next Next 2 quarters challenging for Indian cotton yarn sector By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 09:41:36 GMT Full Article
next How to build a martech stack for this era — and whatever comes next By feeds.marketingland.com Published On :: Wed, 29 Apr 2020 15:37:23 +0000 Acoustic’s head of product marketing said his company made major pivots at the start of last month. This is how he built a martech stack that allowed for such massive shifts. Please visit Marketing Land for the full article. Full Article
next The (Next) Financial Crisis By hbr.org Published On :: Thu, 07 Jul 2011 18:53:02 -0500 Nicholas Dunbar, author of "The Devil's Derivatives: The Untold Story of the Slick Traders and Hapless Regulators Who Almost Blew Up Wall Street ... and Are Ready to Do It Again." Full Article
next The Next Global Talent Pool By hbr.org Published On :: Thu, 15 Sep 2011 18:49:01 -0500 Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid, authors of "Winning the War for Talent in Emerging Markets: Why Women Are the Solution." Full Article
next Find the Next Disruptor Before it Finds You By hbr.org Published On :: Thu, 06 Dec 2012 17:20:25 -0500 Maxwell Wessel, fellow at the Forum for Growth and Innovation and coauthor of the HBR article "Surviving Disruption." Full Article
next Next 2 quarters challenging for Indian cotton yarn sector By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 23:00:04 GMT Full Article
next Tips for Acing Your Next Virtual Job Interview By anderscpa.com Published On :: Tue, 21 Apr 2020 21:13:58 +0000 As recruitment processes for many companies continue to change due to COVID-19, virtual interviews are becoming a normal part of the process. There are many similarities between interviewing in-person and virtually, and ultimately, the end goal is the same. Whether… Read More The post Tips for Acing Your Next Virtual Job Interview appeared first on Anders CPAs. Full Article Careers careers
next Trump and Pence should go into self-quarantine for the next 2 weeks — according to the government's own coronavirus guidelines By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 11:17:04 -0400 AP Photo/Evan Vucci More than a dozen people who may work near President Trump and Vice President Pence have tested positive for the coronavirus this week. On Friday, Pence's press secretary Katie Miller tested positive for the virus. Eleven Secret Service agents have also tested positive for COVID-19, along with one of President Trump's valets. Ivanka Trump's assistant has also caught the coronavirus, but that person has been working remotely for weeks. Because the virus spreads easily when people are in close contact, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention urges anyone who's been exposed to someone who's caught the coronavirus to stay home for 14 days. FDA Commissioner Stephen Hahn, who worked with Miller recently, said he'll stay home for the next two weeks, but the President and Vice President remain out and about. Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories. The coronavirus arrived at the White House this week. Vice President Mike Pence's Press Secretary, Katie Miller, tested positive for the virus on Friday. See the rest of the story at Business InsiderSee Also:The US taught the world public health. Now it's getting schooled.New research found coronavirus antibodies in over 99% of recovered patients. Here's what science says about immunity.The CDC is warning of potential measles outbreaks as kids miss getting vaccines while in lockdown Full Article President Trump coronavirus COVID-19 Public Health
next NECA and CFMA Co-Host Cash Flow Amid COVID-19 Webinar Next Tuesday, 4/14 By www.necanet.org Published On :: Mon, 06 Apr 2020 21:00:12 Z More contractors go bankrupt due to cash flow than they do because of profitability. Given the unprecedented events of COVID-19, the construction industry is particularly prone to major cash flow issues that could easily bankrupt your business. During this webinar session we will address critical cash flow considerations. This webinar is co-hosted by NECA and the Construction Financial Management Association (CFMA). The presenter is Michael McLin, Managing Director at Maxim Consulting Group responsible for leading several service line teams within the firm. Full Article Home Page
next NECA Legislative Top Three 4/24/20: Congress Shores up PPP Funding, Phase IV Next Up By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Fri, 24 Apr 2020 14:21:20 Z 1. Congress Passes Legislation to Increase Funding for PPP On April 23, 2020, the House passed, in a 388 to 5 vote, the Senate Amendment to H.R. 266 – Paycheck Protection Program and Health Care Enhancement Act. This legislation reauthorizes the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP), which was passed in the Senate by unanimous consent on April 21, 2020. NECA advocated for additional funding and are confident that this amendment will continue to help NECA contractors keep their employees on payroll during this crisis. NECA’s Look Ahead: The NECA-supported bill is expected to be signed into law by the President immediately. A detailed section by section summary can be found here. NECA has also compiled some FAQs on this loan program. NECA is continuing to work with congressional leaders on upcoming Phases of COVID-19 response bills. A major Phase IV bill is expected sometime in May. 2. NECA Weighs in on Main Street Lending Program A group of congressional allies sent a letter to Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and Vice Chairman for Supervision of Federal Reserve Board of Governors, Randal Quarles, requesting the inclusion of S corporations, LLCs, and partnerships in utilizing the Main Street lending facilities announced by Treasury and the Federal Reserve. NECA’s Look Ahead: The letter was organized in response to a coalition letter, which NECA supported, to Rep. Warren Davidson (R-Texas) on the issue. NECA will update its members once we have received a formal response from the Department of the Treasury. 3. Register Today for the Upcoming Government Affairs Webinar On May 5, 2020 at 2PM ET, NECA’s Government Affairs team will brief participants on NECA’s requests for Congress in the Phase IV coronavirus response legislation, then participants can take action and send a letter to their Member of Congress requesting help for the electrical construction industry to remain viable during this crisis. Participants will also hear messages from key Members of Congress on the current legislative response to the coronavirus pandemic. Register Today! Full Article Advocacy Issues Advocacy
next Text Analytics and Natural Language Processing: Knowledge Management?s Next Frontier By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Sun, 08 Sep 2019 11:00:00 EST Text analytics and natural language processing are not new concepts. Most knowledge management professionals have been grappling with these technologies for years. From the KM perspective, these technologies share the same fundamental purpose: They help get the right information to employees at the right time. Full Article
next Transform Customer Service With Next-Gen Knowledge: Why and How By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Wed, 06 Nov 2019 12:00:00 EST The consumer has spoken. Forrester Research asked 5,000 of them, "What created the biggest pain when you contacted a business for customer service?" They answered lack and consistency of agent knowledge, followed by the difficulty of finding relevant answers on company websites. So, what is driving this dissatisfaction? Full Article
next Take a Bow for the Next Generation KM By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Wed, 06 Nov 2019 12:00:00 EST There may be several generations that a KM system appeals to in different ways, but there are no generational differences when it comes to expecting high quality customer service and knowledgeable agents. Full Article
next Destek Infosolutions receives $2 Million funding for LegalNextt By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2019-01-22T16:40:00+05:30 Pune based IT Company Destek Infosolutions Pvt Ltd has raised an amount of 2 Million in seed funding round for one of its platforms, LegalNextt - An Extensi... Full Article
next Next year, earnings will have the potential to positively surprise the market: Madhu Kela By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-03-11T18:42:06+05:30 Next year, earnings will have the potential to positively surprise the market: Madhu Kela Full Article
next Lady Gaga's former manager and Uber investor Troy Carter hand picks the next six hot startups By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2015-09-09T13:12:06+05:30 Carter managed Lady Gaga from early into her career to worldwide stardom until he was fired in 2013. Carter and his talent agency, Atom Factory, manage pop stars. Full Article
next Lulu group to invest Rs 5,000 crore in India in next 4 years By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2016-04-10T21:46:11+05:30 United Arab Emirates-based Lulu Group, has decided to invest Rs 5,000 crore in India over the next four years, largely for setting up shopping malls. Full Article
next Investing in startups – Where to find the next set of winners By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-05-09T11:46:08+05:30 Disease or otherwise, travel as we know could change dramatically, at least in frequency if not in distance and mode. The individual and mass transport industry, the hallmark of the 20th Century will change forever in the 21st century. Full Article
next SCCM Pod-95 PCCM: Is the Endotracheal Tube Next to Go By sccm-audio.s3.amazonaws.com Published On :: Wed, 19 Nov 2008 11:30:00 -0500 James D. Fortenberry, MD, FCCM, discusses his editorial published in the September 2008 issue of Pediatric Critical Care Medicine, titled "8-Tracks, Betamax... Is the endotracheal tube next to go?" Fortenberry is a pediatric intensivist at Children's Healthcare of Atlanta in Georgia, where he also is the medical director of the system's clinical research. Dr. Fortenberry also is director, division of critical care medicine in the department of pediatrics at Emory University School of Medicine. The editorial was in response to an article published in the same issue by Leticia J. Yanez et al., "A prospective, randomized, controlled trial of non-invasive ventilation in pediatric acute respiratory insufficiency." (Pediatr Crit Care Med. 2008;9[5]:536) Released: 11/19/08 Full Article Medicine
next GST: Compensation shortfall seen at Rs 30K cr, next Council meet to take up the issue By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-02-10T21:30:29+05:30 GST: Compensation shortfall seen at Rs 30K cr, next Council meet to take up the issue Full Article
next Next year's Olympics will be cancelled if pandemic not over: Games chief By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-04-28T11:39:01+05:30 The postponed Tokyo 2020 Olympics will be cancelled if the coronavirus pandemic isn't brought under control by next year, the organising committee's president said in comments published Tuesday. Full Article
next Speed Camera Tickets, Red Light Cameras Coming Next Week By www.wbal.com Published On :: 2017-07-26T16:22:00 There are eight red light cameras around the city that will begin issuing warnings for violators for 30 days, before beginning to issue tickets. Full Article
next Carvajal Believes Imperial Hint ‘Was 100 Percent Right’ When Scratched By Vets, Will Run Next Year By www.paulickreport.com Published On :: Sat, 09 Nov 2019 18:47:33 +0000 Trainer Luis Carvajal, Jr. was disappointed when veterinarians scratched Imperial Hint on the morning of the Breeders' Cup Sprint, and told horseracingnation.com that despite the horse's “Win and You're In” paying the entry fees, there were other expenses related to traveling to Santa Anita which placed a strain on his 15-horse operation. Vets scratched the 6-year-old […] The post Carvajal Believes Imperial Hint ‘Was 100 Percent Right’ When Scratched By Vets, Will Run Next Year appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report. Full Article Breeders' Cup NL Article breeders' cup sprint dubai Horse Racing imperial hint imperialism Luis Carvajal Jr. raymond mamone santa anita thoroughbred vet scratch
next Lamar Jackson Says He'll Be On Cover Of Next 'Madden' Game By www.wbal.com Published On :: 2020-04-22T05:44:00 The quarterback says he's not worried about the Madden Curse. Full Article
next Miami Herald: Florida’s lax oversight of nursing homes spills over from one deadly crisis to the next By rbfirehose.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 16:33:24 +0000 Miami Herald: Florida’s lax oversight of nursing homes spills over from one deadly crisis to the next. “Florida’s solution for one potential crisis — the failure of nearly 100 elder-care facilities to comply with the state’s emergency power law, even as hurricane season approaches — is to allow the homes to pack all their residents … Continue reading Miami Herald: Florida’s lax oversight of nursing homes spills over from one deadly crisis to the next Full Article COVID-19 coronavirus Florida nursing homes older adults public health senior citizens state government
next First peek at the next 12 Home of the Month selections By www.startribune.com Published On :: 2020-05-07T19:30:47+00:00 Homes include small cabin, remodeled warehouse loft and lakeshore estates. Full Article
next South Rim of Grand Canyon Continues to Conserve Water; May Implement Further Water Restrictions Next Week By www.nps.gov Published On :: Fri, 05 Jan 2018 12:48:00 EST Grand Canyon National Park remains in Level 2 water conservation measures due to water delivery system issues and may implement further restrictions next week. https://www.nps.gov/grca/learn/news/grand-canyon-continues-to-conserves-water.htm Full Article
next Next Time You’re Feeling Particularly Stressed or Anxious, This Study Says You Should Play Tetris By www.goodnewsnetwork.org Published On :: Fri, 17 Apr 2020 18:20:44 +0000 If you're enduring a period of anxiety or uneasiness, this study from the University of California says that Tetris is the perfect solution. The post Next Time You’re Feeling Particularly Stressed or Anxious, This Study Says You Should Play Tetris appeared first on Good News Network. Full Article Health Wellness Anxiety Stress Mental Health Gaming NewsCred
next ‘Goat 2 Meeting’ Service Lets Farm Animals Make Cameo Appearance on Your Next Zoom Call to Support Shelter By www.goodnewsnetwork.org Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 17:44:47 +0000 Sweet Farm Animal Shelter has started Goat 2 Meeting, a service for companies or people to hire farm animals like llamas to appear on their next video call. The post ‘Goat 2 Meeting’ Service Lets Farm Animals Make Cameo Appearance on Your Next Zoom Call to Support Shelter appeared first on Good News Network. Full Article Animals Instagram Rescue Fun Technology California Shelter Funny COVID-19
next Previous/Next click gallery By www.cssplay.co.uk Published On :: 2009-11-25 A click gallery using 'Previous' and 'Next' buttons to navigate, in which the large image is permanently on screen until another image is chosen EVEN when refreshing the page. With descriptive text and linking option. Full Article
next Previous/Next preview click gallery By www.cssplay.co.uk Published On :: 2009-11-26 A click gallery using 'Previous' and 'Next' preview images to navigate, in which the large image is permanently on screen until another image is chosen EVEN when refreshing the page. With descriptive text and linking option. Full Article
next 9 lockdown restrictions most likely to be eased next week By www.getsurrey.co.uk Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 13:17:15 GMT Some restrictions will stay in force for the foreseeable future, but others may be lifted in the next few days Full Article Home
next Government to hold Premier League talks next week in hope of season restart By www.chroniclelive.co.uk Published On :: Fri, 8 May 2020 11:34:30 +0000 Premier League clubs will also hold a videoconference on Monday to discuss Project Restart Full Article Sport
next Belfast grandmother who beat Covid-19 to celebrate 100th birthday next week By www.belfastlive.co.uk Published On :: Sat, 9 May 2020 04:00:00 +0000 Margaret Ethel Sinclair, 99, will turn 100-year-old on May 13 Full Article News
next Tim Hortons plans to open two of its NI locations next week By www.belfastlive.co.uk Published On :: Thu, 7 May 2020 19:31:57 +0000 The Canadian restaurant chain has laid down plans for the gradual reopening of some of its franchises Full Article What's On
next Website Localization: Going Global Amidst The Next Recession By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Fri, 20 Mar 2020 19:34:56 +0000 What does a localization specialist do? What is the concept of localization? If these questions are on your mind, then this article is for you. More Full Article Articles
next Should you use Userbase for your next static site? By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 08:00:00 -0400 During the winter 2020 Pointless Weekend, we built TrailBuddy (working app coming soon). Our team consisted of four developers, two project managers, two front-end developers, a digital-analyst, a UXer, and a designer. In about 48 hours, we took an idea from Jeremy Field’s head to a (mostly) working app. We broke up the project in two parts:. First, a back-end that crunches trail, weather, and soil data. That data is exposed via a GraphQL API for a web app to consume. While developers built the API, I built a static front end using Next.js. Famously, static front-ends don’t have a database, or a concept of “users.” A bit of functionality I wanted to add was saving favorite trails. I didn’t want to be hacky about it, I needed some way to add users and a database. I knew it’d be hard for the developers to set this up as part of the API, they had their hands full with all the #soil-soil-soil-soil-soil (a slack channel dedicated solely to figuring out our soil data problem—those were plentiful.) I had been looking for an excuse to use Userbase, and this seemed like as good a time as any. A textbook Userbase use case “When would I use it?” The Usebase site lists these reasons: If you want to build a web app without writing any backend code. If you never want to see your users' data. If you're tired of dealing with databases. If you want to radically simplify your GDPR compliance. And if you want to keep things really simple. This was a perfect fit for my problem. I didn’t want to write any more backend code for this. I didn’t want to see our user’s data, I don’t care to know anyone’s favorite trails.* A nice bonus to not having users in our backend was not having to worry about keeping their data safe. We don’t have their data at all, it’s end-to-end encrypted by Userbase. We can offer a reasonable amount of privacy for free (well for the price of using Userbase: $49 a year.) I am not tired of dealing with databases, but I’d rather not. I don’t think anyone doesn’t want to simplify their GDPR compliance. Finally, given our tight timeline I wanted nothing more than to keep things really simple. A sign up form that I didn't have to write a back-end for Using Userbase Userbase can be tried for free, so I set aside thirty minutes or so to do a quick proof of concept to make sure this would work out for us. I made an account and followed their Quickstart. Userbase is a fundamentally easy tool to use, but their quickstart is everything I’d want out of a quickstart: Written in the most vanilla way possible (just HTML and vanilla JS). This means I can adapt it to my needs, in this case React using Next.js Easy to follow, it does the most barebones tour of the functionality you can expect to get out of the SDK (software development kit.) In other words it is quick and it is a start It has a live demo and code samples you can download and run yourself It didn’t take long after that to integrate Userbase into our app with more help from their great docs. I debated whether to add code samples of what we did here, and I didn’t because any reader would be better off using the great quickstart and docs Userbase provides—they are that clear, and that good. Depending on your use case you’ll need to adapt the examples to your needs, for us the trickiest things were creating a top level authentication context to manage users in the app, and a custom hook to encapsulate all the logic for setting, updating, and deleting favourite trails in the app. Userbase’s SDK worked seamlessly for us. A log in form that I didn't have to write a back-end for Is Userbase for you? Maybe. I am definitely a fan, so much so that this blog post probably reads like an advert. Userbase saved me a ton of time in this project. It reminded me of “The All Powerful Front End Developer” talk by Chris Coyer. I don’t fully subscribe to all the ideas in that talk, but it is nice to have “serverless” tools like Userbase, and all the new JAMstacky things. There are limits to the Userbase serverless experience in terms of scale, and control. Obviously relying on a third party for something always carries some (probably small) risk—it’s worth noting Usebase includes a note on their pricing page that says “You can host it yourself always under your control, or we can run it for you for a full serverless experience”—Still, I wouldn’t hesitate this to use in future projects. One of the great things about Viget and Pointless Weekend is the opportunity to try new things. For me that was Next.js and Userbase for Trailbuddy. It doesn’t always work out (in fact this is my first pointless weekend where a risk hasn’t blown up in my face) but it is always fun. Getting to try out Userbase and beginning to think about how we may use it in the future made the weekend worthwhile for me, and it made my job on this project much more enjoyable. *I will write a future post about privacy conscious analytics in TrailBuddy when I’ve figured that out. I am looking into Fathom Analytics for that. Full Article Code Front-end Engineering
next Should you use Userbase for your next static site? By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 08:00:00 -0400 During the winter 2020 Pointless Weekend, we built TrailBuddy (working app coming soon). Our team consisted of four developers, two project managers, two front-end developers, a digital-analyst, a UXer, and a designer. In about 48 hours, we took an idea from Jeremy Field’s head to a (mostly) working app. We broke up the project in two parts:. First, a back-end that crunches trail, weather, and soil data. That data is exposed via a GraphQL API for a web app to consume. While developers built the API, I built a static front end using Next.js. Famously, static front-ends don’t have a database, or a concept of “users.” A bit of functionality I wanted to add was saving favorite trails. I didn’t want to be hacky about it, I needed some way to add users and a database. I knew it’d be hard for the developers to set this up as part of the API, they had their hands full with all the #soil-soil-soil-soil-soil (a slack channel dedicated solely to figuring out our soil data problem—those were plentiful.) I had been looking for an excuse to use Userbase, and this seemed like as good a time as any. A textbook Userbase use case “When would I use it?” The Usebase site lists these reasons: If you want to build a web app without writing any backend code. If you never want to see your users' data. If you're tired of dealing with databases. If you want to radically simplify your GDPR compliance. And if you want to keep things really simple. This was a perfect fit for my problem. I didn’t want to write any more backend code for this. I didn’t want to see our user’s data, I don’t care to know anyone’s favorite trails.* A nice bonus to not having users in our backend was not having to worry about keeping their data safe. We don’t have their data at all, it’s end-to-end encrypted by Userbase. We can offer a reasonable amount of privacy for free (well for the price of using Userbase: $49 a year.) I am not tired of dealing with databases, but I’d rather not. I don’t think anyone doesn’t want to simplify their GDPR compliance. Finally, given our tight timeline I wanted nothing more than to keep things really simple. A sign up form that I didn't have to write a back-end for Using Userbase Userbase can be tried for free, so I set aside thirty minutes or so to do a quick proof of concept to make sure this would work out for us. I made an account and followed their Quickstart. Userbase is a fundamentally easy tool to use, but their quickstart is everything I’d want out of a quickstart: Written in the most vanilla way possible (just HTML and vanilla JS). This means I can adapt it to my needs, in this case React using Next.js Easy to follow, it does the most barebones tour of the functionality you can expect to get out of the SDK (software development kit.) In other words it is quick and it is a start It has a live demo and code samples you can download and run yourself It didn’t take long after that to integrate Userbase into our app with more help from their great docs. I debated whether to add code samples of what we did here, and I didn’t because any reader would be better off using the great quickstart and docs Userbase provides—they are that clear, and that good. Depending on your use case you’ll need to adapt the examples to your needs, for us the trickiest things were creating a top level authentication context to manage users in the app, and a custom hook to encapsulate all the logic for setting, updating, and deleting favourite trails in the app. Userbase’s SDK worked seamlessly for us. A log in form that I didn't have to write a back-end for Is Userbase for you? Maybe. I am definitely a fan, so much so that this blog post probably reads like an advert. Userbase saved me a ton of time in this project. It reminded me of “The All Powerful Front End Developer” talk by Chris Coyer. I don’t fully subscribe to all the ideas in that talk, but it is nice to have “serverless” tools like Userbase, and all the new JAMstacky things. There are limits to the Userbase serverless experience in terms of scale, and control. Obviously relying on a third party for something always carries some (probably small) risk—it’s worth noting Usebase includes a note on their pricing page that says “You can host it yourself always under your control, or we can run it for you for a full serverless experience”—Still, I wouldn’t hesitate this to use in future projects. One of the great things about Viget and Pointless Weekend is the opportunity to try new things. For me that was Next.js and Userbase for Trailbuddy. It doesn’t always work out (in fact this is my first pointless weekend where a risk hasn’t blown up in my face) but it is always fun. Getting to try out Userbase and beginning to think about how we may use it in the future made the weekend worthwhile for me, and it made my job on this project much more enjoyable. *I will write a future post about privacy conscious analytics in TrailBuddy when I’ve figured that out. I am looking into Fathom Analytics for that. Full Article Code Front-end Engineering
next Unforgettable Road Trips in the UK-A new of enjoying your next travel By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Thu, 04 Feb 2016 17:35:42 +0000 Scenic Road Trips in the UK that are Worth Capturing by Camera Some people like hiking. Some people like cycling. But, after chatting with online car dealership Carspring, it seems you can have just as much fun exploring your next trip in the complete, climate-controlled comfort of your car. Here we go through the most unforgettable road trips in England, Scotland and Wales. Drives that offer driving heaven, stunning scenery and plenty of fun along the way. All you need is the right company and you are all set to enjoy! England: Road from Glastonbury to Cheddar Gorge – Check out the route here. This route gives you a proper feel of medieval England. Begin deep in England’s spiritual realm on the outskirts of the hallowed town on Glastonbury (Therefore avoid at a certain summer weekend). Start at the Tor on the edge of town, where hippies will tell you ... Read more The post Unforgettable Road Trips in the UK-A new of enjoying your next travel appeared first on Digital Photography Tutorials. Full Article Uncategorized camera compact digital camera Photo Editing photography
next Playable simulations to decide what happens next By flowingdata.com Published On :: Mon, 04 May 2020 07:21:03 +0000 The timelines keep shifting and people are getting antsy for many valid (and…Tags: coronavirus, Marcel Salathé, Nicky Case, simulation Full Article Infographics coronavirus Marcel Salathé Nicky Case simulation
next Should you use Userbase for your next static site? By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 08:00:00 -0400 During the winter 2020 Pointless Weekend, we built TrailBuddy (working app coming soon). Our team consisted of four developers, two project managers, two front-end developers, a digital-analyst, a UXer, and a designer. In about 48 hours, we took an idea from Jeremy Field’s head to a (mostly) working app. We broke up the project in two parts:. First, a back-end that crunches trail, weather, and soil data. That data is exposed via a GraphQL API for a web app to consume. While developers built the API, I built a static front end using Next.js. Famously, static front-ends don’t have a database, or a concept of “users.” A bit of functionality I wanted to add was saving favorite trails. I didn’t want to be hacky about it, I needed some way to add users and a database. I knew it’d be hard for the developers to set this up as part of the API, they had their hands full with all the #soil-soil-soil-soil-soil (a slack channel dedicated solely to figuring out our soil data problem—those were plentiful.) I had been looking for an excuse to use Userbase, and this seemed like as good a time as any. A textbook Userbase use case “When would I use it?” The Usebase site lists these reasons: If you want to build a web app without writing any backend code. If you never want to see your users' data. If you're tired of dealing with databases. If you want to radically simplify your GDPR compliance. And if you want to keep things really simple. This was a perfect fit for my problem. I didn’t want to write any more backend code for this. I didn’t want to see our user’s data, I don’t care to know anyone’s favorite trails.* A nice bonus to not having users in our backend was not having to worry about keeping their data safe. We don’t have their data at all, it’s end-to-end encrypted by Userbase. We can offer a reasonable amount of privacy for free (well for the price of using Userbase: $49 a year.) I am not tired of dealing with databases, but I’d rather not. I don’t think anyone doesn’t want to simplify their GDPR compliance. Finally, given our tight timeline I wanted nothing more than to keep things really simple. A sign up form that I didn't have to write a back-end for Using Userbase Userbase can be tried for free, so I set aside thirty minutes or so to do a quick proof of concept to make sure this would work out for us. I made an account and followed their Quickstart. Userbase is a fundamentally easy tool to use, but their quickstart is everything I’d want out of a quickstart: Written in the most vanilla way possible (just HTML and vanilla JS). This means I can adapt it to my needs, in this case React using Next.js Easy to follow, it does the most barebones tour of the functionality you can expect to get out of the SDK (software development kit.) In other words it is quick and it is a start It has a live demo and code samples you can download and run yourself It didn’t take long after that to integrate Userbase into our app with more help from their great docs. I debated whether to add code samples of what we did here, and I didn’t because any reader would be better off using the great quickstart and docs Userbase provides—they are that clear, and that good. Depending on your use case you’ll need to adapt the examples to your needs, for us the trickiest things were creating a top level authentication context to manage users in the app, and a custom hook to encapsulate all the logic for setting, updating, and deleting favourite trails in the app. Userbase’s SDK worked seamlessly for us. A log in form that I didn't have to write a back-end for Is Userbase for you? Maybe. I am definitely a fan, so much so that this blog post probably reads like an advert. Userbase saved me a ton of time in this project. It reminded me of “The All Powerful Front End Developer” talk by Chris Coyer. I don’t fully subscribe to all the ideas in that talk, but it is nice to have “serverless” tools like Userbase, and all the new JAMstacky things. There are limits to the Userbase serverless experience in terms of scale, and control. Obviously relying on a third party for something always carries some (probably small) risk—it’s worth noting Usebase includes a note on their pricing page that says “You can host it yourself always under your control, or we can run it for you for a full serverless experience”—Still, I wouldn’t hesitate this to use in future projects. One of the great things about Viget and Pointless Weekend is the opportunity to try new things. For me that was Next.js and Userbase for Trailbuddy. It doesn’t always work out (in fact this is my first pointless weekend where a risk hasn’t blown up in my face) but it is always fun. Getting to try out Userbase and beginning to think about how we may use it in the future made the weekend worthwhile for me, and it made my job on this project much more enjoyable. *I will write a future post about privacy conscious analytics in TrailBuddy when I’ve figured that out. I am looking into Fathom Analytics for that. Full Article Code Front-end Engineering
next Should you use Userbase for your next static site? By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 08:00:00 -0400 During the winter 2020 Pointless Weekend, we built TrailBuddy (working app coming soon). Our team consisted of four developers, two project managers, two front-end developers, a digital-analyst, a UXer, and a designer. In about 48 hours, we took an idea from Jeremy Field’s head to a (mostly) working app. We broke up the project in two parts:. First, a back-end that crunches trail, weather, and soil data. That data is exposed via a GraphQL API for a web app to consume. While developers built the API, I built a static front end using Next.js. Famously, static front-ends don’t have a database, or a concept of “users.” A bit of functionality I wanted to add was saving favorite trails. I didn’t want to be hacky about it, I needed some way to add users and a database. I knew it’d be hard for the developers to set this up as part of the API, they had their hands full with all the #soil-soil-soil-soil-soil (a slack channel dedicated solely to figuring out our soil data problem—those were plentiful.) I had been looking for an excuse to use Userbase, and this seemed like as good a time as any. A textbook Userbase use case “When would I use it?” The Usebase site lists these reasons: If you want to build a web app without writing any backend code. If you never want to see your users' data. If you're tired of dealing with databases. If you want to radically simplify your GDPR compliance. And if you want to keep things really simple. This was a perfect fit for my problem. I didn’t want to write any more backend code for this. I didn’t want to see our user’s data, I don’t care to know anyone’s favorite trails.* A nice bonus to not having users in our backend was not having to worry about keeping their data safe. We don’t have their data at all, it’s end-to-end encrypted by Userbase. We can offer a reasonable amount of privacy for free (well for the price of using Userbase: $49 a year.) I am not tired of dealing with databases, but I’d rather not. I don’t think anyone doesn’t want to simplify their GDPR compliance. Finally, given our tight timeline I wanted nothing more than to keep things really simple. A sign up form that I didn't have to write a back-end for Using Userbase Userbase can be tried for free, so I set aside thirty minutes or so to do a quick proof of concept to make sure this would work out for us. I made an account and followed their Quickstart. Userbase is a fundamentally easy tool to use, but their quickstart is everything I’d want out of a quickstart: Written in the most vanilla way possible (just HTML and vanilla JS). This means I can adapt it to my needs, in this case React using Next.js Easy to follow, it does the most barebones tour of the functionality you can expect to get out of the SDK (software development kit.) In other words it is quick and it is a start It has a live demo and code samples you can download and run yourself It didn’t take long after that to integrate Userbase into our app with more help from their great docs. I debated whether to add code samples of what we did here, and I didn’t because any reader would be better off using the great quickstart and docs Userbase provides—they are that clear, and that good. Depending on your use case you’ll need to adapt the examples to your needs, for us the trickiest things were creating a top level authentication context to manage users in the app, and a custom hook to encapsulate all the logic for setting, updating, and deleting favourite trails in the app. Userbase’s SDK worked seamlessly for us. A log in form that I didn't have to write a back-end for Is Userbase for you? Maybe. I am definitely a fan, so much so that this blog post probably reads like an advert. Userbase saved me a ton of time in this project. It reminded me of “The All Powerful Front End Developer” talk by Chris Coyer. I don’t fully subscribe to all the ideas in that talk, but it is nice to have “serverless” tools like Userbase, and all the new JAMstacky things. There are limits to the Userbase serverless experience in terms of scale, and control. Obviously relying on a third party for something always carries some (probably small) risk—it’s worth noting Usebase includes a note on their pricing page that says “You can host it yourself always under your control, or we can run it for you for a full serverless experience”—Still, I wouldn’t hesitate this to use in future projects. One of the great things about Viget and Pointless Weekend is the opportunity to try new things. For me that was Next.js and Userbase for Trailbuddy. It doesn’t always work out (in fact this is my first pointless weekend where a risk hasn’t blown up in my face) but it is always fun. Getting to try out Userbase and beginning to think about how we may use it in the future made the weekend worthwhile for me, and it made my job on this project much more enjoyable. *I will write a future post about privacy conscious analytics in TrailBuddy when I’ve figured that out. I am looking into Fathom Analytics for that. Full Article Code Front-end Engineering
next Jumanji: The Next Level continues a one-joke franchise that wasn't all that funny to begin with By www.inlander.com Published On :: Thu, 12 Dec 2019 01:30:00 -0800 [IMAGE-1]Welcome back to the jungle. And welcome to an unfortunate new Christmas movie tradition: the Jumanji movie.… Full Article Film/Film News
next Don't expect any socially distanced Zags games in the Kennel next year, and other thoughts from Gonzaga Athletic Director Mike Roth's online Q&A By www.inlander.com Published On :: Wed, 29 Apr 2020 14:03:00 -0700 Gonzaga Athletic Director Mike Roth took to the Zoom online meeting app Wednesday for a lengthy chat with members of the school community, fans and media to answer questions about college sports in the era of COVID-19. Like so many things regarding the coronavirus, there are a lot of hopes for a rapid return to normalcy — all of them couched in the reality that none of us really know how the pandemic is going to affect our lives three months from now, or six months down the line.… Full Article Sports
next Thursday's Briefing: BART anticipates huge budget deficit next year; San Leandro Police release body-camera video of fatal shooting at Walmart By www.eastbayexpress.com Published On :: Thu, 23 Apr 2020 04:00:00 -0700 News you don't want to miss for April 23: 1. BART learned on Thursday that $250 million in recent federal relief funds will allow it to balance its budget for this fiscal year, with $78 million remaining, BART Board Director Rebecca Saltzman said.… Full Article
next REBBL Wins NEXTY Award By www.eastbayexpress.com Published On :: Fri, 01 May 2020 04:00:00 -0700 REBBL's Gold Label Mayan Cocoa Elixir has just won the 2020 NEXTY Award for "Best New Ready-to-Drink Beverage." Its ingredients include maca, reishi, maitake, turkey tail mushrooms, lion's mane mushrooms, cayenne, and ashwagandha, among others.… Full Article Blogs/Food & Drink
next REBBL Wins NEXTY For Cocoa Elixir By www.eastbayexpress.com Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 11:07:00 -0700 Gold Label Mayan Cocoa Elixir, made by Emeryville-based REBBL, has just won the 2020 NEXTY Award for "Best New Ready-to-Drink Beverage." Its ingredients include maca, reishi, maitake, turkey tail mushrooms, lion's mane mushrooms, cayenne, and ashwagandha, among others.… Full Article Blogs/Food & Drink
next Les Miserables returns to Southampton's Mayflower Theatre next week By www.dailyecho.co.uk Published On :: Fri, 25 Oct 2019 14:34:06 +0100 NEARLY a decade since the last sell-out tour, Les Misérables is touring again and is back at Southampton’s Mayflower Theatre. Full Article
next Rocket Ronnie wants to join the jungle line-up next year, but who would feature on the dream I'm A Celebrity line up? By www.dailyecho.co.uk Published On :: Fri, 08 Dec 2017 04:58:00 +0000 HE'S a snooker legend, get him in there! Full Article
next Thought Wickham Festival was good? Organisers promise to make next year's even better By www.dailyecho.co.uk Published On :: Wed, 07 Aug 2019 05:17:38 +0100 WICKHAM Festival chiefs have promised to top their best ever event next year. Full Article