Winding down the week with cheese and wine at @Clearleft HQ.
Journal 2343 Links 6250 Articles 65 Notes 2748
Winding down the week with cheese and wine at @Clearleft HQ.
Organising @Clearleft’s open device lab, and adding some more devices (inspired by @slightlylate).
Mornington Descent.
Enraptured by Lysander Follet’s lunchtime talk at @Clearleft.
Apparently I’m the poster child for “helpful comment”:
http://bits.24ways.org/components/detail/comment
As for @PaulRobertLloyd…
Scribble is a good dog.
Lamb neck.
In retrospect, posting a picture of myself at Homebrew Website Club Brighton holding a beer just made things more confusing.
Homebrew Website Club Brighton.
Pigs in blankets. 🐖
Sounds like AMP is a bit of a roach motel. You can check out anytime you like, but you can only leave with great difficulty.
At the last Clearleft Hackfarm, one of the ideas I proposed was “a wiki that doesn’t suck.” Looks like someone’s finally done it.
Details of The Guardian’s switch to HTTPS.
Brightonians, come one, come all to Homebrew Website Club this evening…
https://indieweb.org/events/2016-11-30-homebrew-website-club
Looking forward to @AstroBrighton this evening and Homebrew Website Club tomorrow evening, both in @68MiddleSt.
Learning all about coffee with the @Clearleft crew.
Who’s got most of two thumbs and botched the assembly of Ikea drawers?
I had a really enjoyable time at Codebar Brighton last week, not least because Morty came along.
I particularly enjoy teaching people who have zero previous experience of making a web page. There’s something about explaining HTML and CSS from first principles that appeals to me. I especially love it when people ask lots of questions. “What does this element do?”, “Why do some elements have closing tags and others don’t?”, “Why is it textarea and not input type="textarea"?” The answer usually involves me going down a rabbit-hole of web archeology, so I’m in my happy place.
But there’s only so much time at Codebar each week, so it’s nice to be able to point people to other resources that they can peruse at their leisure. It turns out that’s it’s actually kind of tricky to find resources at that level. There are lots of great articles and tutorials out there for professional web developers—Smashing Magazine, A List Apart, CSS Tricks, etc.—but no so much for complete beginners.
Here are some of the resources I’ve found:
If I find any more handy resources, I’ll link to them and tag them with “learning”.
A whole lotta CSS properties and values gathered together in one place. The one-page view is a bit overwhelming, but search and collections can get you to the right bit lickety-split.
I’m doin’ alright, gettin’ good grades…