Wednesday, August 31, 2016

Is there anything VLC can't do? I didn't know you could do screen recordings with VLC! http://bit.ly/2bChb9I

Is there anything VLC can't do? I didn't know you could do screen recordings with VLC! http://bit.ly/2bChb9I

Is there anything VLC can't do? I didn't know you could do screen recordings with VLC! http://bit.ly/2bChb9I

Is there anything VLC can't do? I didn't know you could do screen recordings with VLC! http://bit.ly/2bChb9I
by Joe PC

August 31, 2016 at 11:40AM
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Windows 98 or Linux in JavaScript in your browser (Node.js)?? http://bit.ly/2bJy6o1 http://bit.ly/2bSaNLI

Windows 98 or Linux in JavaScript in your browser (Node.js)?? http://bit.ly/2bJy6o1 http://bit.ly/2bSaNLI
by Joe PC

August 31, 2016 at 10:01AM
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Windows 98 or Linux in JavaScript in your browser (Node.js)?? http://bit.ly/2bJy6o1 http://bit.ly/2bSaNLI

Windows 98 or Linux in JavaScript in your browser (Node.js)?? http://bit.ly/2bJy6o1 http://bit.ly/2bSaNLI

Tuesday, August 30, 2016

When your Extensions get out of hand... http://bit.ly/2bQpi1h I know something's wrong when a site is behaving badly, but works fine in Incognito Mode or switching to a different user. That tells me an extension or two is causing the issue. Rather than having to Uninstall or Disable in chrome://extensions/, I can quickly enable/disable groups of extensions at once.

When your Extensions get out of hand... http://bit.ly/2bQpi1h I know something's wrong when a site is behaving badly, but works fine in Incognito Mode or switching to a different user. That tells me an extension or two is causing the issue. Rather than having to Uninstall or Disable in chrome://extensions/, I can quickly enable/disable groups of extensions at once.
by Joe PC

August 30, 2016 at 02:53PM
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When your Extensions get out of hand... http://bit.ly/2bQpi1h I know something's wrong when a site is behaving badly, but works fine in Incognito Mode or switching to a different user. That tells me an extension or two is causing the issue. Rather than having to Uninstall or Disable in chrome://extensions/, I can quickly enable/disable groups of extensions at once.

When your Extensions get out of hand... http://bit.ly/2bQpi1h I know something's wrong when a site is behaving badly, but works fine in Incognito Mode or switching to a different user. That tells me an extension or two is causing the issue. Rather than having to Uninstall or Disable in chrome://extensions/, I can quickly enable/disable groups of extensions at once.

Tuesday, August 23, 2016

http://bit.ly/2btJhm6 "Utilizing a Client Side Rendering (CSR) model, the SharePoint Framework is a big step in modern Web Development for SharePoint. CSR allows SharePoint Developers to insert solutions directly into SharePoint without resorting to server-side integration methods. A CSR model allows us to decouple the back-end of SharePoint from the front-end presentation of information to the client (browser). With new possibilities for customizing the front-end interface of SharePoint, I assume that we will start to see incredibly innovative branding and other front-end solutions for SharePoint."

http://bit.ly/2btJhm6 "Utilizing a Client Side Rendering (CSR) model, the SharePoint Framework is a big step in modern Web Development for SharePoint. CSR allows SharePoint Developers to insert solutions directly into SharePoint without resorting to server-side integration methods. A CSR model allows us to decouple the back-end of SharePoint from the front-end presentation of information to the client (browser). With new possibilities for customizing the front-end interface of SharePoint, I assume that we will start to see incredibly innovative branding and other front-end solutions for SharePoint."
by Joe PC

August 23, 2016 at 01:49PM
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http://bit.ly/2btJhm6 "Utilizing a Client Side Rendering (CSR) model, the SharePoint Framework is a big step in modern Web Development for SharePoint. CSR allows SharePoint Developers to insert solutions directly into SharePoint without resorting to server-side integration methods. A CSR model allows us to decouple the back-end of SharePoint from the front-end presentation of information to the client (browser). With new possibilities for customizing the front-end interface of SharePoint, I assume that we will start to see incredibly innovative branding and other front-end solutions for SharePoint."

http://bit.ly/2btJhm6 "Utilizing a Client Side Rendering (CSR) model, the SharePoint Framework is a big step in modern Web Development for SharePoint. CSR allows SharePoint Developers to insert solutions directly into SharePoint without resorting to server-side integration methods. A CSR model allows us to decouple the back-end of SharePoint from the front-end presentation of information to the client (browser). With new possibilities for customizing the front-end interface of SharePoint, I assume that we will start to see incredibly innovative branding and other front-end solutions for SharePoint."

Wednesday, August 17, 2016

Aurelia, another one for me to try sometime (aurelia.io). Very clean looking. http://bit.ly/2b0dCuV Aurelia developer, Rob Eisenberg, "was also part of the team behind Angular 2 before certain decisions made on the project made him jump ship. ... Something you'll notice immediately is that the syntax is much simpler and more explicit (i.e. self-explanatory) than Angular 2 and looks a lot like standard JS syntax. ... Aurelia also uses conventions instead of its own syntax and boilerplate code. No special characters like the ones in Angular 2 (*, (), [] en #) here."

Aurelia, another one for me to try sometime (aurelia.io). Very clean looking. http://bit.ly/2b0dCuV Aurelia developer, Rob Eisenberg, "was also part of the team behind Angular 2 before certain decisions made on the project made him jump ship. ... Something you'll notice immediately is that the syntax is much simpler and more explicit (i.e. self-explanatory) than Angular 2 and looks a lot like standard JS syntax. ... Aurelia also uses conventions instead of its own syntax and boilerplate code. No special characters like the ones in Angular 2 (*, (), [] en #) here."

Aurelia, another one for me to try sometime (aurelia.io). Very clean looking. http://bit.ly/2b0dCuV Aurelia developer, Rob Eisenberg, "was also part of the team behind Angular 2 before certain decisions made on the project made him jump ship. ... Something you'll notice immediately is that the syntax is much simpler and more explicit (i.e. self-explanatory) than Angular 2 and looks a lot like standard JS syntax. ... Aurelia also uses conventions instead of its own syntax and boilerplate code. No special characters like the ones in Angular 2 (*, (), [] en #) here."

Aurelia, another one for me to try sometime (aurelia.io). Very clean looking. http://bit.ly/2b0dCuV Aurelia developer, Rob Eisenberg, "was also part of the team behind Angular 2 before certain decisions made on the project made him jump ship. ... Something you'll notice immediately is that the syntax is much simpler and more explicit (i.e. self-explanatory) than Angular 2 and looks a lot like standard JS syntax. ... Aurelia also uses conventions instead of its own syntax and boilerplate code. No special characters like the ones in Angular 2 (*, (), [] en #) here."
by Joe PC

August 17, 2016 at 01:19PM
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Monday, August 15, 2016

My brain was spinning with possibilities as I researched solutions and all the pieces of a new project. So, I put together a Kanban board with 3 "states" to help me count the cost: "To Do", "Doing", and "Done." Basically, a fancy to-do list that need not be technical (works for any task).

My brain was spinning with possibilities as I researched solutions and all the pieces of a new project. So, I put together a Kanban board with 3 "states" to help me count the cost: "To Do", "Doing", and "Done." Basically, a fancy to-do list that need not be technical (works for any task).
by Joe PC

August 15, 2016 at 12:24PM
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My brain was spinning with possibilities as I researched solutions and all the pieces of a new project. So, I put together a Kanban board with 3 "states" to help me count the cost: "To Do", "Doing", and "Done." Basically, a fancy to-do list that need not be technical (works for any task).

My brain was spinning with possibilities as I researched solutions and all the pieces of a new project. So, I put together a Kanban board with 3 "states" to help me count the cost: "To Do", "Doing", and "Done." Basically, a fancy to-do list that need not be technical (works for any task).

Monday, August 8, 2016

Full Stack Developer

Full Stack Developer
by Joe PC

August 08, 2016 at 01:30PM
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Full Stack Developer

Full Stack Developer

Friday, August 5, 2016

Spent a lot of yesterday trying to "scrape" a link from a search page on the same server using jQuery.load(). Ended up using .ajax() to make this tiny bit of code. Even a few properties are redundant & defaults. I should use that more. Kinda fun and a nice result. One less click (no point in two clicks). Also, I need to be able to do this in plain JavaScript using XMLHttpRequest. JavaScript has come a long way. I used to hate it, but jQuery has helped ease me into it. I imagine jQuery also influenced the evolution of JavaScript (ES6), as well as influence from object-oriented developers.

Spent a lot of yesterday trying to "scrape" a link from a search page on the same server using jQuery.load(). Ended up using .ajax() to make this tiny bit of code. Even a few properties are redundant & defaults. I should use that more. Kinda fun and a nice result. One less click (no point in two clicks). Also, I need to be able to do this in plain JavaScript using XMLHttpRequest. JavaScript has come a long way. I used to hate it, but jQuery has helped ease me into it. I imagine jQuery also influenced the evolution of JavaScript (ES6), as well as influence from object-oriented developers.

Spent a lot of yesterday trying to "scrape" a link from a search page on the same server using jQuery.load(). Ended up using .ajax() to make this tiny bit of code. Even a few properties are redundant & defaults. I should use that more. Kinda fun and a nice result. One less click (no point in two clicks). Also, I need to be able to do this in plain JavaScript using XMLHttpRequest. JavaScript has come a long way. I used to hate it, but jQuery has helped ease me into it. I imagine jQuery also influenced the evolution of JavaScript (ES6), as well as influence from object-oriented developers.

Spent a lot of yesterday trying to "scrape" a link from a search page on the same server using jQuery.load(). Ended up using .ajax() to make this tiny bit of code. Even a few properties are redundant & defaults. I should use that more. Kinda fun and a nice result. One less click (no point in two clicks). Also, I need to be able to do this in plain JavaScript using XMLHttpRequest. JavaScript has come a long way. I used to hate it, but jQuery has helped ease me into it. I imagine jQuery also influenced the evolution of JavaScript (ES6), as well as influence from object-oriented developers.
by Joe PC

August 05, 2016 at 10:30AM
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"JQuery Selectors" Chrome Extension - simple example. Allows you to do a JQuery select on the page and manipulate the object somehow. I just did a highlight for demo: .show("highlight"). You could also simply right click on the html element and click "Copy" > "Copy selector". This will usually get you what you want if you're just looking for a way to get to the element in JQuery.

"JQuery Selectors" Chrome Extension - simple example. Allows you to do a JQuery select on the page and manipulate the object somehow. I just did a highlight for demo: .show("highlight"). You could also simply right click on the html element and click "Copy" > "Copy selector". This will usually get you what you want if you're just looking for a way to get to the element in JQuery.

"JQuery Selectors" Chrome Extension - simple example. Allows you to do a JQuery select on the page and manipulate the object somehow. I just did a highlight for demo: .show("highlight"). You could also simply right click on the html element and click "Copy" > "Copy selector". This will usually get you what you want if you're just looking for a way to get to the element in JQuery.

"JQuery Selectors" Chrome Extension - simple example. Allows you to do a JQuery select on the page and manipulate the object somehow. I just did a highlight for demo: .show("highlight"). You could also simply right click on the html element and click "Copy" > "Copy selector". This will usually get you what you want if you're just looking for a way to get to the element in JQuery.
by Joe PC

August 05, 2016 at 10:02AM
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"JQuery Selectors" Chrome Extension - simple example. Allows you to do a JQuery select on the page and manipulate the object somehow. I just did a highlight for demo: .show("highlight"). You could also simply right click on the html element and click "Copy" > "Copy selector". This will usually get you what you want if you're just looking for a way to get to the element in JQuery.

"JQuery Selectors" Chrome Extension - simple example. Allows you to do a JQuery select on the page and manipulate the object somehow. I just did a highlight for demo: .show("highlight"). You could also simply right click on the html element and click "Copy" > "Copy selector". This will usually get you what you want if you're just looking for a way to get to the element in JQuery.
by Joe PC

August 05, 2016 at 09:57AM
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"JQuery Selectors" Chrome Extension - simple example. Allows you to do a JQuery select on the page and manipulate the object somehow. I just did a highlight for demo: .show("highlight"). You could also simply right click on the html element and click "Copy" > "Copy selector". This will usually get you what you want if you're just looking for a way to get to the element in JQuery.

"JQuery Selectors" Chrome Extension - simple example. Allows you to do a JQuery select on the page and manipulate the object somehow. I just did a highlight for demo: .show("highlight"). You could also simply right click on the html element and click "Copy" > "Copy selector". This will usually get you what you want if you're just looking for a way to get to the element in JQuery.

Monday, August 1, 2016

TL;DR. Looks like a nice summary.

TL;DR. Looks like a nice summary.
by Joe PC

August 01, 2016 at 06:57AM
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TL;DR. Looks like a nice summary.

TL;DR. Looks like a nice summary.