber &yet JavaScript jQTouch jQuery Django Human JavaScript Ampersand.js Simple WebRTC Human Redux Redux React Speedy.gift Redux-bundler Henrik’s GitHub Joreteg.com @HenrikJoreteg Sponsors: Loot Crate FreshBooks Picks Charles Hogwarts Battle React Dev Summit JS Dev Summit Newspaper Theme on Themeforest Get a Coder Job Course Henrik Preact Parcel.js Rollup.js Space repetition systems Anki
Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: Henrik Joreteg This week on My JavaScript Story, Charles speaks with Henrik Joreteg. Henrik has been on JavaScript Jabber previously discussing &yet back in December of 2014 on episode 137. He has since then left &yet and now does independent consulting and works on his own projects. He first got into programming when he started a company that created online video tours for houses and he needed to teach himself programming in order to create the website. They talk about what led him to JavaScript, what he’s proud of contributing to the community, what he is working on now, and much more! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: JavaScript Jabber Episode 137 &yet How did you first get into programming? Liked computers as a child but didn’t want to spend his life on it originally Studied Business in college Create house touring video company Adobe ColdFusion How were you exposed to JavaScript? Gig as a ColdFusion developer jQTouch, jQuery, and Django Interested in building app-like experiences What have you done with JavaScript that you are proud of? Want to push the web into an app-like space Helped to create Ampersand.js Wrote Human JavaScript Created Simple WebRTC Promote web as an application platform What are you working on now? Redux and React New book: Human Redux Independent consulting Speedy.gift Redux-bundler And much, much more! Links: JavaScript Jabber Episode 137 JavaScript Jabber &yet JavaScript jQTouch jQuery Django Human JavaScript Ampersand.js Simple WebRTC Human Redux Redux React Speedy.gift Redux-bundler Henrik’s GitHub Joreteg.com @HenrikJoreteg Sponsors: Loot Crate FreshBooks Picks Charles Hogwarts Battle React Dev Summit JS Dev Summit Newspaper Theme on Themeforest Get a Coder Job Course Henrik Preact Parcel.js Rollup.js Space repetition systems Anki
Panel: Jonathan Stark In this episode of the Freelancer’s Show, Jonathan discusses “Flipping the Switch,” on a solo podcast episode. Jonathan answers questions about shut down his old mobile site jonathanstark.com and replaced the content with ExpensiveProblem.com. Jonathan continues with important insights, in his journey, when you are considering closing doors on one business and starting the next. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: t Combining business at jonathanstark.com Closed doors on the mobile business Working with Credit Unions Horizontal expertise Picking a vertical market Mobile strategy Adaption The announcement of the iPhone and mobile focus Smartphone craze Joining open source projects Jqtouch PhoneGap Mobile platform Jonathan book launch on JQT and PhoneGap Being part of a tribe or a new culture of developers Change in 2012 Leads? Budgets for mobile were drying up 2017 - Mobile become the dominant computing platform Main Stream Blockchain, AI, etc. Side interest - Hourly Billing Coaching service Where your name is associated And much more!
Panel: Jonathan Stark In this episode of the Freelancer’s Show, Jonathan discusses “Flipping the Switch,” on a solo podcast episode. Jonathan answers questions about shut down his old mobile site jonathanstark.com and replaced the content with ExpensiveProblem.com. Jonathan continues with important insights, in his journey, when you are considering closing doors on one business and starting the next. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: t Combining business at jonathanstark.com Closed doors on the mobile business Working with Credit Unions Horizontal expertise Picking a vertical market Mobile strategy Adaption The announcement of the iPhone and mobile focus Smartphone craze Joining open source projects Jqtouch PhoneGap Mobile platform Jonathan book launch on JQT and PhoneGap Being part of a tribe or a new culture of developers Change in 2012 Leads? Budgets for mobile were drying up 2017 - Mobile become the dominant computing platform Main Stream Blockchain, AI, etc. Side interest - Hourly Billing Coaching service Where your name is associated And much more!
Episode 26 - JavaScript UI Widget Libraries Subscribe on iTunes Subscribe to RSS Download MP3 Show notes hosted by Jared Brown Brandon Corbin joined by Edward Rudd JS Widget Libs for Desktop and then Mobile Questions: What do people look for in each lib? How do you choose one over another? Desktop: Great for Intranet software, enterprise, engineering and scientific web apps Mobile: Progressive (mobile site) vs native-feeling app (typically wrapped in something like PhoneGap)? Actively developed or stale? JS Widget LibrariesLarge screenjQuery UIGrid coming to v2.1 Movement to clean up the API Lots of dev momentum lately Kendo UI by TelerikUses jQuery Recently out of beta Free for GPL Compatible open source projects $399 per developer (sounds like M$ style licensing.. inherited from the “.NET” background) Mention DataViz and Mobile Has custom theme builder for it’s widgets (not jquery UI’s builder) Doesn’t support IE6 Native UI on each device wijmoBased on jQuery UI (in fact, some of the team works on jQuery UI) Uses jQuery UI themes native has a cdn for access. Free version includes 18 OpenSource widgets Commercial versionIncludes 40+ widgets $299+ (per developer) (or $499 w/ support) Ext JSby SenchaMention Sencha Touch (free) $329 - one developer license (no support) MobilejQuery Mobile - jQuery70 kb http://codiqa.com/ (web GUI prototyping tool) Open source Broad device support Degrades Gracefully (progressive?) yes Has a theme builder (jQuery UI style) Kendo Mobile - TelerikNo pricing yet (in beta) Ready for PhoneGap Sencha Touch - SenchaHow is it diff from jQTouch?Much more programmatic to work with jQTouch is more web dev friendly Support for tables while jQTouch doesn’t http://9-bits.com/post/723711597/jqtouch-and-sencha-touch Free for non-OEMs Touch charts Looks like Android & iOS styling is a more manual thing to do jQTouch(problems with Android?) - SenchaWorks with Zepto or jQueryZepto is a minimal, jQuery syntax compatible lib SASS-based theming In beta Progressive Free ~20 kb Others to consider (both free, open source)JoNot easy to see which UI widgets it offers Looks to have less popularity GWT MobileFrom Google (but code is on GitHub) PhoneGap wrapper Great for pure client-side Java devs PhoneGap + XUI.jsOpen source Zirb Twitter Bootstrap Notes: Kendo UI Licensing. Kendo is dual-licensed under GPLv3/commercial license, jQuery UI is MIT/GPLv2. Support. Purchasing a Kendo commercial license entitles you to support (options here). Professional jQuery UI support is offered by appendTo and the filament group. Feature set. Kendo has some components that are missing in jQuery UI (Grid, Chart, TreeView, Upload, Templates, and soon - MVVM). You might need to stitch plug-ins by different authors if you want to use such functionality alongside jQuery UI. Roadmap. Kendo has a fixed release cycle (3 releases per year), with a fixed roadmap for the next release. The jQuery roadmap does not guarantee when the features will be included. Openness. You can browse the latest jQuery UI source at all times. With Kendo, you get only the source code for major releases when you don’t have a commercial license. If you purchase one, you get all the latest source code. http://jqueryuivskendoui.com/ Discuss comparison table Sencha Touch Aaron Weyenberg on Quora - “Sencha Touch takes much much longer to learn and become comfortable with, but it’s more robust. Sencha Touch documentation and examples, however, are quite unrefined in my opinion. There’s almost no MVC architecture support docs, so be prepared to do a lot of reverse engineering. jQuery Mobile can get you up and running in a day, but it’s not as feature rich, and seems not quite as smooth in terms of transitions and effects.” http://www.quora.com/Were-deciding-between-jQuery-Mobile-and-Sencha-Touch-What-are-the-pros-and-cons-for-each James Pearce, Developer Relations @ Sencha Inc Of course it very much depends on the use-case, your skill set and your desired architecture. If you want an easy, declarative, markup-configured mobile site, then jQuery Mobile’s progressive enhancements is an obvious option. If you want a richer, more standalone (say, MVC) app, built using a programmatic, RIA philosophy, then the Sencha Touch route would probably be better. It’s more likely that you’d take this approach if you were keen to wrap the app up in PhoneGap to deploy in an app store, for example. jQTouch Sencha touch is a little more complicated for those used to web design to use, in that it is almost a purely programmatic model (you don’t design pages in html, you programmatically add elements to a page). It does, however, have a much richer widget model and is a lot more fleshed out than jQTouch (it is also a lot bigger)… http://stackoverflow.com/questions/3446186/sencha-touch-vs-jqtouch Recommendations DEPENDS ON THE USE CASE Desktop jQuery UI Mobile jQuery Mobile
There’s little hotter in the world of web development right now than creating optimized web experiences and applications for mobile web enabled devices like iPhone, Android, iPad and webOS. Luckily, there’s a number of excellent HTML/CSS/Javascript frameworks to help developers create native-like experiences for these devices. In this session, Jonathan Stark takes an in depth look at several of these, including JQTouch, JQuery Mobile and SenchaTouch, comparing and contrasting their approaches, and most appropriate uses. As a developer looking to tailor experiences and applications for the mobile web, this will be an invaluable session. Jonathan Stark is a mobile and web application consultant who the Wall Street Journal has called an expert on publishing desktop data to the web. He is the author of O’Reilly’s Building iPhone Apps with HTML, CSS, and JavaScript, is a tech editor for both php|architect and Advisor magazines, and is often quoted in the media on internet and mobile lifestyle trends. Jonathan began his programming career more than 20 years ago on a Tandy TRS-80 and still thinks Zork was a sweet game. Follow Jonathan on Twitter: @jonathanstark Licensed as Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/).
Patrick Crowley dives into the world of mobile app development and shows how to use the jQTouch framework to quickly build awesome mobile-optimized web apps.
Change the look and behavior of a Rails app on mobile devices. Also use jQTouch to build a native-looking interface.
Change the look and behavior of a Rails app on mobile devices. Also use jQTouch to build a native-looking interface.
Jim covers jQTouch, a plugin for jQuery that enables quick iPhone websites, and Nick talks about how to design for the small screen.
Bienvenue dans le quatorzième épisode de CacaoCast! Dans cet épisode, Philippe Casgrain et Philippe Guitard discutent des sujets suivants: Evènement Spécial d'Apple - Steve Jobs présente de nouveaux produits Transgaming - Philippe a un nouveau job Syntaxe "dot-notation" en Objective-C 2.0 - L'utilisez-vous? JQTouch - Pour développer des applications Web pour l'iPhone avec JQuery ClickToFlash - Encore amélioré, permet de charger directement les vidéos YouTube en H.264 Ecoutez cet épisode