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Venha aprender sobre Ruby, Rails, Node.js, Javascript e muito mais.

 

Um bate papo descontraído com o melhor dos objetivos, compartilhar conhecimento.

 

Palestrantes:

 

Fábio Akita (Codeminer 42)

Nando Vieira (Codeplane e HowTo)

Rafael França (Plataformatec)

Ricardo Almeida (Gonow)

A Hack Jam going on for 48 hours, in which we taught everyone HTML, CSS and JavaScript, made 2 Boot to Gecko apps and translated Marketplace.

 

Photos via Ioana Chiorean

  

With: Any Oarga, Vlad Florin Maniak, Florin Bogdan Strugariu, Manuela Muntean, Alex Lakatos, Galmati Marius, Dorin Pop, Ovidiu Suciu, Andreea Diana Pod, Simi Hantig and Trif Andrei Alin at Casa de Cultura a Studentilor Cluj.

Taken at dotJS in Paris on November 17th, 2014 by Nicolas Ravelli

Amsterdam and the Next Web 2009, Eric A. Meyer, JavaScript will save us all

The design conference for people who make websites

 

An Event Apart is an intensely educational two-day learning session for passionate practitioners of standards-based web design. If you care about code as well as content, usability as well as design, An Event Apart is the conference you’ve been waiting for.

 

Dedicated to the proposition that the creators of great web experiences deserve a great learning experience, An Event Apart brings together twelve of the leading minds in web design for two days of non-stop inspiration and enlightenment.

11th APRIL, LONDON - Damjan Vujnovic shares when he decided to build mindmup.com. The two main goals, to learn cool stuff and have fun. What went right? What went wrong? What was most surprising? How did they test, monitor & troubleshoot? See the SkillsCast recording (film, code, slides) at bit.ly/16V3t3p

Taken at 2012.dotjs.eu on Nov 30, 2012 by Maurice Svay

A few animation and button updates to this experimental UI, shown here in "mystery meat navigation" mode.. Perhaps a small grid view with centered titles beneath may work well.

 

This is using SoundManager 2, a JS + Flash sound API.

 

This UI was inspired by Apple's preview feature in the iPhone's iTunes music store, also elsewhere on the web and other things like this watch.

wip.. colors are shit right now, but will get better

Taken at 2012.dotjs.eu on Nov 30, 2012 by Maurice Svay

11th APRIL, LONDON - Damjan Vujnovic shares when he decided to build mindmup.com. The two main goals, to learn cool stuff and have fun. What went right? What went wrong? What was most surprising? How did they test, monitor & troubleshoot? See the SkillsCast recording (film, code, slides) at bit.ly/16V3t3p

在萬能的 Google 大神指導下我的 JS Calendar 又好了

Taken at dotJS 2016 in Paris on December 5, 2016 by Nicolas Ravelli

after jared poole's refresh boston presentation, a handful of us went to tommy doyle's for some food and drinks. in addition to seeing the presentation, it was a good opportunity for me to meet up with my "internet friends" paul (paul_irish) and vuong (atula), who, even though they're also based in boston, have only been known to me through their contributions to the irc.freenode.net #jquery support channel

 

and yes, they're exactly as dorky in person as you'd imagine from jquery javascript irc support nerds. which is "very"

xuanjitu, 2020 (work in progress). Web app (Ruby on Rails, JavaScript, HTML5, and Canvas). Courtesy of the artist.

 

Project statement from Rory Ou:

xuanjitu is an online, web-based implementation of Xuanji tu(璇玑图), an ancient palindrome poem by Chinese poet Su Hui. "One of the earliest extant poems by a woman—also among the most complex and unsung—the Xuanji tu takes the form of a 29 x 29 character grid, embroidered or woven in five colors in silk, written in classical Chinese in the fourth century." (—Jen Bervin)

 

As the poem can be read horizontally, vertically, or diagonally, in either direction, there are thousands and thousands of ways through the grid that can form rhyming poems of various line lengths. Plenty of scholars have published books and papers about how to read it, over the thousand+ years since it was created, but mostly in the form of text and printed diagrams to show the paths through the grid.

 

This app animates those readings proposed by scholars, and (eventually, I hope) will allow visitors to discover new readings of their own.

 

Demo mode:

The app is still a work in progress. So far, it only has a non-interactive demo mode, where it runs in a continuous loop, about an hour long. The loop consists of over 500 readings (distinct poems) proposed by Michèle Métail in her book Wild Geese Returning: Chinese Reversible Poems (translated by Jody Gladding). For all colors other than red, the loop includes every reading listed in Métail's book (with minor exceptions); for red--which has such a disproportionately large number of possible readings that Métail doesn't list them in the book--the loop contains a sampling of readings that would be valid according to Métail's system.

 

Pinyin is provided in the sidebar.

 

Book citations:

Wild Geese Returning: Chinese Reversible Poems, Michèle Métail, trans. Jody Gladding, Penguin Random House, 2017.

诗苑珍品--璇玑图 (roughly "Poetry Garden Treasures: Xuanji tu"), Li Wei (李蔚), 东方出版社 (roughly "Eastern Publishing Co."), 1996.

 

Installation view of Jen Bervin: Shift Rotate Reflect, curated by Kendra Paitz, and on view at University Galleries of Illinois State University from August 15 through December 13, 2020. Photo credit: Lyndsie Schlink.

 

Taken at dotJS 2016 in Paris on December 5, 2016 by Nicolas Ravelli

but finally we took a less heavy one, Borders at Rockville, Maryland

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