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Guest Brian Muenzenmeyer Panelists Richard Littauer | Abbigail Cabunoc Mayes Show Notes In this episode of Sustain, host Richard Littauer is joined by co-host Abigail Cabunoc Mayes and guest Brian Muenzenmeyer, a seasoned open source contributor. Brian shares his journey in web development, his experiences with burnout, and insights from his new book, Approachable Open Source. Some key topics discussed include contributing to open source projects, community building, maintaining balance, and funding models for sustainability. This episode emphasizes the role of diverse contributions and the importance of creating accessible avenues for all kinds of contributions in open source. Press download now to hear more! [00:01:40] Brian discusses his book, which offers practical advice for navigating open source. He reflects on his career journey, from early contributions to burnout and recovery. He shares his humble beginnings with jQuery Mobile and the steps that led him to maintain major projects like Pattern Lab. [00:04:21] Brian opens up about his experience with burnout and how it influenced the writing of his book. [00:06:42] Brian emphasizes the importance of designing sustainable open source communities. [00:08:41] Richard, Brian, and Abby explore the concept of “pace layers” in open source, highlighting the dynamic balance between innovation and stability. [00:14:10] Chapter 7 in Brian's book is discussed where Brian advocates for corporate contributions to open source and shares tips for individuals looking to get involved. [00:20:04] Brian provides practical advice for maintainers, including time management, fostering diverse roles, and creating approachable entry points for contributors. [00:25:01] The conversation delves into the challenges of improving diversity in open source communities and the importance of celebrating successes. [00:28:39] Find out where you can get Brian's book, Approachable Open Source. Digital copies are available worldwide, and physical copies shipping to the U.S. and Canada. Quotes [00:05:29] “There isn't a dichotomy between consumption and contribution.” [00:13:48] “The work that we're doing isn't really for us. If you're making open source, it's not really for you, you're sharing it with the world.” [00:20:28] “If you look at a mature open source project and try to emulate it at the outset, you're going to be disappointed and you're going to feel like you're always behind.” [00:23:09] “You don't need permission to do your job.” [00:23:41] “You're already empowered to fix things that you see are broken.” [00:23:57] “Instead of buying a maintainer a coffee, spend a coffee cup's amount of time looking at their issue log.” Spotlight [00:30:05] Richard's spotlight is Stephen Colbert. [00:30:38] Abby's spotlight is Calibre. [00:30:54] Brian's spotlight is his good friend, Geoff Pursell (https://github.com/geoffp). Links SustainOSS (https://sustainoss.org/) podcast@sustainoss.org (mailto:podcast@sustainoss.org) richard@sustainoss.org (mailto:richard@sustainoss.org) SustainOSS Discourse (https://discourse.sustainoss.org/) SustainOSS Mastodon (https://mastodon.social/tags/sustainoss) Open Collective-SustainOSS (Contribute) (https://opencollective.com/sustainoss) Richard Littauer Socials (https://www.burntfen.com/2023-05-30/socials) Abby Cabunoc Mayes X (https://x.com/abbycabs) Brian Muenzenmeyer Website (https://brianmuenzenmeyer.com/) Brian Muenzenmeyer's Bluesky (https://bsky.app/profile/brianmuenzenmeyer.com) Brian Muenzenmeyer LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/in/brian-muenzenmeyer-91a77554/) Approachable Open Source By Brian Muenzenmeyer (https://approachableopensource.com/) Colin Dean-GitHub (https://github.com/colindean) Pace Layers Thinking: Paul Saffo and Stewart Brand @ The Interval (https://longnow.org/ideas/stewart-brand-pace-layers-thinking-at-the-interval/) Ship Faster By Building Design Systems Slower By Josh Clark (https://bigmedium.com/ideas/design-system-pace-layers-slow-fast.html) Ecosyste.ms (https://ecosyste.ms/) Ecosystem Funds: Curated Support For Your Critical Software Dependencies By Ben Nickolls (https://opencollective.com/opensource/updates/ecosystem-funds-curated-support-for-your-critical-software-dependencies) Stephen Colbert (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stephen_Colbert) Calibre (https://calibre-ebook.com/) Credits Produced by Richard Littauer (https://www.burntfen.com/) Edited by Paul M. Bahr at Peachtree Sound (https://www.peachtreesound.com/) Show notes by DeAnn Bahr Peachtree Sound (https://www.peachtreesound.com/) Special Guest: Brian Muenzenmeyer.
Get stoked, jQuery 1.2 is here! Join Scott and Wes as they discuss jQuery Mobile, slicing PSD files, CSS rounded corners, CoffeeScript features, WordPress 2.3, and the rise of Skeuomorphism, shaping the landscape of web development this year. Show Notes 00:00 Welcome to Syntax! 01:16 Brought to you by Sentry.io. 02:17 jQuery 1.2 released! 07:38 jQuery Mobile. 09:34 Skeuomorphism. 10:25 How do you slice up your .PSDs? Slicy By MacRabbit 12:34 Cufon, new font method. 14:06 CSS rounded corners. CSS3Please 15:17 Coda Tip. 16:48 Top 5 CoffeeScript Features. 18:44 Conference Talks to Spotlight. BatmanJS, your new favorite JavaScript superhero 20:35 WordPress 2.3! 21:15 PHP 5.2.0 PHP 5.2.0 Release Announcement 21:53 Sponsored by Media Temple. Hit us up on Socials! Syntax: X Instagram Tiktok LinkedIn Threads Wes: X Instagram Tiktok LinkedIn Threads Scott:X Instagram Tiktok LinkedIn Threads Randy: X Instagram YouTube Threads
December 27th, 2017 | In the penultimate recap of the year, the world is topsy turvy. Dave and Michael stumble upon the Apple conspiracy to raise awareness of mobile device regulation; we now know why Magic Leap was hiring astronauts; jQuery Mobile is actually in the news; we remember fondly the days of m.dot websites; and oh yeah do you remember the Magic Jack? Follow @w3_radio on Twitter and on w3radio.com. Michael Schofield is @schoeyfield. Dave Gillhespy is @yodasw16 Dan Sims is @danielgsims
Добрый день уважаемые слушатели. Представляем новый выпуск подкаста RWpod. В этом выпуске: Ruby Ruby 2.5.0 Released, Ruby 2.5 requires pp by default, Array#prepend and Array#append in Ruby 2.5 и Counting Or Sorting By An Association In A Rails SQL Query JavaScript The Future of jQuery UI and jQuery Mobile, 16 Conference Talks From 2017 Every Designer and Developer Needs to Watch, Markdown-to-jsx - Markdown Component for React и Moon Sugar - a library for snowfall on your website
MJS 030: Mike North This episode is a My JavaScript Story featuring Mike North. Tune in to learn more about how Mike started his journey as a developer in JavaScript! [00:01:15] Introduction to Mike Mike has a Frontend Masters Series for Ember 2 and has two other courses that help developers stand out from the software perspective. [00:02:45] How did you get into programming? Mike describes that he has taken a non-linear path to get to where he is now. He started programming as a teenager. He was laying dry wall with a construction company when he was 15 or 16. At the end of the job, he built a training app for the company in order to decrease their paperwork. Mike states that the programming work he does day-to-day he only learned two or three years ago. [00:04:13] Is that due to things changing so quickly? Mike’s role and passion keeps evolving. People pick what is important to them. A goal of his is to always stay learning; he enjoys having a deep understanding of topics. He enjoys using brand new skills and calls himself a “perpetual beginner.” Mike is always talking about something that he has just figured out how to do. [00:05:20] How do you approach keeping current? Mike thinks that it is impossible to keep up with everything. It is a full time job to keep track of everything. Developers don’t need to spend so much time going through information. He goes to teams once every quarter and helps them absorb the information in a distilled way so they do not have to filter through stuff such as what frameworks are worth paying attention to. This condenses the information and frees them from having to learn everything. Instead, they are able to focus on their product. [00:08:27] How did you get into JavaScript and web development? When Mike entered college, he was going into mechanical engineering and did not want to write code. He thought it was boring. When he began getting into code, it was because he could use it to solve real world problems. When he first started, he wrote engineering simulation code for Formula One racecars. When the iPhone came out, it gave him clarity that he wanted to work with that. He began to work with jQuery Mobile. He liked doing this enough that he ran a consultancy at night. He ran projects that he had no previous experience with in order to learn skills that would help him make JavaScript his full-time job. [00:13:29] Where does Ember fit in with all of this? When Mike started working at Yahoo, he became very familiar with Ember. Ember allowed employees to treat engineers as resources towards the larger goal of building and merging all apps together instead of having separate pockets of different technology everywhere. There were only a few Ember experts at the time, so Mike took advantage and spent a lot of time to gain expertise with the framework. [00:16:50] What kinds of contributions do you feel like you’ve made to the JavaScript community? Mike believes the way he has contributed to the community has evolved over time. In the past, he wrote libraries and worked with issues in the framework itself. The impact he has now is representing newcomers to a technology. He does workshops at conferences. He loves teaching and enabling people. [00:19:07] How do you structure the learning to make it that it is approachable for people? How do you address both audiences? As far as newcomers to programming, there is an alarming statistic of companies hiring computer programmers at 400% of the rate at which CS majors can graduate. The demand for software engineers exceeds the ability to educate conventionality. This means companies have to take people seriously that were educated via boot camps. There is a lot of material for new beginners. For people who are established programmers but new to specific technologies, there is a huge gap of material. Video courses, tutorials, and books should be made more accessible for these people. Mike also believes it is the job of a senior engineer to spend time teaching people. Books, tutorials, and trainings that scrape the surface disappoint Mike. This has informed the techniques he uses to teach during his workshops. Students spend 50% of their time solving problems. His students are given code tests and spend time working how to solve problems. It takes a long time to build his curriculum but it is his main focus right now. Picks Mike: TypeScript Deep Dive by Basarat Ali Syed Proposal for Async Iteration Charles Visual Studio Code Frontend Masters Links Twitter www.mike.works
MJS 030: Mike North This episode is a My JavaScript Story featuring Mike North. Tune in to learn more about how Mike started his journey as a developer in JavaScript! [00:01:15] Introduction to Mike Mike has a Frontend Masters Series for Ember 2 and has two other courses that help developers stand out from the software perspective. [00:02:45] How did you get into programming? Mike describes that he has taken a non-linear path to get to where he is now. He started programming as a teenager. He was laying dry wall with a construction company when he was 15 or 16. At the end of the job, he built a training app for the company in order to decrease their paperwork. Mike states that the programming work he does day-to-day he only learned two or three years ago. [00:04:13] Is that due to things changing so quickly? Mike’s role and passion keeps evolving. People pick what is important to them. A goal of his is to always stay learning; he enjoys having a deep understanding of topics. He enjoys using brand new skills and calls himself a “perpetual beginner.” Mike is always talking about something that he has just figured out how to do. [00:05:20] How do you approach keeping current? Mike thinks that it is impossible to keep up with everything. It is a full time job to keep track of everything. Developers don’t need to spend so much time going through information. He goes to teams once every quarter and helps them absorb the information in a distilled way so they do not have to filter through stuff such as what frameworks are worth paying attention to. This condenses the information and frees them from having to learn everything. Instead, they are able to focus on their product. [00:08:27] How did you get into JavaScript and web development? When Mike entered college, he was going into mechanical engineering and did not want to write code. He thought it was boring. When he began getting into code, it was because he could use it to solve real world problems. When he first started, he wrote engineering simulation code for Formula One racecars. When the iPhone came out, it gave him clarity that he wanted to work with that. He began to work with jQuery Mobile. He liked doing this enough that he ran a consultancy at night. He ran projects that he had no previous experience with in order to learn skills that would help him make JavaScript his full-time job. [00:13:29] Where does Ember fit in with all of this? When Mike started working at Yahoo, he became very familiar with Ember. Ember allowed employees to treat engineers as resources towards the larger goal of building and merging all apps together instead of having separate pockets of different technology everywhere. There were only a few Ember experts at the time, so Mike took advantage and spent a lot of time to gain expertise with the framework. [00:16:50] What kinds of contributions do you feel like you’ve made to the JavaScript community? Mike believes the way he has contributed to the community has evolved over time. In the past, he wrote libraries and worked with issues in the framework itself. The impact he has now is representing newcomers to a technology. He does workshops at conferences. He loves teaching and enabling people. [00:19:07] How do you structure the learning to make it that it is approachable for people? How do you address both audiences? As far as newcomers to programming, there is an alarming statistic of companies hiring computer programmers at 400% of the rate at which CS majors can graduate. The demand for software engineers exceeds the ability to educate conventionality. This means companies have to take people seriously that were educated via boot camps. There is a lot of material for new beginners. For people who are established programmers but new to specific technologies, there is a huge gap of material. Video courses, tutorials, and books should be made more accessible for these people. Mike also believes it is the job of a senior engineer to spend time teaching people. Books, tutorials, and trainings that scrape the surface disappoint Mike. This has informed the techniques he uses to teach during his workshops. Students spend 50% of their time solving problems. His students are given code tests and spend time working how to solve problems. It takes a long time to build his curriculum but it is his main focus right now. Picks Mike: TypeScript Deep Dive by Basarat Ali Syed Proposal for Async Iteration Charles Visual Studio Code Frontend Masters Links Twitter www.mike.works
MJS 030: Mike North This episode is a My JavaScript Story featuring Mike North. Tune in to learn more about how Mike started his journey as a developer in JavaScript! [00:01:15] Introduction to Mike Mike has a Frontend Masters Series for Ember 2 and has two other courses that help developers stand out from the software perspective. [00:02:45] How did you get into programming? Mike describes that he has taken a non-linear path to get to where he is now. He started programming as a teenager. He was laying dry wall with a construction company when he was 15 or 16. At the end of the job, he built a training app for the company in order to decrease their paperwork. Mike states that the programming work he does day-to-day he only learned two or three years ago. [00:04:13] Is that due to things changing so quickly? Mike’s role and passion keeps evolving. People pick what is important to them. A goal of his is to always stay learning; he enjoys having a deep understanding of topics. He enjoys using brand new skills and calls himself a “perpetual beginner.” Mike is always talking about something that he has just figured out how to do. [00:05:20] How do you approach keeping current? Mike thinks that it is impossible to keep up with everything. It is a full time job to keep track of everything. Developers don’t need to spend so much time going through information. He goes to teams once every quarter and helps them absorb the information in a distilled way so they do not have to filter through stuff such as what frameworks are worth paying attention to. This condenses the information and frees them from having to learn everything. Instead, they are able to focus on their product. [00:08:27] How did you get into JavaScript and web development? When Mike entered college, he was going into mechanical engineering and did not want to write code. He thought it was boring. When he began getting into code, it was because he could use it to solve real world problems. When he first started, he wrote engineering simulation code for Formula One racecars. When the iPhone came out, it gave him clarity that he wanted to work with that. He began to work with jQuery Mobile. He liked doing this enough that he ran a consultancy at night. He ran projects that he had no previous experience with in order to learn skills that would help him make JavaScript his full-time job. [00:13:29] Where does Ember fit in with all of this? When Mike started working at Yahoo, he became very familiar with Ember. Ember allowed employees to treat engineers as resources towards the larger goal of building and merging all apps together instead of having separate pockets of different technology everywhere. There were only a few Ember experts at the time, so Mike took advantage and spent a lot of time to gain expertise with the framework. [00:16:50] What kinds of contributions do you feel like you’ve made to the JavaScript community? Mike believes the way he has contributed to the community has evolved over time. In the past, he wrote libraries and worked with issues in the framework itself. The impact he has now is representing newcomers to a technology. He does workshops at conferences. He loves teaching and enabling people. [00:19:07] How do you structure the learning to make it that it is approachable for people? How do you address both audiences? As far as newcomers to programming, there is an alarming statistic of companies hiring computer programmers at 400% of the rate at which CS majors can graduate. The demand for software engineers exceeds the ability to educate conventionality. This means companies have to take people seriously that were educated via boot camps. There is a lot of material for new beginners. For people who are established programmers but new to specific technologies, there is a huge gap of material. Video courses, tutorials, and books should be made more accessible for these people. Mike also believes it is the job of a senior engineer to spend time teaching people. Books, tutorials, and trainings that scrape the surface disappoint Mike. This has informed the techniques he uses to teach during his workshops. Students spend 50% of their time solving problems. His students are given code tests and spend time working how to solve problems. It takes a long time to build his curriculum but it is his main focus right now. Picks Mike: TypeScript Deep Dive by Basarat Ali Syed Proposal for Async Iteration Charles Visual Studio Code Frontend Masters Links Twitter www.mike.works
Mat Marquis is Chair of the Responsive Issues Community Group, technical editor at A List Apart, a former member of the jQuery Mobile team, and editor of the W3C HTML5 specification. His book, JavaScript for Web Designers, was recently published by A Book Apart.
Mat Marquis is Chair of the Responsive Issues Community Group, technical editor at A List Apart, a former member of the jQuery Mobile team, and editor of the W3C HTML5 specification. His book, JavaScript for Web Designers, was recently published by A Book Apart.
Mat Marquis is Chair of the Responsive Issues Community Group, technical editor at A List Apart, a former member of the jQuery Mobile team, and editor of the W3C HTML5 specification. His book, JavaScript for Web Designers, was recently published by A Book Apart.
A deep dive into mobile development with Mobile Expert an Appcelerator Titan (MVP) Gaurav Kheterpal. https://www.linkedin.com/in/gauravkheterpal @gauravkheterpal Guarav reflects on his history in telecommunication development and mobile application development. He discusses: Appcelerator Titanium http://www.appcelerator.com/ and Sencha Touch http://www.sencha.com/products/touch The best use cases for Native and Hybrid application development and cross platform frameworks. The functions and capabilities of the Salesforce Mobile SDK including the new 2.3 Mobile SDK https://developer.salesforce.com/page/Mobile_SDK_Release_Notes Resources for starting mobile development on Salesforce. Overviews and the pros and cons of the following mobile frameworks: jQuery Mobile http://jquerymobile.com/ Sencha Touch http://www.sencha.com/products/touch AngularJS https://angularjs.org/ Ionic http://ionicframework.com/ This is an information packed episode and a great intro for someone looking to get an rapid overview of the landscape.
Scott Jehl and Jeffrey Zeldman discuss the picture element: a container for multiple images. Making the emerging W3C standard picture element work in today's browsers. Polyfills and progressive enhancement. Responsible responsive design. Shim versus polyfill; srcset versus picture; the prefix wars. Balancing company projects and open source, community projects. Picturefill is a responsive images polyfill approach that web designers and developers can use today. Scott Jehl is a web designer and developer who works with the bright folks at Filament Group, where he creates websites and applications for a range of clients (including the 2012 responsive design of the Boston Globe). He is an active contributor to the open source community, frequently releasing ideas and projects on Github; a jQuery team member (most recently leading the development of the jQuery Mobile project); and the co-author of Designing With Progressive Enhancement (New Riders: 2010)
Scott Jehl and Jeffrey Zeldman discuss the picture element: a container for multiple images. Making the emerging W3C standard picture element work in today’s browsers. Polyfills and progressive enhancement. Responsible responsive design. Shim versus polyfill; srcset versus picture; the prefix wars. Balancing company projects and open source, community projects. Picturefill is a responsive images polyfill approach that web designers and developers can use today. Scott Jehl is a web designer and developer who works with the bright folks at Filament Group, where he creates websites and applications for a range of clients (including the 2012 responsive design of the Boston Globe). He is an active contributor to the open source community, frequently releasing ideas and projects on Github; a jQuery team member (most recently leading the development of the jQuery Mobile project); and the co-author of Designing With Progressive Enhancement (New Riders: 2010)
Mit OpenLayers 3 steht eine komplette Neuentwicklung der funktionsreichen OpenLayers-Bibliothek zur Verfügung. Die verbesserte Unterstützung mobiler Geräte war ein primäres Ziel der neuen Version. Dieser Vortrag stellt den JQuery Mobile basierten OL3 Mobile Viewer vor, der erweiterte Funktionen wie automatische Kartenausrichtung oder Positionsnachführung bietet. Es wird auch ein Vergleich mit anderen Viewern, wie der auf Bootstrap und AngularJS aufbauenden Neuentwicklung von Swisstopo angestellt.
Eine Episode über die Entwicklung plattformübergreifender Apps mit dem Framework jQuery Mobile.
Enregistré le 17 juin 2013 Téléchargement de l’épisode LesCastCodeurs-Episode–81.mp3 Sponsors - OCTO Nous croyons que l’informatique transforme nos sociétés. Nous voyons en chaque développeur un ouvrier aux mains d’or et un artisan travaillant dans les règles de l’art. Toi aussi viens rejoindre la tribu OCTO pour partager ton savoir et apporter ta pierre à l’édifice. Au delà du développement, tu découvriras que la création de valeur se fait à tous les niveaux du SI : dans l’architecture, les projets et les produits innovants. Tu verras la transformation à l’oeuvre chez nos clients et tu en deviendras l’acteur et le promoteur. Pour en savoir plus… Coup de pouce Une tasse de Thé Podcast http://unetassedethepodcast.com NipDev http://www.niptech.com/podcast/category/nipdev/ News Conferences: Apple world et Red Hat Summit Keynote d’Apple http://www.apple.com/apple-events/june-2013/ Mac Pro http://arstechnica.com/apple/2013/06/a-critical-look-at-the-new-mac-pro/ OpenCL http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenCL CUDA http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CUDA Haswell http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haswell_(microarchitecture) JUDCon http://www.jboss.org/events/JUDCon/2013/unitedstates/ CamelOne http://www.camelone.com MySQL -> MariaDB pour RHEL http://www.itwire.com/business-it-news/open-source/60292-red-hat-ditches-mysql-switches-to-mariadb ava App server debate - WildFly gagne http://zeroturnaround.com/rebellabs/the-great-java-application-server-debate-with-tomcat-jboss-glassfish-jetty-and-liberty-profile/ OpenShift les prix https://www.openshift.com/blogs/announcing-the-openshift-online-silver-plan JBoss Windup https://github.com/windup/windup Aerogear et push server (route, securite, push server, geoloc, otp) Java Compiler en 1.5 ou avant retiré en Java 9 http://openjdk.java.net/jeps/182 Quelle version de Java en production et en développement ? http://glaforge.appspot.com/article/which-jdk-versions-do-you-use Entreprise Java EE 7 et les TCKs sont officiellement disponibles http://www.oracle.com/us/corporate/press/1957557 Envoyer du JMS avec des evenements CDI http://john-ament.blogspot.fr/2013/06/whats-new-in-jms-2-part-2-event-based.html JBoss Tools https://community.jboss.org/en/tools/blog/2013/06/05/beta-time-for-jboss-tools-41-and-developer-studio-70 Autocompletion http://emmanuelbernard.com/blog/2013/05/28/autocompletion-is-crap/ Cloudera Search http://blog.cloudera.com/blog/2013/06/cloudera-search-the-newest-hadoop-framework-for-cdh-users-and-developers/ Mobile Android Studio - etre Gradle centric http://alexruiz.developerblogs.com/?p=2700 XWiki Mobile http://extensions.xwiki.org/xwiki/bin/view/Extension/XWikiMobile Cloud La NSA vous regarde, impact de la NSA sur les déploiements cloud Apple et le partage de donnees avec la justice http://www.apple.com/apples-commitment-to-customer-privacy/ PiCloud http://techcrunch.com/2013/06/14/picloud/ Thales et l’espionnage Français http://lexpansion.lexpress.fr/high-tech/internet-sms-comment-thales-va-mettre-les-reseaux-francais-sur-ecoute_383757.html?p=3 Ce que PRISM signifie pour les entreprises françaises http://lecercle.lesechos.fr/economie-societe/recherche-innovation/intelligence-economique/221174654/prism-signifie-entreprises-f Debats backbone.js http://backbonejs.org Angular.js http://angularjs.org jQuery Mobile http://jquerymobile.com Pairing is just NOT a substitute for code-reviews. It falls prey to groupthink and other social dynamics. Stop spreading this, agile people. – Dhanji La documentation: Asciidoc et JavaDoc http://asciidoctor.org/news/2013/06/03/asciidoclet-announcement/ Asciidoc http://asciidoc.org Asciidoctor (implementation Ruby) http://asciidoctor.org XWiki Rendering http://rendering.xwiki.org/xwiki/bin/view/Main/WebHome Outils de l’épisode Localisation dans le navigateur http://instantserver.io/ Fichier .rvmrc https://rvm.io/workflow/rvmrc Etre notifié des nouveaux artifacts https://www.artifact-listener.org Dans iTerm 2, on peut ouvrir une URL en clickant dessus via Command+click JUG et Conferences Devoxx Belgique http://www.devoxx.be/#/ https://sites.google.com/site/jugsummercamp/ vendredi 20 septembre (call for paper) Scala IO - 24–25 Octobre 2013 : the Scala and functionnal programming conference in Paris via @ScalaIO_FR => ScalaDays, ScalaIO, on ne les arrête plus :-) Soft Shake 24, 25 octobre à Genève Nous contacter Contactez-nous via twitter http://twitter.com/lescastcodeurs sur le groupe Google http://groups.google.com/group/lescastcodeurs ou sur le site web http://lescastcodeurs.com/ Flattr-ez nous (dons) sur http://lescastcodeurs.com/ En savoir plus sur le sponsoring? sponsors@lescastcodeurs.com
Panel Todd Parker (twitter github) Joe Eames (twitter github blog) Jamison Dance (twitter github blog) Merrick Christensen (twitter github) Charles Max Wood (twitter github Teach Me To Code Rails Ramp Up) Discussion 00:53 - Todd Parker Introduction Filament Group 01:21 - DevChat.tv Indiegogo Campaign 01:55 - jQuery Mobile jQuery UI 04:13 - Responsive web design 06:17 - Mobile & Proxy Browsers WebKit Opera & Opera Mini Amazon Silk 14:06 - Enhancements 17:11 - Plugging jQuery Mobile into Desktop Applications 19:11 - Using client-side MVC frameworks AngularJS jQuery Mobile Resources Page 21:52 - Filament Group and jQuery projects ThemeRoller The Filament Group on Github Microsoft Contributions 28:26 - Theming Structure vs Style Object-oriented CSS Widget Factory 37:25 - Accessibility 058 JSJ Building Accessible Websites with Brian Hogan ARIA 44:18 - Progressive Enhancement Bootstrap Designing with Progressive Enhancement: Building the web that works for everyone by The Filament Group Visualize Picks Disenchanted by Robert Kroese (Joe) Sid Meier's Ace Patrol (Joe) Zeds Dead & Omar LinX (Merrick) RequireJS (Merrick) Ember 101 Screencasts (Jamison) Gifsicle (Jamison) vundle (Jamison) D-Link SharePort Go Mobile Companion with Rechargeable Battery (Chuck) E-3lue Cobra Type-M EMS131BK High Precision Gaming Mouse (Chuck) TotalMount - Apple TV Universal Mounting Kit (Chuck) Sonos (Todd) Sketch App (Todd) GitHub (Todd) iOctocat (Chuck) Grunt (Todd) LEGO Batman: DC Super Heroes (Todd) Next Week Development Environments Transcript [Hosting and bandwidth provided by the Blue Box Group. Check them out at Bluebox.net.] [This episode is sponsored by Component One, makers of Wijmo. If you need stunning UI elements or awesome graphs and charts, then go to Wijmo.com and check them out.] CHUCK: Hey everybody, and welcome to Episode 59 of the JavaScript Jabber Show. This week on our panel, we have Joe Eames. JOE: Hey everybody. CHUCK: Jamison Dance. JAMISON: Hello. CHUCK: Merrick Christensen. MERRICK: Hey guys. CHUCK: I’m Charles Max Wood from DevChat.tv. And we have a special guest, Todd Parker from the jQuery UI team. TODD: Hey everyone. CHUCK: You want to introduce yourself really quickly? TODD: Sure. My name is Todd Parker. I am a partner here at Filament Group in Boston. We’re a small web design shop. And I’m also the project lead for the jQuery Mobile team. And previous to that, I was on the jQuery UI team as well. So, I’m both covered. CHUCK: Did I say jQuery UI? I meant jQuery Mobile. TODD: You did. I was covering for you though, it’s okay. CHUCK: [Laughs] Awesome. Before we get too far into this, I want to make one announcement and that is that I’ve set up an Indiegogo campaign for the network of podcasts that this is a part of. So, we’re trying to build a website that has all the features that people have been asking for. Mostly it has to do with search and some RSS feed management stuff. So, if you would like to support the show, then by all means do so. You can do it by going to Indiegogo.com/projects/DevChat-tv. And I’ll put a link to the show notes so that you can find it. Alright. Well, let’s talk about jQuery Mobile here. I’m a little curious. I’ve played with it a little bit, but I haven’t really had to build too many Mobile sites. So, can you explain a little bit about what the focus is and how it’s different from the jQuery that we all know and love? TODD: Sure. So, jQuery Mobile started its life, it’s very similar in concept to jQuery UI, so it’s a user interface framework that’s built on top of jQuery core. The difference between UI and Mobile is obviously UI is much more desktop focused, and Mobile is mobile focused. That said, jQuery Mobile, from the beginning,
Panel Todd Parker (twitter github) Joe Eames (twitter github blog) Jamison Dance (twitter github blog) Merrick Christensen (twitter github) Charles Max Wood (twitter github Teach Me To Code Rails Ramp Up) Discussion 00:53 - Todd Parker Introduction Filament Group 01:21 - DevChat.tv Indiegogo Campaign 01:55 - jQuery Mobile jQuery UI 04:13 - Responsive web design 06:17 - Mobile & Proxy Browsers WebKit Opera & Opera Mini Amazon Silk 14:06 - Enhancements 17:11 - Plugging jQuery Mobile into Desktop Applications 19:11 - Using client-side MVC frameworks AngularJS jQuery Mobile Resources Page 21:52 - Filament Group and jQuery projects ThemeRoller The Filament Group on Github Microsoft Contributions 28:26 - Theming Structure vs Style Object-oriented CSS Widget Factory 37:25 - Accessibility 058 JSJ Building Accessible Websites with Brian Hogan ARIA 44:18 - Progressive Enhancement Bootstrap Designing with Progressive Enhancement: Building the web that works for everyone by The Filament Group Visualize Picks Disenchanted by Robert Kroese (Joe) Sid Meier's Ace Patrol (Joe) Zeds Dead & Omar LinX (Merrick) RequireJS (Merrick) Ember 101 Screencasts (Jamison) Gifsicle (Jamison) vundle (Jamison) D-Link SharePort Go Mobile Companion with Rechargeable Battery (Chuck) E-3lue Cobra Type-M EMS131BK High Precision Gaming Mouse (Chuck) TotalMount - Apple TV Universal Mounting Kit (Chuck) Sonos (Todd) Sketch App (Todd) GitHub (Todd) iOctocat (Chuck) Grunt (Todd) LEGO Batman: DC Super Heroes (Todd) Next Week Development Environments Transcript [Hosting and bandwidth provided by the Blue Box Group. Check them out at Bluebox.net.] [This episode is sponsored by Component One, makers of Wijmo. If you need stunning UI elements or awesome graphs and charts, then go to Wijmo.com and check them out.] CHUCK: Hey everybody, and welcome to Episode 59 of the JavaScript Jabber Show. This week on our panel, we have Joe Eames. JOE: Hey everybody. CHUCK: Jamison Dance. JAMISON: Hello. CHUCK: Merrick Christensen. MERRICK: Hey guys. CHUCK: I’m Charles Max Wood from DevChat.tv. And we have a special guest, Todd Parker from the jQuery UI team. TODD: Hey everyone. CHUCK: You want to introduce yourself really quickly? TODD: Sure. My name is Todd Parker. I am a partner here at Filament Group in Boston. We’re a small web design shop. And I’m also the project lead for the jQuery Mobile team. And previous to that, I was on the jQuery UI team as well. So, I’m both covered. CHUCK: Did I say jQuery UI? I meant jQuery Mobile. TODD: You did. I was covering for you though, it’s okay. CHUCK: [Laughs] Awesome. Before we get too far into this, I want to make one announcement and that is that I’ve set up an Indiegogo campaign for the network of podcasts that this is a part of. So, we’re trying to build a website that has all the features that people have been asking for. Mostly it has to do with search and some RSS feed management stuff. So, if you would like to support the show, then by all means do so. You can do it by going to Indiegogo.com/projects/DevChat-tv. And I’ll put a link to the show notes so that you can find it. Alright. Well, let’s talk about jQuery Mobile here. I’m a little curious. I’ve played with it a little bit, but I haven’t really had to build too many Mobile sites. So, can you explain a little bit about what the focus is and how it’s different from the jQuery that we all know and love? TODD: Sure. So, jQuery Mobile started its life, it’s very similar in concept to jQuery UI, so it’s a user interface framework that’s built on top of jQuery core. The difference between UI and Mobile is obviously UI is much more desktop focused, and Mobile is mobile focused. That said, jQuery Mobile, from the beginning,
Panel Todd Parker (twitter github) Joe Eames (twitter github blog) Jamison Dance (twitter github blog) Merrick Christensen (twitter github) Charles Max Wood (twitter github Teach Me To Code Rails Ramp Up) Discussion 00:53 - Todd Parker Introduction Filament Group 01:21 - DevChat.tv Indiegogo Campaign 01:55 - jQuery Mobile jQuery UI 04:13 - Responsive web design 06:17 - Mobile & Proxy Browsers WebKit Opera & Opera Mini Amazon Silk 14:06 - Enhancements 17:11 - Plugging jQuery Mobile into Desktop Applications 19:11 - Using client-side MVC frameworks AngularJS jQuery Mobile Resources Page 21:52 - Filament Group and jQuery projects ThemeRoller The Filament Group on Github Microsoft Contributions 28:26 - Theming Structure vs Style Object-oriented CSS Widget Factory 37:25 - Accessibility 058 JSJ Building Accessible Websites with Brian Hogan ARIA 44:18 - Progressive Enhancement Bootstrap Designing with Progressive Enhancement: Building the web that works for everyone by The Filament Group Visualize Picks Disenchanted by Robert Kroese (Joe) Sid Meier's Ace Patrol (Joe) Zeds Dead & Omar LinX (Merrick) RequireJS (Merrick) Ember 101 Screencasts (Jamison) Gifsicle (Jamison) vundle (Jamison) D-Link SharePort Go Mobile Companion with Rechargeable Battery (Chuck) E-3lue Cobra Type-M EMS131BK High Precision Gaming Mouse (Chuck) TotalMount - Apple TV Universal Mounting Kit (Chuck) Sonos (Todd) Sketch App (Todd) GitHub (Todd) iOctocat (Chuck) Grunt (Todd) LEGO Batman: DC Super Heroes (Todd) Next Week Development Environments Transcript [Hosting and bandwidth provided by the Blue Box Group. Check them out at Bluebox.net.] [This episode is sponsored by Component One, makers of Wijmo. If you need stunning UI elements or awesome graphs and charts, then go to Wijmo.com and check them out.] CHUCK: Hey everybody, and welcome to Episode 59 of the JavaScript Jabber Show. This week on our panel, we have Joe Eames. JOE: Hey everybody. CHUCK: Jamison Dance. JAMISON: Hello. CHUCK: Merrick Christensen. MERRICK: Hey guys. CHUCK: I’m Charles Max Wood from DevChat.tv. And we have a special guest, Todd Parker from the jQuery UI team. TODD: Hey everyone. CHUCK: You want to introduce yourself really quickly? TODD: Sure. My name is Todd Parker. I am a partner here at Filament Group in Boston. We’re a small web design shop. And I’m also the project lead for the jQuery Mobile team. And previous to that, I was on the jQuery UI team as well. So, I’m both covered. CHUCK: Did I say jQuery UI? I meant jQuery Mobile. TODD: You did. I was covering for you though, it’s okay. CHUCK: [Laughs] Awesome. Before we get too far into this, I want to make one announcement and that is that I’ve set up an Indiegogo campaign for the network of podcasts that this is a part of. So, we’re trying to build a website that has all the features that people have been asking for. Mostly it has to do with search and some RSS feed management stuff. So, if you would like to support the show, then by all means do so. You can do it by going to Indiegogo.com/projects/DevChat-tv. And I’ll put a link to the show notes so that you can find it. Alright. Well, let’s talk about jQuery Mobile here. I’m a little curious. I’ve played with it a little bit, but I haven’t really had to build too many Mobile sites. So, can you explain a little bit about what the focus is and how it’s different from the jQuery that we all know and love? TODD: Sure. So, jQuery Mobile started its life, it’s very similar in concept to jQuery UI, so it’s a user interface framework that’s built on top of jQuery core. The difference between UI and Mobile is obviously UI is much more desktop focused, and Mobile is mobile focused. That said, jQuery Mobile, from the beginning,
We discuss Scott's latest thinking about “responsible responsive design,” whether responsive design is destroying creativity on the web, working with CSS flexbox, what's new with the jQuery Mobile project, why people fear JavaScript and love jQuery, the size and management of Filament Group's multi-device test suite, the secret history of the jQuery logo, and much more. This episode of The Big Web Show is sponsored by Lynda.com, an online learning company with more than 77,000 video tutorials that teach software, creative, and business skills. Try lynda.com free for 7 days by visiting lynda.com/bigwebshow.
We discuss Scott's latest thinking about “responsible responsive design,” whether responsive design is destroying creativity on the web, working with CSS flexbox, what’s new with the jQuery Mobile project, why people fear JavaScript and love jQuery, the size and management of Filament Group's multi-device test suite, the secret history of the jQuery logo, and much more.
本期由 Dingding Ye 主持,邀请了 RubyChina 的核心开发者之一和 Mac 版的作者 Ashchan 给大家分享了他在 Mac 桌面应用和 iOS/Android 移动开发上的一些心得体会。同时参与嘉宾有 Terry Tai。主要涉及内容有: 各种 Ruby Bridge/Binding for Mac/iOS dev Mobile Development including iOS and Android HTML based solution such as WebView, PhoneGap, Titanium and etc. 乐库科技 Rakuraku gmail-notifr RubyCocoa: A Ruby/Objective-C Bridge for Mac OS X with Cocoa MacRuby: Ruby for the Objective-C Runtime, an implementation of Ruby 1.9 directly on top of Mac OS X core technologies RubyMotion: Ruby for iOS, a revolutionary toolchain for iOS. Programming Cocoa with Ruby ARC PHP Addiction PhoneGap: A free and open source framework that allows you to create mobile apps using HTML, CSS and JavaScript. Titanium: An open, extensible development platform for creating beautiful native apps across different mobile devices and OSs including iOS, Android, Windows and BlackBerry, as well as hybrid and HTML5. jQuery Mobile: A unified, HTML5-based user interface system for all popular mobile device platforms, built on the rock-solid jQuery and jQuery UI foundation. iWeekly Mind Map Book MindNode Pro Echofon for Social RubyMotion 我是歌手 Special Guest: Ash Chan.
This week I talk to Mat Marquis about responsive images, the main and picture element, jQuery Mobile and the Burrito Bomber.
One day we woke up and things were different. Maybe it happened overnight, maybe it took many years. Suddenly the ASP.NET Web Stack is open source, hosted using Git on CodePlex and taking pull requests from the Mono team. We can run node.js and Java alongside ASP.NET in the Azure Cloud and deploy them easily. The Visual Studio editor supports HTML5, CSS3 and JavaScript in a big way. ASP.NET ships not only the open source jQuery library out of the box but also KnockoutJS, jQuery UI, jQuery Mobile and Modernizr. The Azure SDKs are hosted on Github. We are scripting thousands of Virtual Machines from the command line while others are creating things today with JavaScript that were impossible yesterday. Join Scott Hanselman as he explores the relationship between the Cloud and the Browser, many Languages and one Languages, how it might all fit together and what comes next. Development is fun again.
Mat works at The Filament Group in Boston, a company that designs engaging sites and apps for mobile, tablet, and desktop platforms. He is a designer and a developer who occasionally works independently with big-time clients like The Boston Globe. Mat also regularly writes articles for the A List Apart blog. He is a member of the jQuery Mobile team, and also an active member of the open space community at movethewebforward. In addition, Mat chairs the Responsive Images Community Group.
Mat works at The Filament Group in Boston, a company that designs engaging sites and apps for mobile, tablet, and desktop platforms. He is a designer and a developer who occasionally works independently with big-time clients like The Boston Globe. Mat also regularly writes articles for the A List Apart blog. He is a member of the jQuery Mobile team, and also an active member of the open space community at movethewebforward. In addition, Mat chairs the Responsive Images Community Group.
Mat works at The Filament Group in Boston, a company that designs engaging sites and apps for mobile, tablet, and desktop platforms. He is a designer and a developer who occasionally works independently with big-time clients like The Boston Globe. Mat also regularly writes articles for the A List Apart blog. He is a member of the jQuery Mobile team, and also an active member of the open space community at movethewebforward. In addition, Mat chairs the Responsive Images Community Group.
dW open source and linux editor Chris Walden joins me to talk about the open source lifestyle. John Swanson fills us in on the newsletter focus for the week, and I share a brief travelogue from Madrid where I attended the Smarter Commerce Global Summit last week. See interviews from that conference in the blog posts below, including one with Yuchun Lee, once a member of the famed MIT blackjack card counting team and co-founder of Unica, now an IBM company. Next week, watch for our coverage from Innovate (software and systems innovation) and Edge (storage technology), two conferences going on simultaneously in Orlando, Florida.
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
This week on developerWorks, John Swanson and Scott Laningham talk new developerWorks content and Lotusphere 2012, going on this Sunday through Thursday in Orlando, Florida. Look for coverage here next week from Todd Watson, Gary Barnett, and others.
This week on developerWorks, John Swanson and I preview new site content -- the IBM Tech Trends survey, new articles on monitoring and diagnosing Java apps, using Google Chart Tools with IBM Mashup Center, creating custom jQuery mobile themes, Rational Harmony, XML data mining, and alert traffic with IBM Business Process Manager.
In this week's episode, "In The News" is back, we take a very quick look at jQuery Mobile, we spotlight a new music service, and are you ready for political season. Welcome to Blog Oklahoma In The News:Some of the latest from the Oklahoma blog-o-sphere and the main street media Links mentioned in this episode: (Current iPhone friendly site: ) Live Show: To hear the show we broadcasted live at Mixlr, including the pre and post show, checkout: Music: Pictures:
5. Develop Touch Mobile (03/11/2011) – WebApp Vs MobileWeb - WebApp Vs NativeApp - iWebKit 5.0.4 - jQuery Mobile 1.0 - Esercitazione > Mobile Frameworks Comparison Chart
5. Develop Touch Mobile (03/11/2011) – WebApp Vs MobileWeb - WebApp Vs NativeApp - iWebKit 5.0.4 - jQuery Mobile 1.0 - Esercitazione > Mobile Frameworks Comparison Chart
5. Develop Touch Mobile (03/11/2011) – WebApp Vs MobileWeb - WebApp Vs NativeApp - iWebKit 5.0.4 - jQuery Mobile 1.0 - Esercitazione > Mobile Frameworks Comparison Chart
5. Develop Touch Mobile (03/11/2011) – WebApp Vs MobileWeb - WebApp Vs NativeApp - iWebKit 5.0.4 - jQuery Mobile 1.0 - Esercitazione > Mobile Frameworks Comparison Chart
Scott Jehl joins Jeffrey Zeldman and Dan Benjamin to discuss the recent responsive resign of the Boston Globe, jQuery, the jQuery Mobile project, writing and speaking about web design, and his new book, Designing with Progressive Enhancement. Sponsored by HelpSpot and Rackspace.
Scott Jehl joins Jeffrey Zeldman and Dan Benjamin to discuss the recent responsive resign of the Boston Globe, jQuery, the jQuery Mobile project, writing and speaking about web design, and his new book, Designing with Progressive Enhancement.
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/).
Justin and Jason discuss the surprising success of StartupGuild and the software that's powering it, why Jason is begrudgingly making the move to jQuery and why Justin hates REST, why Jason uses an HSA for his family's health plan and Justin's idea for offering a group health plan through StartupGuild, how the US is using socketpuppet software as a propaganda mechanism, how Justin is using jQuery Mobile for his new secret project, and whether or not TechZing is a "bootstrapping" show.
This week, Nick shows introduces the Tumblr templating engine and Jim goes over the basics of jQuery Mobile.