Skip to main content

Home/ iQ Web Team/ Group items matching "working" in title, tags, annotations or url

Group items matching
in title, tags, annotations or url

Sort By: Relevance | Date Filter: All | Bookmarks | Topics Simple Middle
Matt Haines

Bootstrap, from Twitter - 3 views

  •  
    Bootstrap is a toolkit from Twitter designed to kickstart development of webapps and sites. It includes base CSS and HTML for typography, forms, buttons, tables, grids, navigation, and more. Nerd alert: Bootstrap is built with Less and was designed to work out of the gate with modern browsers in mind.
Trevor Pries

ResponsiveSlides.js · Responsive jQuery slideshow - 1 views

  •  
    ResponsiveSlides.js is a tiny jQuery plugin that creates a responsive slideshow using images inside a single container. It works with wide range of browsers including all IE versions from IE6 and up.
Cody Lee

Move Your Camera - 2 views

  •  
    I went out this past weekend and did a few experiments on "environmental" structures that made good bases and found some nice options over the course of running some errands. The video might give someone an idea for something they're working on, or it might also confirm that you're much smarter than me and I should have figured this simple crap out weeks ago.
Michael Yagudaev

node.js - 0 views

  •  
    Node JS is a server-side javascript framework which allows you to work with low level networking protocols. Built on top of V8.
Michael Yagudaev

CSS Float Theory: Things You Should Know - Smashing Magazine - 5 views

  •  
    Explains how floats work and how to best use them.
Andrew Schonhoffer

Into the Ring with knockout.js | Nettuts+ - 2 views

  •  
    In the red corner, weighing in at just 29Kb (uncompressed), is knockout.js; a pure JavaScript library that simplifies the creation of dynamic user interfaces. Knockout is library agnostic, so it can easily be used with any of the most popular JavaScript libraries already available, but it works particularly well with jQuery, and uses jQuery.tmpl as its default templating engine.
Thu Tran

Writing CSS For Others - Smashing Magazine - 2 views

  • always code like you’re working in a team, even when you’re not
  • Write comments like you’re talking to a rubber duck! Good comments take care of 99% of what you hand over and — more importantly —  take care of your documentation. Your code should be the documentation. Comments are also an excellent way to show off. Ever wanted to tell someone how awesome a bit of your code is but never found the chance? This is that chance! Explain how clever it is, and just wait for people to read it. Egos aside, though, comments do force you to write nicer code. I’ve found that writing extensive comments has made me a better developer. I write cleaner code, because writing comments reminds me that I’m intending for others to read the code
  •  
    A discussion on how to write CSS for other developers and why it's important
Thu Tran

Why Google+ Will Never Beat Facebook - 3 views

  • When you try to move beyond the Hey, I'm not using Facebook! How does this work? dimension of Google+, you find there's no reason to stay. The site's worse than irrelevant: it's redundant. There's no niche, no small slice to serve, no tight community of geeks in need of a petri dish.
  • Facebook is stellar at what it sets out to do. It murdered photo sharing services, decimated the use of Instant Messaging, is in the ring with Twitter, and, of course, is where all your friends are. And for a social network, we want to be where our friends are
  • Google+ has a news feed—Facebook's is better. Google+ has a wall of some kind—Facebook's is better. Google+ had "Circles," which illicit erections across the internet for some reason—Facebook stole the idea and made Lists, which are the same thing. And that last one's crucial. No matter what Google+ might have on Facebook, Facebook can always take. They stole Twitter for statuses, they ripped AIM and Skype for Facebook Chat, and they'll ransack whatever few nuggets of worth lie in Google+ as well. They'll always be ahead.
  •  
    Why Google+ Will never beat facebook
Matt Haines

RubyMonk - Interactive platform to master Ruby - 1 views

shared by Matt Haines on 24 Oct 11 - No Cached
  •  
    Discover Ruby, learn lessons and solve problems, in your browser! Work your way through guided lessons and try your hand at problems as you move along the path to mastery.
‹ Previous 21 - 29 of 29
Showing 20 items per page