The World Wide Web is moving to AOL! by Brian Bailey
Biting satire that hits its mark superbly. Ouch! Be careful — this is sharp …and funny.
Biting satire that hits its mark superbly. Ouch! Be careful — this is sharp …and funny.
I remember when Rebecca wrote about A Baseline for Front-End Developers:
I think we’re seeing the emphasis shift from valuing trivia to valuing tools.
I know that Paul places a similar emphasis on the value of front-end development tools. Personally, I’ve always been lax with keeping up to date with start-of-the-art tools. I’ve been working on the web long enough to see yesterday’s cutting-edge tools stagnate or fall out of favour.
Still, I should really do more to keep up. There are a few design tools cropping up that I should really investigate.
LayerVault and Pixelapse both offer git-style version control for Photoshop, Fireworks, and Illustrator files. Sounds useful.
Then there are the tools that I think could be really useful for making HTML prototypes: Easel is browser-based, while Hammer and Mixture are OS X apps. They’ve all got enough time-saving shortcuts to make them worth investigating further. I wouldn’t use them for production code, but like I said, handy for prototyping.
Cennydd uses the word “select” as an input-neutral term for what we might be tempted to call clicks or taps. Personally, I like the term “choose”, although that word might have too much intent bundled with it.
This is handy—a month by month list of which vegetables you should be planting right now.