Summary: Are you building a Web site or a Web application? The line between Web sites, which are largely informational, and Web apps, which are more interactive, has blurred. There are best practices for building good informational sites, and those practices aren't the same for building a good application. In this article, learn the real, tangible differences between Web sites and Web apps, and then analyze your own sites. Explore the kind of sites you're managing, designing, and coding in a way that helps you improve their design and usability. Learn to make informed decisions that support your Web goals.
To provide the most engaging experiences that attract visitors to make them customers, brands require an immersive and high-quality front-end interface. Companies that choose to go headless have the benefit of selling across multiple channels, but aren't able to deliver an engaging front-end experience for their customers.
JSON is strict. Keys need to be quoted; strings can only be double-quoted; objects and arrays can't have trailing commas; and comments aren't allowed. Using such a strict subset of "JavaScript object notation" was likely for the best at the time, but with modern ECMAScript 5 engines like V8 in Chrome and Node, these limitations are cumbersome.
You've got your product arranged beautifully in your ecommerce store. The doors are open, your Google Business profile is up-to-date and accurate, but your employees say they love coming into work in a peaceful atmosphere where they aren't driven mad by people constantly trying to give them money.
At Technical.ly, we've heard again and again that talent is the lifeblood of any tech ecosystem. We've also seen that even a nuanced view of talent can be altered by broad-sweeping (and potentially false) hiring narratives.