The Responsive Grid & You: Extending Your WordPress Site Across Multiple Dev...Jeremy Fuksa
Presented to WordCamp KC 2011.
If you are a web designer of any type, you're interested in making sure your designs are faithful AND useful to the widest audience possible. This has been true for years. But now, your audience has widened to mobile users and also users on HDTVs. How do you accommodate them? Simple: Responsive Web Design.
This talk shows how to use some of the open source responsive CSS frameworks to make sites that are fluid and adaptable to a wide range of devices.
The Responsive Grid & You: Extending Your WordPress Site Across Multiple Dev...Jeremy Fuksa
Presented to WordCamp KC 2011.
If you are a web designer of any type, you're interested in making sure your designs are faithful AND useful to the widest audience possible. This has been true for years. But now, your audience has widened to mobile users and also users on HDTVs. How do you accommodate them? Simple: Responsive Web Design.
This talk shows how to use some of the open source responsive CSS frameworks to make sites that are fluid and adaptable to a wide range of devices.
From Cowboy To Astronaut: Lessons From The Trail, New Worlds On The HorizonJeremy Fuksa
This is the version of "From Cowboy To Astronaut" that I presented to the Oklahoma City Ad Club as part of their Career Day for 2008. As you can see from previous versions of this presentation, the format has changed dramatically as a result of feedback and ideas generated over the past year.
Video excerpt of this presentation at http://www.vimeo.com/2706705
Defending Your Workloads Against the Next Zero-Day VulnerabilityAmazon Web Services
When serious vulnerabilities like Shellshock or Heartbleed are found, you know you should respond quickly. But when you’re juggling many priorities, and are more comfortable developing apps than security policies, emergency updates may fall to the bottom of the list. Is there a better way to protect your workloads, without a lot of work? In AWS, you approach everything in your infrastructure as an API. If you take the same approach to security, you can automate protection for zero-day vulnerabilities, without impacting agility or architecture flexibility. In this session, we’ll show you how to use AWS security groups, virtual private networks, and security capabilities like intrusion detection and prevention to defend what you put in the cloud. We will use the recent Shellshock vulnerability as a real-world threat scenario and walk you through how to combine AWS features and workload-aware security controls to prevent hackers from exploiting similar zero-day threats. Learn simple, easy to deploy security tools and techniques to protect workloads – that don't require a PhD in cyber security.
This is a slidedeck from my presentation at WordCamp Portland 2008. I used it to share what my need for an ecosystem is, why I'm using WordPress, and some info about ecosystems I'm working on.
Some thoughts about public procurement and how going for lowest prize selection forced us to think through the process as detailed as possible on beforehand
Before you start, always ask the kids what a greenhouse is. I kid you not! This presentation is simple, a bit too wordy, but effective nevertheless. I've included some blank slides so you can do your own thing. Enjoy and thank you.
Migrer vers PMB: retour d\'expérience d\'une migration depuis SocratePMB-BUG
PMB-BUG, Leuven, 2008-10-02
Cécile Gass (FR)
Migrer vers PMB: retour d\'expérience d\'une migration depuis Socrate
Migreren van een andere software naar PMB: Ervaringen met de migratie van Socrate
From Cowboy To Astronaut: Lessons From The Trail, New Worlds On The HorizonJeremy Fuksa
This is the version of "From Cowboy To Astronaut" that I presented to the Oklahoma City Ad Club as part of their Career Day for 2008. As you can see from previous versions of this presentation, the format has changed dramatically as a result of feedback and ideas generated over the past year.
Video excerpt of this presentation at http://www.vimeo.com/2706705
Defending Your Workloads Against the Next Zero-Day VulnerabilityAmazon Web Services
When serious vulnerabilities like Shellshock or Heartbleed are found, you know you should respond quickly. But when you’re juggling many priorities, and are more comfortable developing apps than security policies, emergency updates may fall to the bottom of the list. Is there a better way to protect your workloads, without a lot of work? In AWS, you approach everything in your infrastructure as an API. If you take the same approach to security, you can automate protection for zero-day vulnerabilities, without impacting agility or architecture flexibility. In this session, we’ll show you how to use AWS security groups, virtual private networks, and security capabilities like intrusion detection and prevention to defend what you put in the cloud. We will use the recent Shellshock vulnerability as a real-world threat scenario and walk you through how to combine AWS features and workload-aware security controls to prevent hackers from exploiting similar zero-day threats. Learn simple, easy to deploy security tools and techniques to protect workloads – that don't require a PhD in cyber security.
This is a slidedeck from my presentation at WordCamp Portland 2008. I used it to share what my need for an ecosystem is, why I'm using WordPress, and some info about ecosystems I'm working on.
Some thoughts about public procurement and how going for lowest prize selection forced us to think through the process as detailed as possible on beforehand
Before you start, always ask the kids what a greenhouse is. I kid you not! This presentation is simple, a bit too wordy, but effective nevertheless. I've included some blank slides so you can do your own thing. Enjoy and thank you.
Migrer vers PMB: retour d\'expérience d\'une migration depuis SocratePMB-BUG
PMB-BUG, Leuven, 2008-10-02
Cécile Gass (FR)
Migrer vers PMB: retour d\'expérience d\'une migration depuis Socrate
Migreren van een andere software naar PMB: Ervaringen met de migratie van Socrate