The document discusses progressive web apps (PWAs) and outlines key considerations for creating a PWA. It addresses questions around what a PWA is, how to make a website feel like an app, offline functionality, push notifications, and creating a roadmap. Examples from companies that implemented PWAs successfully are provided. The conclusion recommends developing a progressive roadmap that starts with baseline PWA features and builds out functionality over time based on priorities and initiatives.
Presented at Web Directions Code, Melbourne
If you have a website—particularly one that generates revenue for your organization—you need a Progressive Web App. So where do you begin? How do you decide which features of a Progressive Web App make sense for your users? What tools can make the process easier (or harder)? In this practical session, Jason will guide you through the key design decisions you’ll need to make about your Progressive Web App and how those decisions impact the scope of your project. He'll also teach you how to avoid common pitfalls and help you take full advantage of Progressive Web App technology.
How I learned to stop worrying and love UX metricsTammy Everts
This talk at the 2018 performance.now() conference (Amsterdam) walks through a brief history of UX and web performance research, highlighting landmark studies that helped connect the dots between performance and user experience. I also demystify the current state of performance metrics and help you understand what you need to focus on for your site and your users.
Raiders of the Fast Start: Frontend Performance Archaeology - Performance.now...Katie Sylor-Miller
Raiders of the Fast Start: Frontend Performance Archeology
There are a lot of books, articles, and online tutorials out there with fantastic advice on how to make your websites performant. It all seems easy in theory, but applying best practices to real-world code is anything but straightforward. Diagnosing and fixing frontend performance issues on a large legacy codebase is like being an archaeologist excavating the remains of a lost civilization. You don’t know what you will find until you start digging!
Pick up your trowels and come along with Etsy’s Frontend Systems team as we become archaeologists digging into frontend performance on our large, legacy mobile codebase. I’ll share real-life lessons you can use to guide your own excavations into legacy code:
What tools and metrics we used to diagnose issues and track progress.
How we went beyond server-driven best practices to focus on the client.
Which fixes successfully increased conversion, and which didn’t.
Our work, like all good archaeology, went beyond artifacts and unearthed new insights into our culture. We at Etsy pride ourselves on our culture of performance, but, like all cultures, it needs to adapt and reinvent itself to account for changes to the landscape. Based on what we’ve learned, we are making the case for a new, organization-wide, frontend-focused performance culture that will solve the problems we face today.
2021 Chrome Dev Summit: Web Performance 101Tammy Everts
What do we mean when we talk about "web performance"? Why should you care about it? How can measure it? How do you get other people in your organization to care? In this workshop at the 2021 Chrome Dev Summit, I covered these questions – including an overview of the history of performance metrics, up to Core Web Vitals.
Is the buzz around Progressive Web Apps real or are they simply the latest fad? In this talk, you’ll learn exactly what Progressive Web Apps are, what problems they solve, and what new design challenges they present. Jason will show how organizations are using Progressive Web Apps to provide better and faster user experiences.
Everyone loves fast sites. While "make your site faster" is a simple mantra, the actual steps to achieve this can be daunting. Fortunately, we know where to start: JavaScript. JavaScript consumes more CPU than loading, layout, and rendering combined. Byte-for-byte, JavaScript inflicts more delays on sites than any other resource, and yet the amount of JavaScript on sites continues to grow.
In this session you'll learn the latest techniques for measuring and improving the impact JavaScript on your site, including: using the User Timing Spec and Long Tasks API to track the CPU cost of JavaScript for real users, moving expensive JavaScript off the main thread, using code coverage tools to reduce your JavaScript, and understanding why defer is probably a better technique than async for loading JavaScript.
How slow load times hurt UX (and what you can do about it) [FluentConf 2016]Tammy Everts
There are compelling arguments why companies need to care about serving faster pages to their users. Countless studies have found an irrefutable connection between load times and key performance indicators, ranging from page views to revenue.
In this talk, I outlined research-based reasons why you need to care about web performance and what you can do to make your pages faster. Your takeaways (I hope) will be an understanding of why improving load times is critical to delivering better online experiences and how to identify and fix common performance leeches on your pages.
Topics include:
- User expectations
- The impact of load time on business metrics (revenue, conversions, bounce rate, and user satisfaction/retention)
- The insidiousness of “page bloat”
- 19 things you can do to deliver a faster user experience
Presented at Web Directions Code, Melbourne
If you have a website—particularly one that generates revenue for your organization—you need a Progressive Web App. So where do you begin? How do you decide which features of a Progressive Web App make sense for your users? What tools can make the process easier (or harder)? In this practical session, Jason will guide you through the key design decisions you’ll need to make about your Progressive Web App and how those decisions impact the scope of your project. He'll also teach you how to avoid common pitfalls and help you take full advantage of Progressive Web App technology.
How I learned to stop worrying and love UX metricsTammy Everts
This talk at the 2018 performance.now() conference (Amsterdam) walks through a brief history of UX and web performance research, highlighting landmark studies that helped connect the dots between performance and user experience. I also demystify the current state of performance metrics and help you understand what you need to focus on for your site and your users.
Raiders of the Fast Start: Frontend Performance Archaeology - Performance.now...Katie Sylor-Miller
Raiders of the Fast Start: Frontend Performance Archeology
There are a lot of books, articles, and online tutorials out there with fantastic advice on how to make your websites performant. It all seems easy in theory, but applying best practices to real-world code is anything but straightforward. Diagnosing and fixing frontend performance issues on a large legacy codebase is like being an archaeologist excavating the remains of a lost civilization. You don’t know what you will find until you start digging!
Pick up your trowels and come along with Etsy’s Frontend Systems team as we become archaeologists digging into frontend performance on our large, legacy mobile codebase. I’ll share real-life lessons you can use to guide your own excavations into legacy code:
What tools and metrics we used to diagnose issues and track progress.
How we went beyond server-driven best practices to focus on the client.
Which fixes successfully increased conversion, and which didn’t.
Our work, like all good archaeology, went beyond artifacts and unearthed new insights into our culture. We at Etsy pride ourselves on our culture of performance, but, like all cultures, it needs to adapt and reinvent itself to account for changes to the landscape. Based on what we’ve learned, we are making the case for a new, organization-wide, frontend-focused performance culture that will solve the problems we face today.
2021 Chrome Dev Summit: Web Performance 101Tammy Everts
What do we mean when we talk about "web performance"? Why should you care about it? How can measure it? How do you get other people in your organization to care? In this workshop at the 2021 Chrome Dev Summit, I covered these questions – including an overview of the history of performance metrics, up to Core Web Vitals.
Is the buzz around Progressive Web Apps real or are they simply the latest fad? In this talk, you’ll learn exactly what Progressive Web Apps are, what problems they solve, and what new design challenges they present. Jason will show how organizations are using Progressive Web Apps to provide better and faster user experiences.
Everyone loves fast sites. While "make your site faster" is a simple mantra, the actual steps to achieve this can be daunting. Fortunately, we know where to start: JavaScript. JavaScript consumes more CPU than loading, layout, and rendering combined. Byte-for-byte, JavaScript inflicts more delays on sites than any other resource, and yet the amount of JavaScript on sites continues to grow.
In this session you'll learn the latest techniques for measuring and improving the impact JavaScript on your site, including: using the User Timing Spec and Long Tasks API to track the CPU cost of JavaScript for real users, moving expensive JavaScript off the main thread, using code coverage tools to reduce your JavaScript, and understanding why defer is probably a better technique than async for loading JavaScript.
How slow load times hurt UX (and what you can do about it) [FluentConf 2016]Tammy Everts
There are compelling arguments why companies need to care about serving faster pages to their users. Countless studies have found an irrefutable connection between load times and key performance indicators, ranging from page views to revenue.
In this talk, I outlined research-based reasons why you need to care about web performance and what you can do to make your pages faster. Your takeaways (I hope) will be an understanding of why improving load times is critical to delivering better online experiences and how to identify and fix common performance leeches on your pages.
Topics include:
- User expectations
- The impact of load time on business metrics (revenue, conversions, bounce rate, and user satisfaction/retention)
- The insidiousness of “page bloat”
- 19 things you can do to deliver a faster user experience
Smashing Meets for Speed: Why web performance matters – especially nowTammy Everts
We talk a lot about web performance, but a lot of these conversations come from a purely technical perspective. Most people have a gut feeling that performance is important, but exactly what influence it has on your users and your business is often overlooked. In this talk I shared at Smashing Conference's 'Meets for Speed', I share why our need for fast online experiences is hard-wired, and how slow performance hurts your users and your business.
Slides from my recent presentation on Progressive web apps. I showed what they are and how I believe they are the future of web/app development.
I also demonstrated how to use de F12 tools in Chrome to debug the Service Worker and the Manifest.json file. I also demonstrated how, by adding and changing a few lines, a Node.js app is converted to a progressive web app.
Cloud Connect Santa Clara 2013: Web Acceleration and Front-End Optimization (...Strangeloop
One approach to performance is to accelerate the network; another is to optimize the application by reducing how much the network is needed and pushing content out towards the user. In this session, Hooman Beheshti reveals how technologies like Front-End Optimization and Content Delivery Networks work alongside the rest of the cloud computing stack to improve performance and increase user productivity.
Continuous Performance Testing and Monitoring in Agile DevelopmentNeotys
Continuous Performance testing and monitoring is the best way to ensure application performance with quicker development cycles. Balancing Agile and DevOps velocity with the need for ongoing performance testing and monitoring is essential. We call it Continuous Performance Validation.
This presentation explores the why and how of progressive web applications. It discusses the technical and business problems that PWA attempt to solve and shows how you can build a Progressive Web App using Polymer.
A big thanks to Alex Russell for allowing me to use some of his content.
Demo app can be found here: https://github.com/vaadin/expense-manager-demo
Vaadin Elements: https://vaadin.com/elements
Building for Your Next Billion - Google I/O 2017Robert Nyman
New internet users are coming online around the world and are facing very different constraints to accessing the internet. In this talk, we'll cover what we've learned from building experiences for new internet users and walk through how you can build great experiences that work well for billions of users around the world.
This is a presentation from Google I/O 2017, the video is available at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wD3rpdiLMyY
Speakers: Tal Oppenheimer, Mariya Moeva, Robert Nyman
https://twitter.com/taloppenheimer
https://twitter.com/marrrr
https://twitter.com/robertnyman
Progressive Web Apps and the Windows Ecosystem [Build 2017]Aaron Gustafson
Whether at home or at work, the web plays an increasingly critical role in our daily lives. As we have become more dependent on accessing the tools it powers, we’ve also struggled to overcome some of its limitations—network connectivity, for instance. At Microsoft, we’ve long been interested in the power of the web for software development and we are even more excited for the future possibilities offered by progressive web apps (PWAs). In this session, we discuss what PWAs are, how they can be integrated into the development process of modern websites, the advantages and disadvantages of PWAs vs. native development, and what opportunities they present when installed alongside native apps in Windows.
In 2016, mobile internet usage exceeded desktop for the first time! With over 50% of users on mobile, is your web app optimized for them?
Let’s learn about Accelerated Mobile Pages, how AMP address mobile user challenges and build a valid AMP app together!
http://nodevember.org/speaker/Lisa%20Huang
“If Tetris has taught me anything, it’s that errors pile up and accomplishments disappear” is a common quote and it seems we’re living this to its full extend as web developers. We fail to celebrate the successes we have and the tools that are at our disposal but we’re never short of finding reasons why things don’t work. We also tend to pile on technology on technology to solve problems that may actually not exist and thus clog up the web. In this talk Chris Heilmann wants to remind us what we achieved and how we should celebrate it and how we should stop trying to solve problems that are simply beyond our control.
AMP is coming to improve the mobile web. Big time.
There are many aspect to a great user experience on sites.
In order to improve the speed of the media websites on mobile and the monetization, we needed few things:
1. Fast pages. Fast to load, fast to display, saving bandwidth when possible.
2. Easy for the developers and companies to create. Only based on known and widely used technologies.
3. Mobile Friendly: they should respect a standard and thanks to this standard, pages would be automatically optimized for mobile devices
4. Embrace the open web: non-proprietary technology, open source, available to anyone to use and improve. It should not only help for search engines, but for everyone.
In these slides, we will cover AMP and what it can do for you.
Progressive Web Applications are a new way to think about using the web to provide great user experiences using the best web platform features.
The education market has many opportunities to benefit their communities using PWAs to deliver information and application experiences across all devices and platforms.
2020 Chrome Dev Summit: Web Performance 101Tammy Everts
What do we mean when we talk about "web performance"? Why should you care about it? How can measure it? How do you get other people in your organization to care? In this workshop at the 2020 Chrome Dev Summit, I covered these questions – including an overview of the history of performance metrics, up to Core Web Vitals.
How to fix the design issues that matter on the pages that matter [2016 Smash...Tammy Everts
How do you know what consumers expect from your site? Every shopper is different and every visit is different. Industry stats tell only part of the story. You need to crack the hood and analyze your own real user data. This talk covers how and why to gather real user data and connect the dots between the metrics that matter most -- IT, UX, and business -- in order to create better shopper experiences and improve your business.
Performance Is About People, Not Metrics [2017 Web Directions Summit] Tammy Everts
If you want your site to succeed, you need to deliver a consistently fast user experience. But how do you quantify "fast"? And how do you track speed across millions and billions of user visits?
When we think about measuring web performance, it’s easy to fall into an abyss of metrics. TCP connection, TTFB, start render, PageSpeed and YSlow scores. Which ones should we care about? In this talk, I share my 10-year quest in search of a unicorn metric for measuring user engagement and web performance.
Go for Progressive Web Apps. Get a Better, Low Cost, Mobile PresenceMagic Software
Progressive web app may look like a buzz word around improved web standards and few mobile friendly web design patterns. But it brings positive impact on businesses and users. Let’s learn more about it here.
Smashing Meets for Speed: Why web performance matters – especially nowTammy Everts
We talk a lot about web performance, but a lot of these conversations come from a purely technical perspective. Most people have a gut feeling that performance is important, but exactly what influence it has on your users and your business is often overlooked. In this talk I shared at Smashing Conference's 'Meets for Speed', I share why our need for fast online experiences is hard-wired, and how slow performance hurts your users and your business.
Slides from my recent presentation on Progressive web apps. I showed what they are and how I believe they are the future of web/app development.
I also demonstrated how to use de F12 tools in Chrome to debug the Service Worker and the Manifest.json file. I also demonstrated how, by adding and changing a few lines, a Node.js app is converted to a progressive web app.
Cloud Connect Santa Clara 2013: Web Acceleration and Front-End Optimization (...Strangeloop
One approach to performance is to accelerate the network; another is to optimize the application by reducing how much the network is needed and pushing content out towards the user. In this session, Hooman Beheshti reveals how technologies like Front-End Optimization and Content Delivery Networks work alongside the rest of the cloud computing stack to improve performance and increase user productivity.
Continuous Performance Testing and Monitoring in Agile DevelopmentNeotys
Continuous Performance testing and monitoring is the best way to ensure application performance with quicker development cycles. Balancing Agile and DevOps velocity with the need for ongoing performance testing and monitoring is essential. We call it Continuous Performance Validation.
This presentation explores the why and how of progressive web applications. It discusses the technical and business problems that PWA attempt to solve and shows how you can build a Progressive Web App using Polymer.
A big thanks to Alex Russell for allowing me to use some of his content.
Demo app can be found here: https://github.com/vaadin/expense-manager-demo
Vaadin Elements: https://vaadin.com/elements
Building for Your Next Billion - Google I/O 2017Robert Nyman
New internet users are coming online around the world and are facing very different constraints to accessing the internet. In this talk, we'll cover what we've learned from building experiences for new internet users and walk through how you can build great experiences that work well for billions of users around the world.
This is a presentation from Google I/O 2017, the video is available at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wD3rpdiLMyY
Speakers: Tal Oppenheimer, Mariya Moeva, Robert Nyman
https://twitter.com/taloppenheimer
https://twitter.com/marrrr
https://twitter.com/robertnyman
Progressive Web Apps and the Windows Ecosystem [Build 2017]Aaron Gustafson
Whether at home or at work, the web plays an increasingly critical role in our daily lives. As we have become more dependent on accessing the tools it powers, we’ve also struggled to overcome some of its limitations—network connectivity, for instance. At Microsoft, we’ve long been interested in the power of the web for software development and we are even more excited for the future possibilities offered by progressive web apps (PWAs). In this session, we discuss what PWAs are, how they can be integrated into the development process of modern websites, the advantages and disadvantages of PWAs vs. native development, and what opportunities they present when installed alongside native apps in Windows.
In 2016, mobile internet usage exceeded desktop for the first time! With over 50% of users on mobile, is your web app optimized for them?
Let’s learn about Accelerated Mobile Pages, how AMP address mobile user challenges and build a valid AMP app together!
http://nodevember.org/speaker/Lisa%20Huang
“If Tetris has taught me anything, it’s that errors pile up and accomplishments disappear” is a common quote and it seems we’re living this to its full extend as web developers. We fail to celebrate the successes we have and the tools that are at our disposal but we’re never short of finding reasons why things don’t work. We also tend to pile on technology on technology to solve problems that may actually not exist and thus clog up the web. In this talk Chris Heilmann wants to remind us what we achieved and how we should celebrate it and how we should stop trying to solve problems that are simply beyond our control.
AMP is coming to improve the mobile web. Big time.
There are many aspect to a great user experience on sites.
In order to improve the speed of the media websites on mobile and the monetization, we needed few things:
1. Fast pages. Fast to load, fast to display, saving bandwidth when possible.
2. Easy for the developers and companies to create. Only based on known and widely used technologies.
3. Mobile Friendly: they should respect a standard and thanks to this standard, pages would be automatically optimized for mobile devices
4. Embrace the open web: non-proprietary technology, open source, available to anyone to use and improve. It should not only help for search engines, but for everyone.
In these slides, we will cover AMP and what it can do for you.
Progressive Web Applications are a new way to think about using the web to provide great user experiences using the best web platform features.
The education market has many opportunities to benefit their communities using PWAs to deliver information and application experiences across all devices and platforms.
2020 Chrome Dev Summit: Web Performance 101Tammy Everts
What do we mean when we talk about "web performance"? Why should you care about it? How can measure it? How do you get other people in your organization to care? In this workshop at the 2020 Chrome Dev Summit, I covered these questions – including an overview of the history of performance metrics, up to Core Web Vitals.
How to fix the design issues that matter on the pages that matter [2016 Smash...Tammy Everts
How do you know what consumers expect from your site? Every shopper is different and every visit is different. Industry stats tell only part of the story. You need to crack the hood and analyze your own real user data. This talk covers how and why to gather real user data and connect the dots between the metrics that matter most -- IT, UX, and business -- in order to create better shopper experiences and improve your business.
Performance Is About People, Not Metrics [2017 Web Directions Summit] Tammy Everts
If you want your site to succeed, you need to deliver a consistently fast user experience. But how do you quantify "fast"? And how do you track speed across millions and billions of user visits?
When we think about measuring web performance, it’s easy to fall into an abyss of metrics. TCP connection, TTFB, start render, PageSpeed and YSlow scores. Which ones should we care about? In this talk, I share my 10-year quest in search of a unicorn metric for measuring user engagement and web performance.
Go for Progressive Web Apps. Get a Better, Low Cost, Mobile PresenceMagic Software
Progressive web app may look like a buzz word around improved web standards and few mobile friendly web design patterns. But it brings positive impact on businesses and users. Let’s learn more about it here.
A Progressive Web App uses modern web capabilities to deliver an app-like user experience.
Progressive Web Apps bring features we expect from native apps to the mobile browser experience in a way that uses standards-based technologies and run in a secure container accessible to anyone on the web.
Performance and User Experience for the Web of TomorrowWP Engine
Mariya Moeva, Product Manager at Google, discusses the future of the web and the important roles privacy, speed, and fostering quality user experiences have to play in it. Learn about tools like AMP, Site Kit and Web Stories for WordPress that you can use to assess and advance the performance of your WordPress site.
Ready to go Mobile? Today's Mobile Landscape: Responsive, Adaptive, Hybrid, a...Jeremy Johnson
There are a number of options when going mobile, and it's not slowing down. Why choose one over the other? What are the strengths and pitfalls? What's right for your customers and users? We'll go over each option, with examples of how you can come to the right strategy around your mobile offerings.
The Web has grown from sharing information as document to highly scalable application. With the introduction of Progressive web apps, we now have a whole new way to rethink and architect client applications across multiple platforms. The primary motive of a PWA is for it feel like a native app irrespective of the platform.
PWAs are quick, function offline and can also perform like a conventional native application. This provides users with a positive experience. PWAs and Web Applications perform the same functions and are extremely comparable in many aspects. And since we’ve understood how trending they are in today’s time, PWA would definitely be a good choice for your company!
Introduction to Progressive Web Apps (PWA) as presented in Divum's New Product Developers Meet. PWA provides highly reliable, fast & engaged mobile like user experience on the web.
The web is evolving too fast, and it could be overwhelming sometimes to keep the rhythm with the pace of all that good work happening by the amazing web enthusiast engineers, so to put it all in a nutshell we'll review the most significant changes in the web platform recently, including the major features and adoptions of PWA - Progressive Web Apps, and AMP - Accelerated Mobile Pages. It's like headlines or teasers, that you can refer to individual topics for details later. You're free to use these slides in your talks, I'd appreciate giving credits though - https://goo.gl/1joHK4
Todays web front-end applications architecture. All resources shared at the end of presentation.
Full sources on:
https://lnkd.in/gyQuFKK
https://lnkd.in/gZK8Sp3
Let's focus on the Mobile Web and talk about the keys to a building a great mobile experience.
From AMP (=Accelerated Mobile Pages) as a starting point up to PWA (=Progressive Web Apps). I will cover the steps through some of the key features we see as core to the modern web experience. As a bonus, we will close with new APIs that expending the web even farther.
This Slide Deck Was used on my Masterclass abut PWA in my Masterclass about PWA and Web Standards. Thia was an introduction to PWA and his basic stone Path.
Why Progressive Web Apps will transform your websiteJason Grigsby
* Cut through the PWA hype and learn why they really matter
* Discover incentives from Google and Microsoft including SEO benefits
* Learn how other companies have used PWAs to increase revenue
* Put together a high-level plan on converting your website to a PWA
Presented at Portland Digital Summit 2017
Adapting to Input — Smashing Conference NYCJason Grigsby
Responsive Web Design has forced us to accept that we don't know the size of our canvas, and we've learned to embrace the squishiness of the web. Input, it turns out, is every bit as challenging as screen size. We have tablets with keyboards, laptops that become tablets, laptops with touch screens, phones with physical keyboards, and even phones that become desktop computers.
In this session, Jason will guide you through the input landscape, showing you new forms of input like sensors and voice control, as well as new lessons about old input standbys. You'll learn the design principles necessary to build web sites that respond and adapt to whatever input people use.
It took nearly four years, four proposed standards, the formation of a community group, and a funding campaign to pay for development, but we finally got what we've been clamoring for—a solution for responsive images baked into browsers. Now the hard work begins. Learn how to use the new responsive image specifications, which ones are appropriate for which images, and how to tackle the riddle of responsive image breakpoints.
Adaptive Input — Breaking Development Conference, San DiegoJason Grigsby
Windows 8. Chromebook Pixel. Ubuntu Phone. These devices shatter another consensual hallucination that we web developers have bought into: mobile = touch and desktop = keyboard and mouse.
We have tablets with keyboards; laptops that become tablets; laptops with touch screens; phones with physical keyboards; and even phones that become desktop computers. Not to mention new forms of input like cameras, voice control, and sensors.
We've learned how to respond to screen size. Our next challenge is learning how to adapt to different forms of input.
Mobile first and responsive web design aren’t simply two great tastes that go great together. No they represent much more than that. Mobile first responsive web design is the responsible way to build responsive designs.
Mobile first responsive web design is the best way to build something that is both responsive from a layout AND a performance perspective.
But if mobile first is the right way to do responsive design, then why are so few people doing it? In this presentation, we’ll dig into why mobile first responsive design matters and the five techniques necessary to make it work.
No matter how much we try to put ourselves into a mobile first mentality, it is hard for us to do so fully. Our access to PCs prevents us from experiencing mobile the way many in the world do.
We're currently fighting for parity among experiences. We're arguing that the mobile version shouldn't be a dumbed down version of the desktop site.
But we've set our sights too low. In a true Mobile First world, the mobile version should be the best experience. Mobile shouldn't just match the desktop experience, it should exceed it.
Presented at Mobilism.nl
Device diversity is about to get an order of magnitude worse. SmartTVs are hitting the market in mass this year. Sony, LG, Vizio, and Samsung are all shipping televisions with Google TV built in.
And if the rumors that Apple will release a TV this year are true, 2012 will turn out to be the year web developers start to tackle the glass screen hanging on our walls.
Why should web developers focused on mobile learn about the web on TVs? Because TVs represent the next challenge in device proliferation. They share common characteristics with their smaller brethren. They create new challenges and opportunities we haven't encountered yet. And most importantly, learning how to build for TVs helps inform our practices of building for mobile devices.
Why You Should Make Mobile Your Career | Clark CollegeJason Grigsby
A variation of my talk on mobile strategy given to Clark College to encourage students to pursue mobile and to encourage the college to adopt mobile curriculum.
Google Talk: DOs and DON'Ts of Mobile StrategyJason Grigsby
Presented at Google on October 8, 2010 as part of the Google Talks series.
Updated from previous presentations to talk about legacy content management systems and more ways our iPhone lens skews our perception of the world.
Get Me a Mobile Strategy or You're FIRED!Jason Grigsby
Pitching in to help cover for a speaker who was unable to make it to Design4Mobile so I've modified a version of my Mobile Strategy slides for the afternoon session.
Covers DOs and DONTs of Mobile Strategy for businesses.
Accelerate your Kubernetes clusters with Varnish CachingThijs Feryn
A presentation about the usage and availability of Varnish on Kubernetes. This talk explores the capabilities of Varnish caching and shows how to use the Varnish Helm chart to deploy it to Kubernetes.
This presentation was delivered at K8SUG Singapore. See https://feryn.eu/presentations/accelerate-your-kubernetes-clusters-with-varnish-caching-k8sug-singapore-28-2024 for more details.
The Art of the Pitch: WordPress Relationships and SalesLaura Byrne
Clients don’t know what they don’t know. What web solutions are right for them? How does WordPress come into the picture? How do you make sure you understand scope and timeline? What do you do if sometime changes?
All these questions and more will be explored as we talk about matching clients’ needs with what your agency offers without pulling teeth or pulling your hair out. Practical tips, and strategies for successful relationship building that leads to closing the deal.
LF Energy Webinar: Electrical Grid Modelling and Simulation Through PowSyBl -...DanBrown980551
Do you want to learn how to model and simulate an electrical network from scratch in under an hour?
Then welcome to this PowSyBl workshop, hosted by Rte, the French Transmission System Operator (TSO)!
During the webinar, you will discover the PowSyBl ecosystem as well as handle and study an electrical network through an interactive Python notebook.
PowSyBl is an open source project hosted by LF Energy, which offers a comprehensive set of features for electrical grid modelling and simulation. Among other advanced features, PowSyBl provides:
- A fully editable and extendable library for grid component modelling;
- Visualization tools to display your network;
- Grid simulation tools, such as power flows, security analyses (with or without remedial actions) and sensitivity analyses;
The framework is mostly written in Java, with a Python binding so that Python developers can access PowSyBl functionalities as well.
What you will learn during the webinar:
- For beginners: discover PowSyBl's functionalities through a quick general presentation and the notebook, without needing any expert coding skills;
- For advanced developers: master the skills to efficiently apply PowSyBl functionalities to your real-world scenarios.
Key Trends Shaping the Future of Infrastructure.pdfCheryl Hung
Keynote at DIGIT West Expo, Glasgow on 29 May 2024.
Cheryl Hung, ochery.com
Sr Director, Infrastructure Ecosystem, Arm.
The key trends across hardware, cloud and open-source; exploring how these areas are likely to mature and develop over the short and long-term, and then considering how organisations can position themselves to adapt and thrive.
Generating a custom Ruby SDK for your web service or Rails API using Smithyg2nightmarescribd
Have you ever wanted a Ruby client API to communicate with your web service? Smithy is a protocol-agnostic language for defining services and SDKs. Smithy Ruby is an implementation of Smithy that generates a Ruby SDK using a Smithy model. In this talk, we will explore Smithy and Smithy Ruby to learn how to generate custom feature-rich SDKs that can communicate with any web service, such as a Rails JSON API.
UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series, part 4DianaGray10
Welcome to UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series part 4. In this session, we will cover Test Manager overview along with SAP heatmap.
The UiPath Test Manager overview with SAP heatmap webinar offers a concise yet comprehensive exploration of the role of a Test Manager within SAP environments, coupled with the utilization of heatmaps for effective testing strategies.
Participants will gain insights into the responsibilities, challenges, and best practices associated with test management in SAP projects. Additionally, the webinar delves into the significance of heatmaps as a visual aid for identifying testing priorities, areas of risk, and resource allocation within SAP landscapes. Through this session, attendees can expect to enhance their understanding of test management principles while learning practical approaches to optimize testing processes in SAP environments using heatmap visualization techniques
What will you get from this session?
1. Insights into SAP testing best practices
2. Heatmap utilization for testing
3. Optimization of testing processes
4. Demo
Topics covered:
Execution from the test manager
Orchestrator execution result
Defect reporting
SAP heatmap example with demo
Speaker:
Deepak Rai, Automation Practice Lead, Boundaryless Group and UiPath MVP
Slack (or Teams) Automation for Bonterra Impact Management (fka Social Soluti...Jeffrey Haguewood
Sidekick Solutions uses Bonterra Impact Management (fka Social Solutions Apricot) and automation solutions to integrate data for business workflows.
We believe integration and automation are essential to user experience and the promise of efficient work through technology. Automation is the critical ingredient to realizing that full vision. We develop integration products and services for Bonterra Case Management software to support the deployment of automations for a variety of use cases.
This video focuses on the notifications, alerts, and approval requests using Slack for Bonterra Impact Management. The solutions covered in this webinar can also be deployed for Microsoft Teams.
Interested in deploying notification automations for Bonterra Impact Management? Contact us at sales@sidekicksolutionsllc.com to discuss next steps.
Elevating Tactical DDD Patterns Through Object CalisthenicsDorra BARTAGUIZ
After immersing yourself in the blue book and its red counterpart, attending DDD-focused conferences, and applying tactical patterns, you're left with a crucial question: How do I ensure my design is effective? Tactical patterns within Domain-Driven Design (DDD) serve as guiding principles for creating clear and manageable domain models. However, achieving success with these patterns requires additional guidance. Interestingly, we've observed that a set of constraints initially designed for training purposes remarkably aligns with effective pattern implementation, offering a more ‘mechanical’ approach. Let's explore together how Object Calisthenics can elevate the design of your tactical DDD patterns, offering concrete help for those venturing into DDD for the first time!
Transcript: Selling digital books in 2024: Insights from industry leaders - T...BookNet Canada
The publishing industry has been selling digital audiobooks and ebooks for over a decade and has found its groove. What’s changed? What has stayed the same? Where do we go from here? Join a group of leading sales peers from across the industry for a conversation about the lessons learned since the popularization of digital books, best practices, digital book supply chain management, and more.
Link to video recording: https://bnctechforum.ca/sessions/selling-digital-books-in-2024-insights-from-industry-leaders/
Presented by BookNet Canada on May 28, 2024, with support from the Department of Canadian Heritage.
6. How does the CEO even
know about progressive
web apps?
7. Cool. I’ve been wanting to play with
service workers… Maybe we can use
Vue.js here as well… I wonder if this
can be used as excuse to switch to
node js…
8.
9. How does the CEO even
know about progressive
web apps?
10.
11.
12. Ola Cabs
• 68% increase in mobile traffic
• Tier 2 cities conversion rate same as
native app. Tier 3 cities, conversion
rate is 30% higher with PWA.
• PWA is 200KB which 300x smaller
than Android and 500x than iOS.
• 20% of users who book in the PWA
had previously uninstalled app.
Source: Google, http://bit.ly/2q9D4EA
16. Original Definition by Frances Berriman and Alex Russell
Responsive
Fit any form factor. RWD FTW!
Connectivity Independent
Offline features thanks to service workers.
App-like interactions
App shell for apps navigation.
Fresh
Up-to-date thanks to service workers.
Safe
Served on HTTPS.
Discoverable
Manifest files identify them as apps.
Re-engageable
Push notifications bring people back to apps.
Installable
Can be installed to the home screen w/o app stores.
Linkable
Still part of the web—URLs still work.
Progressive
Use progressive enhancement for better experience.
25. PWA is a website that has been enhanced with:
{manifest}https service worker
Credit to Jeremy Keith for explicitly declaring a technical definition: https://adactio.com/journal/13098
36. The hype can be a turn off
https://twitter.com/elliotecweb/status/864070806569066497
37. The name isn’t for you and worrying about it is
distraction from just building things that work better for
everyone. The name is for your boss, for your investor,
for your marketeer.
—Frances Berriman, Naming Progressive Web Apps
40. If so, you would probably benefit from a PWA.
Does your organization have a website?
41. Does your organization make money on
your website via e-commerce,
advertising, or some other method?
If so, you definitely need a progressive web app.
44. Reach people who don’t have your native app
installed or are on a different device.
45. Your website is often a
customer’s first interaction
with your company.
A better web experience will likely mean
more revenue and more native app installs.
88. Adding a back button is harder than it seems
• Manage the browser history so back
button goes to right location.
• Back button in an app often implies
a hierarchy, not simply going to the
last screen you were on.
• Do you rearchitect your site to
create an app hierarchy?
89.
90. Where does this button go?
Does it do the same thing as
the browser back button?
Should
there be an
app back
button?
103. Should feeling like an app be the goal?
Should feeling
like an app be
your goal?
104. Feel Like an App
Website with
Performance
Improvements
Full screen, app
shell with native
design language
Minimal-ui
Standalone
System Fonts Fullscreen
Animation and Polish App Shell
Native Design
MORE COMPLEXLESS COMPLEX
107. Offline Fallback Pages
Can Keep People
Engaged
• Trivago found that 67% of people
continue to browse the site when they
come back online.
Source: http://bit.ly/2GoXjCi
126. The goal isn’t offline; offline is just a special case
of flakiness (and the easiest one to detect
technically). PWAs and SWs give you the ability to
be reliable for your users. That’s the advantage
across all connection states (even online!)
—Alex Russell
143. Beyond PWAs
Basic PWA Multiple New APIs
Autofill Support
AMP to PWA
Credential Management API
Camera, other sensors Payment Request API
AMP in PWA
MORE COMPLEXLESS COMPLEX
145. PWAs are progressive because… Progressive Roadmap
{manifest}https
Jul 13
Redesign launches
Better security with HTTPS
Faster site via HTTP/2
Better bookmarks via manifest
Oct 3
Faster pages
Offline fallback
It’s a PWA!
service worker
Oct 18
Offline pages
Offline indicator
Improved font loading
Nov 22
Push notifications
HTTP/2 Link Preload
Dec 7
Small tweaks
PWA announced
148. Offline
Interactivity
Cache for
Perf Only
Offline
Native App
Stores
Website with Perf
Improvements
Full Screen,
App Shell
New APIs
No Add to
Home Screen
Basic PWA
Feels Like An App
Installation and Discovery
No Push
Notifications
Personalized and
Integrated Push
Push Notifications
Beyond PWAs
154. Coming November 12th!
Preorders available now. Follow
@abookapart, @grigs or sign up for the
A Book Apart newsletter for updates.
https://abookapart.com/products/
progressive-web-apps
No
28
PROGRESSIVE
WEBAPPS
Jason Grigsby
156. Thank You!
White Blank Notebook by Tirachard Kumtanom
Woman Executive Holding Tablet by Pixabay
Schedule Planning by Startup Stock Photos
Hackers by Christopher Dombres
NSA by by Mario Antonio Pena Zapatería
Map Location Symbol by Tumisa
Smartphone on Bridge by Jeremy Levin
Hype by Kerry J
Instagram App on iPhone by Pixabay
Man in Fuzzy Hat by Gratisography
Southbank - Samsung Galaxy S8 (1) by TaylorHerring
Now THIS is comfort! by Garry Wilmore
Trojan Horse by Hsing Wei
Cold Snow Man Person
Asphalt Blur Car City by Pixabay
Woman Listening to Music by bruce mars
Woman and Dog by Tookapic
Focus by Mark Hunter
Person Holding Silver iPhone by rawpixel.com
MacBook Air Beside Painting by rawpixel.com
Android Phone by freestocks.org
Smart Watch by Oliur Rahman
Apple Office Internet iPad by Pixabay
Woman Jumping by Quang Anh Ha Nguyen
SEM by Pixabay
Legs on Chair by kaboompics.com
In Hiding by Taylor McBride
Medusa Kill Switch by Scott Hart
White Auto Gauge by Mikes Photos
Blue and Silver Stethoscope by Pixabay
Tortoise by Frans Van Heerden
iPhone Photo on Railroad Tracks by Kaique Rocha
database by ✦ Shmidt Sergey ✦ from the Noun Project
Cloud by Blackwoodmedia.com.au from the Noun Project
Responsive Design by Delwar Hossain from the Noun Project
cogs by Gregor Cresnar from the Noun Project
Special thanks to these fabulous people who graciously
shared their work under Creative Commons.