Music for sleeping
Posted on 4 January, 2010 at 10:43pm with no comments
I love Slaapwel Records. They publish music to make you fall asleep. It’s just a beauty.
I love Slaapwel Records. They publish music to make you fall asleep. It’s just a beauty.
A great post on how Aaron Swartz hires programmers. I love the way it’s written and I love the approach.
A great article written by Andy Clarke on how he handles browser testing for the sites he makes.
I like the fact that he relies on educating the client to cover his ass about older browsers. I just lived hell myself a few weeks ago when a project practically came to a halt due to my client telling me he was using IE6. It was my mistake not having discussed browser issues with him.
Forrester just published their annual Social Technographics Report. I don’t have the $500 bucks to buy it but the information they published in the announcement is pretty amazing. 4 out of 5 american internet users are using Social Networking sites. Go check it out.
A couple of good jQuery links. Probably everyone knows them, but hey, maybe you don’t.
First of all the official jQuery blog. It’s so freakin full of good stuff. You’ll find jewels like this article explaining how to set and delete cookies with jQuery or this super cool jQuery MP3 player.
Second, jQuery TOOLS. A collection of useful scripts for working on UIs.
Anil Dash writes about the future of the web. He calls it Pushbutton Web. A great read.
Hi Impact with Low Effort SEO (from a developer’s perspective). From the SEOMoz site.
Huge, huge, photos that you can zoom into. You can find some pretty stuff in there. Gigapixel Photography.
ActionScript 3 tutorials and videos with Doug Winnie.
A Slideshare presentation made by Alex King explaining Carrington Theme.
Start learning CSS3.
Make sure to grab Antoxic.org‘s feed to get a daily dose of beautiful imagery.

Do Little Things First is a fantastic post by Alex King on why getting small things done on web development projects is a good idea (great read).
Worth. Taking care of clients. It’s worth it.