In the above article, Harry gives a more nuanced and specific method using data attributes to target specific anchors in the document, one reason being you don't need to prerender login or logout pages.
Since last year, I've finally finished two WordPress plugins I wasn't able to completely figure out, I've built new tiny apps that I previously would be stuck on, I am improving existing projects that I have up to Github now, and more. I think my abilities are enhanced by probably 25-50%.
Middle management for software engineering has gone through a paradigm shift. The trend for businesses is flatter structures, manager roles with more responsibilities and this reality largely includes being as deep in the code as direct reports.
Since 2023, most roles I reviewed or interviewed for were player/coach roles, often close to 50/50 split. In my last EM role, I was hired for exactly this.
I found very few EM roles that are primarily managing with only "being in the code"; I can count on my hands out of hundreds of Engineering Manager roles. Probably closer to 95% or more EM roles require hands-on technical work similar to Tech Lead roles.
My journey into building computers and networking were partly driven by Anandtech. I bought and sold quite a few things on the forums, too. I always thought Anandtech was one of the higher quality tech publications. RIP to one of the best.
I started with Part 4 intentionally, it stands alone from the other three.
This article is a damning call out of the web development industry and how we've gone down a bad path for the Javascript-first landscape of websites and services.
Regarding the Ad Tech section, I found value in the August 6th episode of Security Now titled "How Revoking!" where he's talking about 3rd-party cookies handling in Firefox.
Generally speaking, I'm sure it's difficult to find a general balance between privacy and usability, and I tend to want a purist viewpoint on blocking all 3rd-party cookies if I set Enhanced Tracking Protection to Strict. The above episodes explains why it's not 100% doing what we expect, which was troubling to hear!
Browser spec creators and browser vendors have been implementing touch and non-touch UI differences in common primitive features since the 2010s. Example, if you use at a <select> element on desktop browsers and mobile browsers, I would say it falls into a similar idea as rotating UX. There are countless other examples, too.
Could there be improvements? Absolutely, and that's where we get to have a voice.
Except that studies show that users expect both similar content and experiences regardless of device. Responsive web design, with progressive enhancement, is the foundational bridge to make this experience work well.
Just because someone experiences a less than ideal experience of RWD in one or more places doesn't mean to group all RWD UI experiences together as bad.
It's more practical spend less time developing and testing one global component than more than one.
The big takeaway from this presentation is CSS offers so many things that were mostly Javascript previously. Going forward, sometime in 2025, it will be less compelling to use libraries an frameworks for many web native interactions and features.
Firefox, please hurry up your support for many mentioned features in this video!
I just tried Storybook this past week and it's a great improvement even from version 6.x.
That said, I wish this was at a place where I could easily use it for the UI layer with simple integration into a given CMS. As others have stated, it's great in isolation and for demos. Also, I realize that most apps and CMSes are so opinionated and using Storybook for the view of that system is a lot of overhead.
One less than stellar example is WordPress. It's technically possible to create a headless app using Next.js or Remix on the front-end, Gutenberg for the data layer and authoring, and Storybook as the source of truth for both ends. However, it was so much work to get there.
Maybe a legacy PHP system trying to be modern isn't a great example. But, then I'm stuck with any flavor of, usually paid database hosted, software like Contentful or Sanity. Again, the overhead!
I am a huge advocate for design systems that translate into component libraries, and Storybook fills part of that gap, but it'd be huge to see this type of setup become more practical.
There's not a lot of examples provided, but the ones there are interesting. Also, why the tracking with Yandex? They might be legit, but it's suspect.
This reminds me of many other gallery sites, but one of the best right now is https://httpster.net/. Lots of inspiring, minimalist, but beautiful websites.
If "they" is WordPress, have you tried modern PHP? 8.x has come a long way to looking and feeling like a modern programming language. So many new things reminding me of Typescript, Javascript, Python, etc.
For those of you who are curious what drives jQuery in 2024 and beyond, you need to remember that WordPress is still more than 1/3 of the web, and the majority of installations and so many plugins critically rely on jQuery. Yes, seriously.
Any advances to removing deprecated APIs or functions are great. jQuery will probably be around dominantly on the web for years to come.