Refresh Tallahassee: The RE/MAX Front End StoryRachael L Moore
Come join us downstairs at the Proof Brewing Company for another excellent evening of inspiration! Rachael Moore, the front-end lead on the new remax.com, has kindly agreed to share the story and take a peek under the hood of this massive (and really nicely done) site. Among the likely topics of discussion are: Object-oriented CSS, CSS preprocessors, JavaScript frameworks, and the ins and outs of working with a distributed team.
The document introduces Sharpe as an alternative financing solution for clients compared to traditional banks. It notes that banks now approve less than 20% of financing applications and have tightened standards. This leaves many clients frustrated as they struggle to find financing on their own or get approved. Sharpe presents itself as a comprehensive financing solution that can meet the needs of more clients by offering flexible terms, funding up to $1 million, and partnerships with over 50 lenders to streamline the process.
Refresh Tallahassee: The RE/MAX Front End StoryRachael L Moore
Come join us downstairs at the Proof Brewing Company for another excellent evening of inspiration! Rachael Moore, the front-end lead on the new remax.com, has kindly agreed to share the story and take a peek under the hood of this massive (and really nicely done) site. Among the likely topics of discussion are: Object-oriented CSS, CSS preprocessors, JavaScript frameworks, and the ins and outs of working with a distributed team.
The document introduces Sharpe as an alternative financing solution for clients compared to traditional banks. It notes that banks now approve less than 20% of financing applications and have tightened standards. This leaves many clients frustrated as they struggle to find financing on their own or get approved. Sharpe presents itself as a comprehensive financing solution that can meet the needs of more clients by offering flexible terms, funding up to $1 million, and partnerships with over 50 lenders to streamline the process.
Operations Tooling for UI - DevOps for CSS DevelopersRachael L Moore
Linting, testing, distribution, deployment--and all the associated tooling and tracking.
The learning curve on all this stuff can be pretty harsh for web UI developers. All the vocabulary. All the options. All the extra code. What does it all mean? And what, if anything, does your project need?
In this talk I discuss web user interfaces at scale and the benefits of bringing more of DevOps culture to the UI space, combining introductory material with practical applications.
Talk presented at CSSConf in June 2015.
Distributing UI Libraries: in a post Web-Component worldRachael L Moore
Modern UI Component libraries influenced by Web Components will rely more heavily on package management than last generation UI Frameworks. In this 15 minute session we'll introduce package management for web graphical user interfaces, talk about the best package contents for a UI component, and some tactics for making smooth releases.
For video, skip to 57 minutes, 13 seconds (57:13), http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BhP86d5IiM4&t=57m13s
Creating GUI container components in Angular and Web ComponentsRachael L Moore
So you've embraced architecting your Angular application with reusable components--cheers to you! But you have UI components that need multiple entry points for user markup, and regular ng-transclude left you hanging. In this talk, we'll cover how new web component standards, like the Shadow DOM, handle this. Next, we'll walk through how to accomplish it today in Angular 1.3 -- and also give you a brief glimpse into what a solution will look like in upcoming Angular 2. Afterwards, you'll know how to make layout scaffold components with custom elements that serve as containers for arbitrary user-provided HTML content.
Talk presented at ng-conf in March 2015.
Creating GUI Component APIs in Angular and Web ComponentsRachael L Moore
So you’ve embraced architecting your Angular application with reusable components – cheers to you! But you have UI components that need to communicate with each other or expose public methods, and you’re wondering about your options. In this talk, we’ll cover how new web component standards, like Custom Elements, handle this. Next, we’ll walk through how to accomplish it today in Angular 1.x – and bring it all together into what a solution will look like in upcoming Angular 2. Afterwards, you'll know how to design and implement the public HTML and JavaScript interfaces of GUI components.
Talk presented at Angular Connect in October 2015.
Operations Tooling for UI - DevOps for CSS DevelopersRachael L Moore
Linting, testing, distribution, deployment--and all the associated tooling and tracking.
The learning curve on all this stuff can be pretty harsh for web UI developers. All the vocabulary. All the options. All the extra code. What does it all mean? And what, if anything, does your project need?
In this talk I discuss web user interfaces at scale and the benefits of bringing more of DevOps culture to the UI space, combining introductory material with practical applications.
Talk presented at CSSConf in June 2015.
Distributing UI Libraries: in a post Web-Component worldRachael L Moore
Modern UI Component libraries influenced by Web Components will rely more heavily on package management than last generation UI Frameworks. In this 15 minute session we'll introduce package management for web graphical user interfaces, talk about the best package contents for a UI component, and some tactics for making smooth releases.
For video, skip to 57 minutes, 13 seconds (57:13), http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BhP86d5IiM4&t=57m13s
Creating GUI container components in Angular and Web ComponentsRachael L Moore
So you've embraced architecting your Angular application with reusable components--cheers to you! But you have UI components that need multiple entry points for user markup, and regular ng-transclude left you hanging. In this talk, we'll cover how new web component standards, like the Shadow DOM, handle this. Next, we'll walk through how to accomplish it today in Angular 1.3 -- and also give you a brief glimpse into what a solution will look like in upcoming Angular 2. Afterwards, you'll know how to make layout scaffold components with custom elements that serve as containers for arbitrary user-provided HTML content.
Talk presented at ng-conf in March 2015.
Creating GUI Component APIs in Angular and Web ComponentsRachael L Moore
So you’ve embraced architecting your Angular application with reusable components – cheers to you! But you have UI components that need to communicate with each other or expose public methods, and you’re wondering about your options. In this talk, we’ll cover how new web component standards, like Custom Elements, handle this. Next, we’ll walk through how to accomplish it today in Angular 1.x – and bring it all together into what a solution will look like in upcoming Angular 2. Afterwards, you'll know how to design and implement the public HTML and JavaScript interfaces of GUI components.
Talk presented at Angular Connect in October 2015.