Archive: September 18th, 2019

Replying to a tweet from @eli_schiff

Medice, cura te ipsum.

Replying to a tweet from @eli_schiff

Yes.

Unkind.

Replying to a tweet from @eli_schiff

Your remark was unkind.

Replying to a tweet from @eli_schiff

Yes. Unkind.

Replying to a tweet from @eli_schiff

That is unkind.

Checked in at Jolly Brewer. Fiddles at the ready 🎻 — with Jessica map

Checked in at Jolly Brewer. Fiddles at the ready 🎻 — with Jessica

Keeping it simple with CSS that scales - Andy Bell

The transcript of Andy’s talk from this year’s State Of The Browser conference.

I don’t think using scale as an excuse for over-engineering stuff—especially CSS—is acceptable, even for huge teams that work on huge products.

Picture 1 Picture 2

Reading on the beach. 📖 🌊

A love letter to my website - DESK Magazine

We choose whether our work stays alive on the internet. As long as we keep our hosting active, our site remains online. Compare that to social media platforms that go public one day and bankrupt the next, shutting down their app and your content along with it.

Your content is yours.

But the real truth is that as long as we’re putting our work in someone else’s hands, we forfeit our ownership over it. When we create our own website, we own it – at least to the extent that the internet, beautiful in its amorphous existence, can be owned.

The Appification of Everything & Why it Needs to End

When your only tool seems like a smartphone, everything looks like an app.

Amber writes on Ev’s blog about products that deliberately choose to be dependent on smartphone connectivity:

We read service outage stories like these seemingly every week, and have become numb to the fundamental reality: The idea of placing the safety of yourself, your child, or another loved one in the hands of an app dependent on a server you cannot touch, control, or know the status of, is utterly unacceptable.

Replying to a tweet from @charlotte_dann

See you there!