Got Canterbury?: special features DVD: Romantic warriors III: a progressive music saga: Canterbury tales / produced by Zeitgeist Media ; directed and produced by Adele Schmidt & José Zegarra Holder
Progress in hybrid RANS-LES modelling: papers contributed to the 7th Symposium on Hybrid RANS-LES Methods, 17-19 September, 2018, Berlin, Germany / Yannick Hoarau, Shia-Hui Peng, Dieter Schwamborn, Alistair Revell, Charles Mockett, editors
15 well-known original pieces: in progressive order of difficulty: with practical comments / Johannes Brahms ; edited and with fingering by Sylvia Hewig-Tröscher
Bonjour, piano!: upper intermediate level ; 17 pieces by French composers in progressive order.
12 well-known original pieces: in progressive order of difficulty: with practical comments / Franz Schubert ; edited and with fingering by Sylvia Hewig-Tröscher
American art songs for the progressing mezzo-soprano.
Progress in performance management: industry insights and case studies on principles, application tools, and practice / Marc Helmold and Warda Samara
[ASAP] Metal–Organic Frameworks in Heterogeneous Catalysis: Recent Progress, New Trends, and Future Perspectives
Progress in reaction kinetics [electronic journal].
Problemy prognozirovanii͡a [electronic journal] / Akademii͡a nauk SSSR, Institut ėkonomiki i prognozirovanii͡a nauchno-tekhnicheskogo progressa.
3rd Biomedical Engineering's recent progress in biomaterials, drugs development, and medical devices: proceedings of the International Symposium of Biomedical Engineering (ISBE) 2018: conference date, 6-8 August 2018: location, Jakarta, Indonesia / ed
Plant biotechnology: progress in genomic era / S. M. Paul Khurana, Rajarshi Kumar Gaur, editors
The 4th Biomedical Engineering's Recent Progress in Biomaterials, Drugs Development, Health, and Medical Devices: Proceedings of the International Symposium of Biomedical Engineering (ISBE) 2019: 22-24 July 2019, Padang, Indonesia / editors, Kenny Lis
Advances in pharmaceutical biotechnology: recent progress and future applications / Jayanta Kumar Patra, Amritesh C. Shukla, Gitishree Das, editors
‘The Two Popes’ Pits Tradition Against Progress
What the new Netflix drama can teach us about the interdependency of orthodoxy and reform.
Progress in photon science: recent advances / edited by Kaoru Yamanouchi, Sergey Tunik, Vladimir Makarov
Small-molecule fluorescent probes for imaging gaseous signaling molecules: current progress and future implications
DOI: 10.1039/D0SC01482F, Perspective
This perspective article aims to introduce the design principles and recognition strategies of small-molecule fluorescent probes which are applied for the detection of gas signaling molecules including NO, CO and H2S in biological systems.
To cite this article before page numbers are assigned, use the DOI form of citation above.
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry
Progress in computing, analytics and networking: proceedings of ICCAN 2019 / Himansu Das, Prasant Kumar Pattnaik, Siddharth Swarup Rautaray, Kuan-Ching Li, editors
Philosophy's Future: The Problem of Philosophical Progress
Philosophy’s Future: The Problem of Philosophical Progress diagnoses the state of philosophy as an academic discipline and calls it to account, inviting further reflection and dialogue on its cultural value and capacity for future evolution. Read More... |
Recent progress on phenotype-based discovery of dengue inhibitors
DOI: 10.1039/D0MD00052C, Review Article
The review presents the discovery of new dengue inhibitors by a phenotype-based approach.
To cite this article before page numbers are assigned, use the DOI form of citation above.
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry
Recent progress in selective estrogen receptor downregulators (SERDs) for the treatment of breast cancer
DOI: 10.1039/C9MD00570F, Review Article
This article reviews the current progress in the development of SERDs as anti-breast cancer agents.
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry
Tunnelling: a decade of progress: GeoDelft 1995-2005 / editors, A. Bezuijen, H. van Lottum
Asia-Pacific progress in sustainable energy : a global tracking framework 2017 regional assessment report / Kim Roseberry ; with the support of Remife De Guzman
JSJ 343: The Power of Progressive Enhancement with Andy Bell
Panel:
- Charles Max Wood
- Aimee Knight
- Chris Ferdinandi
- AJ O’Neal
Special Guest: Andy Bell
In this episode, the panel talks with Andy Bell who is an independent designer and developer who uses React, Vue, and Node. Today, the panelists and the guest talk about the power of progressive enhancements. Check it out!
Show Topics:
0:00 – Advertisement: KENDO UI
0:34 – Chuck: Hi! Our panel is AJ, Aimee, Chris, myself and my new show is coming out in a few weeks, which is called the DevRev! It helps you with developer’s freedom! I am super excited. Our guest is Andy Bell. Introduce yourself, please.
2:00 – Guest: I am an independent designer and developer out in the U.K.
2:17 – Chuck: You wrote things about Vanilla.js. I am foreshadowing a few things and let’s talk about the power and progressive enhancement.
2:43 – The guest gives us definitions of power and progressive enhancements. He describes how it works.
3:10 – Chuck: I’ve heard that people would turn off JavaScript b/c it was security concern and then your progressive enhancement would make it work w/o JavaScript. I am sure there’s more than that?
3:28 – The guest talks about JavaScript, dependencies, among other things.
4:40 – Chuck: Your post did make that very clear I think. I am thinking I don’t even know where to start with this. Are people using the 6th version? How far back or what are we talking about here?
5:09 – Guest: You can go really far back and make it work w/o CSS.
5:49 – Chris: I am a big advocate of progressive enhancement – the pushback I get these days is that there is a divide; between the broadband era and AOL dialup. Are there compelling reasons why progressive enhancements even matter?
6:48 – Guest.
8:05 – Panel: My family lives out in the boonies. I am aware of 50% of American don’t have fast Internet. People don’t have access to fast browsers but I don’t think they are key metric users.
8:47 – Guest: It totally depends on what you need it for. It doesn’t matter if these people are paying or not.
9:31 – Chris: Assuming I have a commute on the trail and it goes through a spotty section. In a scenario that it’s dependent on the JS...are we talking about 2 different things here?
10:14 – Panelist chimes-in.
10:36 – Chris: I can take advantage of it even if I cannot afford a new machine.
10:55 – Panel: Where would this really matter to you?
11:05 – Chris: I do have a nice new laptop.
11:12 – Chuck: I had to hike up to the hill (near the house) to make a call and the connection was really poor (in OK). It’s not the norm but it can happen.
11:37 – Chris: Or how about the All Trails app when I am on the trail.
11:52 – Guest.
12:40 – Chris: I can remember at the time that the desktop sites it was popular to have...
Chris: Most of those sites were inaccessible to me.
13:17 – Guest.
13:51 – Chuck: First-world countries will have a good connection and it’s not a big deal. If you are thinking though about your customers and where they live? Is that fair? I am thinking that my customers need to be able to access the podcast – what would you suggest? What are the things that you’d make sure is accessible to them.
14:31 – Guest: I like to pick on the minimum viable experience? I think to read the transcript is important than the audio (MP3).
15:47 – Chuck.
15:52 – Guest: It’s a lot easier with Vue b/c you don’t’ have to set aside rendering.
17:13 – AJ: I am thinking: that there is a way to start developing progressively and probably cheaper and easier to the person who is developing. If it saves us a buck and helps then we take action.
17:49 – Guest: It’s much easier if you start that way and if you enhance the feature itself.
18:38 – AJ: Let me ask: what are the situations where I wouldn’t / shouldn’t worry about progressive enhancements?
18:57 – Guest answers the question.
19:42 – AJ: I want people to feel motivated in a place WHERE to start. Something like a blog needs Java for comments.
Hamburger menu is mentioned, too.
20:20 – Guest.
21:05 – Chris: Can we talk about code?
21:16 – Aimee: This is the direction I wanted to go. What do you mean by that – building your applications progressively?
21:44 – Guest.
22:13 – Chuck: I use stock overflow!
22:20 – Guest.
22:24 – Chuck: I mean that’s what Chris uses!
22:33 – Guest (continues).
23:42 – Aimee.
23:54 – Chris.
24:09 – Chris
24:16 – Chris: Andy what do you think about that?
24:22 – Guest: Yes, that’s good.
24:35 – Chris: Where it falls apart is the resistance to progressive enhancements that it means that your approach has to be boring?
25:03 – Guest answers the question.
The guest mentions modern CSS and modern JavaScript are mentioned along with tooling.
25:50 – Chuck: My issue is that when we talk about this (progressive enhancement) lowest common denominator and some user at some level (slow network) and then they can access it. Then the next level (better access) can access it. I start at the bottom and then go up. Then when they say progressive enhancement I get lost. Should I scrap it and then start over or what?
26:57 – Guest: If it’s feasible do it and then set a timeline up.
27:42 – Chuck: You are saying yes do it a layer at a time – but my question is HOW? What parts can I pair back? Are there guidelines to say: do this first and then how to test?
28:18 – Advertisement – Sentry.io
29:20 – Guest: Think about the user flow. What does the user want to do at THIS point? Do you need to work out the actual dependencies?
30:31 – Chuck: Is there a list of those capabilities somewhere? So these users can use it this way and these users can use it that way?
30:50 – Guest answers the question.
31:03 – Guest: You can pick out the big things.
31:30 – Chuck: I am using this feature in the browser...
31:41 – Guest.
31:46 – Chris: I think this differently than you Andy – I’ve stopped caring if a browser supports something new. I am fine using CSS grid and if your browser doesn’t support it then I don’t have a problem with that. I get hung up on, though if this fails can they still get the content? If they have no access to these – what should they be able to do?
Note: “Cutting the Mustard Test” is mentioned.
33:37 – Guest.
33:44 – Chuck: Knowing your users and if it becomes a problem then I will figure it out.
34:00 – Chris: I couldn’t spare the time to make it happen right now b/c I am a one-man shop.
34:20 – Chuck and Chris go back-and-forth.
34:36 –Chris: Check out links below for my product.
34:54 – AJ: A lot of these things are in the name: progressive.
36:20 – Guest.
38:51 – Chris: Say that they haven’t looked at it all before. Do you mind talking about these things and what the heck is a web component?
39:14 – The guest gives us his definition of what a web component is.
40:02 – Chuck: Most recent episode in Angular about web components, but that was a few years ago. See links below for that episode.
40:25 – Aimee.
40:31 – Guest: Yes, it’s a lot like working in Vue and web components. The concepts are very similar.
41:22 – Chris: Can someone please give us an example? A literal slideshow example?
41:45 – Guest answers the question.
45:07 – Chris.
45:12 – Guest: It’s a framework that just happens to use web components and stuff to help.
45:54 – Chuck: Yeah they make it easier (Palmer). Yeah there is a crossover with Palmer team and other teams. I can say that b/c I have talked with people from both teams. Anything else?
46:39 – Chuck: Where do they go to learn more?
46:49 – Guest: Check out the Club! And my Twitter! (See links below.)
47:33 – Chuck: I want to shout-out about DevLifts that has $19 a month to help you with physical goals. Or you can get the premium slot! It’s terrific stuff. Sign-up with DEVCHAT code but there is a limited number of slots and there is a deadline, too. Just try it! They have a podcast, too!
49:16 – Aimee: Yeah, I’m on their podcast soon!
49:30 – Chuck: Picks!
END – Advertisement: CacheFly!
Links:
- JavaScript
- React
- Elixir
- Ember.js
- Vue
- GO
- jQuery
- Node.js
- Puppeteer
- Cypress
- Past episode: AiA 115
- Past episode: JSJ 120
- Vue.js – Slots
- Using templates and slots – Article
- Web Components Club
- GitHub: Pwa – Starter – Kit
- Progressively Enhanced Toggle Panel
- Time Ago in under 50 lines of JavaScript
- GitHub: ebook-boilerplate
- Chris Ferdinandi’s Go Make Things Site
- Game Chops
- CNBC – Trump Article
- New in Node v10.12
- Quotes Archive
- My Amazon Interview Horror Story
- DevPal.io
- Honest Work
- Relative Paths
- DevLifts
- Andy Bell’s Twitter
- Andy’s Website
Sponsors:
Picks:
Aimee
Chris
AJ
Charles
- Getacoderjob.com
- Self-Publishing School
- MF CEO podcast
Andy
JSJ 355: Progressive Web Apps with Aaron Gustafson LIVE at Microsoft Ignite
Sponsors
- Sentry use the code “devchat” for $100 credit
- Triplebyte
- Clubhouse
- CacheFly
Panel
- Charles Max Wood
Joined by special guest: Aaron Gustafson
Episode Summary
This episode of JavaScript Jabber comes to you live from Microsoft Ignite. Charles Max Wood talks to Aaron Gustafson who has been a Web Developer for more than 20 years and is also the Editor in Chief at “A List Apart”. Aaron gives a brief background on his work in the web community, explains to listeners how web standardization has evolved over time, where Progressive Web Apps (PWAs) come from, where and how can they be installed, differences between them and regular websites and their advantages. They then delve into more technical details about service workers, factors affecting the boot up time of JavaScript apps, best practices and features that are available with PWAs.
Aaron mentions some resources people can use to learn about PWAs, talks about how every website can benefit from being a PWA, new features being introduced and the PWA vs Electron comparison. In the end, they also talk about life in general, that understanding what people have gone through and empathizing with them is important, as well as not making judgements based on people’s background, gender, race, health issues and so on.
Links
- Creating & Enhancing Netscape Web Pages
- A List Apart
- A Progressive Roadmap for your Progressive Web App
- Windows Dev Center - Progressive Web Apps
- MDN web docs
- PWA Stats
- PWA Stats Twitter
- Aaron’s website
- Aaron’s Twitter
- https://www.facebook.com/javascriptjabber/
- https://twitter.com/JSJabber
Picks
Aaron Gustafson:
Charles Max Wood:
JSJ 415: Progressive Web Apps with Maximiliano Firtman
Maximiliano Firtman is a mobile web developer from Buenos Ares, Argentina. He has been a developer for 24 years and his most recent focus has been on progressive web apps, or PWAs. Steve and Max reflect on the technologies they were using when they first got started in web development and talk about their experience with mobile development. One area that Max emphasized was bringing the web into the mobile space. They discuss the progression of web access on mobile and some of the available tools. Max notes that responsible design has a very high cost in web performance for mobile devices, which requires unique approaches. They discuss some of the issues with latency in mobile, even on 4G. The solution to this latency is PWAs.
Progressive web apps are a set of best practices to create web apps that are installable. They can work offline at high speeds on several operating systems. Once installed, it looks like any other app on the system. Max delves into more details on how it works. He talks about how the resources for your application are managed. He assures listeners that it’s just a website that’s using a new API, they’re not changing the way the web works, and that when that API is there, the app can be installed. It will also generally use your default browser. Steve and Max discuss how local data is stored with PWAs. To write PWAs, you can use Angular, React, JavaScript, or Vue, and it’s a pretty transparent process. Max talks about some common tools used for local storage and some of the PWAs he’s worked on in the past. The benefit of using PWAs is that they generally run faster than regular web apps. To get started, Max advises listeners to install one and start exploring.
Panelists
-
Steve Edwards
Guest
-
Maximiliano Firtman
Sponsors
____________________________
"The MaxCoders Guide to Finding Your Dream Developer Job" by Charles Max Wood is now available on Amazon. Get Your Copy Today!
____________________________________________________________
Links
Picks
Steve Edwards:
Maximiliano Firtman:
JSJ 426: Killing the Release Night with Progressive Delivery with Dave Karow
JavaScript Remote Conf 2020
May 14th to 15th - register now!
Dave Karow is a developer evangelist for Split. He dives into how you can deliver software sustainably without burning out. His background is in performance and he's moved into smooth deliveries. He pushes the ideas behind continuous delivery and how to avoid getting paid to stay late in "free" pizzas.
Panel
-
AJ O’Neal
-
Aimee Knight
-
Charles Max Wood
-
Dan Shappir
Guest
-
Dave Karow
Sponsors
-
Taiko - free and open source browser test automation
____________________________________________________________
"The MaxCoders Guide to Finding Your Dream Developer Job" by Charles Max Wood is now available on Amazon. Get Your Copy Today!
____________________________________________________________
Links
Picks
Aimee Knight:
Dan Shappir:
AJ O’Neal:
Charles Max Wood
Dave Karow:
Follow JavaScript Jabber on Twitter > @JSJabb
Improving Water Information Programme : progress report : advances in water information made by the Bureau of Meteorology in 2014 / Bureau of Meteorology
The Deep Sea Drilling Project--a decade of progress / based on a symposium sponsored by SEPM-AAPG, held at the annual meeting, Houston, Texas, 1979, with additional related contributions ; edited by John E. Warme, Robert G. Douglas, and Edward L. Winterer
Advanced catalytic materials: current status and future progress / José Manuel Domínguez-Esquivel, Manuel Ramos, editors
JAMA Oncology : Hyperprogressive Disease in Patients With Advanced NSCLC Treated With PD-1/PD-L1 Inhibitors
Interview with Benjamin Besse, MD, author of Hyperprogressive Disease in Patients With Advanced Non–Small Cell Lung Cancer Treated With PD-1/PD-L1 Inhibitors or With Single-Agent Chemotherapy
JAMA Ophthalmology : Progression of Stargardt Disease as Determined by Fundus Autofluorescence Over a 12-Month Period
Interview with Hendrik Scholl, M.D., M.A., author of Progression of Stargardt Disease as Determined by Fundus Autofluorescence Over a 12-Month Period: ProgStar Report No. 11
Therapeutic Progress in Oncology: Towards a Revolution in Cancer Therapy?
The combined effects of population growth and aging have led to an increase in the number of cancers. Preventing, diagnosing, treating and curing cancer are therefore, more than ever, imperatives facing medicine especially to continue the decrease in cancers mortality rates and to improve the quality of survival. Over time, the classic modes of treatment (surgery, external beam radiotherapy, chemotherapy) have become more refined and efficient. From Read More... |
Activists in transition : progressive politics in democratic Indonesia / edited by Thushara Dibley and Michele Ford
Recent progress in few-body physics: proceedings of the 22nd International Conference on Few-Body Problems in Physics / N. A. Orr, M. Ploszajczak, F. M. Marqués, J. Carbonell, editors
Thatcher's progress: from social democracy to market liberalism through an English new town / Guy Ortolano, New York University
[ASAP] Review of Progress in the Chemistry of Organic Natural Products<source>Progress in the Chemistry of Organic Natural Products</source>, Volume 108. Edited by A. Douglas Kinghorn, Heinz Falk, Simon Gibbons, Jun’ichi Kobayashi, Yoshinori A
Govt has put out a progressive Budget aimed at boosting infra: Sujeet Kumar
It has restored confidence of businesses as well as provided on-ground support that MSMEs need and farmers deserve, Co-founder of Udaan said
Association Between Use of Interferon Beta and Progression of Disability in Patients With Relapsing-Remitting Multiple Sclerosis
Interview with Helen Tremlett, PhD, author of Association Between Use of Interferon Beta and Progression of Disability in Patients With Relapsing-Remitting Multiple Sclerosis
Aortic Stiffness, Blood Pressure Progression, and Incident Hypertension
Interview with Gary F. Mitchell, MD, author of Aortic Stiffness, Blood Pressure Progression, and Incident Hypertension
Effect of Vitamin D Supplementation on Progression of Knee Pain and Cartilage Volume Loss in Patients With Symptomatic Osteoarthritis: A Randomized Controlled Trial
Interview with Timothy McAlindon, DM, MPH, author of Effect of Vitamin D Supplementation on Progression of Knee Pain and Cartilage Volume Loss in Patients With Symptomatic Osteoarthritis: A Randomized Controlled Trial
Effect of Micronutrient Supplementation on Disease Progression in Asymptomatic, Antiretroviral-Naive, HIV-Infected Adults in Botswana
Interview with Marianna K Baum, PhD, author of Effect of Micronutrient Supplementation on Disease Progression in Asymptomatic, Antiretroviral-Naive, HIV-Infected Adults in Botswana
Progress in metal physics [electronic resource].
- Publisher London : Butterworths Scientific Publications, 1949-1959.
- Location World Wide Web
- Call No. TN600