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Some interesting and useful things for web developer # 22

Good day, dear habravchane. Recently, I saw some interesting and useful tools / libraries / events that I want to share with Habr.

Awesome awesomeness


Over the past few weeks, I regularly came across Awesome- * projects that I mentioned in the latest selections. It all started with Awesome-PHP , then came the "live lists" of utilities for system administrators and pythonists . Everyone noticed a positive trend and, as desired, it turned into a whole trend. Now there are collections of tools for the languages ​​of Ruby , Go , NodeJS , JavaScript , Java , Scala , Bash , etc. There are even similar sets for entire areas in IT, for example Big Data . Awesome Awesomeness is a living list of living lists of all the essentials for a developer from a particular field.

Breach - full JavaScript browser



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JS Must Watch


"Live list" of the best videos from lectures and conferences on JavaScript. I duplicate the contents of the repository at the time of publication of the collection:

2035

  1. Gary Bernhardt: The Birth & Death of Javascript


2014

  1. Ilya Grigorik: Website Performance Optimization (Udacity course) #HOT
  2. Mark DiMarco: User Interface Algorithms
  3. Neil Green: Writing Custom DSLs
  4. Philip Roberts: Help, I'm stuck in an event-loop
  5. Eric Bidelman: Polymer and Web Components # io14
  6. Alex Russell, Jake Archibald: Bridging the gap between the web and apps # io14


2013

  1. Nat Duca: Jank Free: Chrome Rendering Performance # io13
  2. Ilya Grigorik: Automating Performance Best Practices with PageSpeed # io13
  3. Eric Bidelman: Web Components # io13
  4. Alex Komoroske: Web Components in Action # io13
  5. Paul Lewis: Device Agnostic Development # io13
  6. John McCutchan: A Trip Down Memory Lane with Gmail and DevTools # io13
  7. Joe Marini: Upgrading to a Chrome Packaged App # io13
  8. Pete Hunt: React: Rethinking best practices
  9. Martin Kleppe: 1024+ Seconds of JS Wizardry
  10. Yehuda Katz: A tale of two MVC's


2012

  1. Ryan Sandor Richards: Garbage Collection & Heap Management
  2. Addy Osmani: Scaling Your JavaScript Applications


  3. John-David Dalton: Lo-Dash
  4. Gary Bernhardt: WAT #HOT
  5. Angus Croll: Break all the rules


2011

  1. Douglas Crockford: Level 7: ECMAScript 5: The New Parts
  2. Douglas Crockford: Section 8: Programming Style and Your Brain
  3. Ryan Dahl: Introduction to Node.js


2010

  1. Douglas Crockford: Volume One: The Early Years
  2. Douglas Crockford: Chapter 2: And Then There Was JavaScript
  3. Douglas Crockford: Act III: Function the Ultimate
  4. Douglas Crockford: Episode IV: The Metamorphosis of Ajax
  5. Douglas Crockford: Part 5: The End of All Things
  6. Douglas Crockford: Scene 6: Loopage


2009

  1. Nicholas Zakas: Scalable JavaScript Application Architecture


Lollytin - Layout Designer for Bootstrap 3




Jazz & rain



One of the main distractions that prevent concentration is noise. However, not any noise interferes with work - many people are much easier to immerse themselves in the “stream” to the music or in a noisy cafe. There are even scientific studies confirming the positive influence of moderate noise on solving creative and intellectual problems.


Relatively recently on Habré told about the wonderful site Noisli , which contains a collection of background noise for every taste with the ability to mix them in arbitrary proportions. Jazz & Rain is something similar, but it is jazz to the sound of rain.

Well, in order to complete the theme of the background music there is also Pianomood .

Western thoughts or what would translate to Habré:




Says and shows Habr:




Finally:




Previous selection (Release 21)

I apologize for any typos. If you notice a problem - please write in a personal.

Thank you all for your attention.

Source: https://habr.com/ru/post/229607/


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