Popover API Sliding Nav
Here’s a nifty demo of popover
but it’s not for what we’d traditionally consider a modal dialog.
Here’s a nifty demo of popover
but it’s not for what we’d traditionally consider a modal dialog.
I wasn’t able to tune into this live (“tune in?” what century is this?) but I’ve enjoyed catching up with the great talks like:
It would be much harder for a 15-year-old today to View Source and understand the code structure that built the website they’re on. Every site is layered with analytics, code snippets, javascript plugins, CMS data, and more.
This is why the simplicity of HTML and CSS now feels like a radical act. To build a website with just these tools is a small protest against platform capitalism: a way to assert sustainability, independence, longevity.
Here’s a nice HTML web component that uses structured data in the markup to populate a Leaflet map.
Personally I’d probably use microformats rather than microdata, but the princple is the same: progressive enhancement from plain old HTML to an interactive map.
It’s like CSS exists in some bizarre quantum state; somehow both too complex to use, yet too simple to take seriously, all at once.
In many ways, CSS has greater impact than any other language on a user’s experience, which often directly influences success. Why, then, is its role so belittled?
Writing CSS seems to be regarded much like taking notes in a meeting, complete with the implicit sexism and devaluation of the note taker’s importance in the room.
Going back to school in Amsterdam.
A lazy option for responsive images is at hand.
The joy of getting hands-on with HTML and CSS.
The `details` element is like the TL;DR of markup.
Better UX through better HTML: inputmode, enterkeyhint, and autocomplete.