A name-your-price book that uses the Processing language to explore how to simulate concepts from nature in code.
The Nature of Code
May 29th, 2013svg.js – A lightweight JavaScript library for manipulating and animating svg
May 29th, 2013A JavaScript library for dealing with SVG objects.
svg.js – A lightweight JavaScript library for manipulating and animating svg
HERE IS TODAY
May 29th, 2013Sometimes, we need a little perspective.
Instagram: My wife @suzecampbell and I, celebrating the WordPress 10th Anniversary with BBQ, in our WordPress shirts. #wp10
May 27th, 2013johncant/node-http-tunnel · GitHub
May 23rd, 2013This could come in handy. For something. Somewhere. Tunnel TCP protocols (like, say, SSH) over HTTP. Useful to bypass a restrictive layer-7 firewall.
GNU Octave – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
May 17th, 2013Open source, free alternative to MATLAB.
chjj/tty.js · GitHub
May 9th, 2013If you are in an environment that makes it difficult to get a normal SSH connection to your server, but allows HTTP (e.g., restrictive network), this could be useful. As long as you are careful about security when you set it up.
Intern: A next-generation JavaScript testing stack
May 1st, 2013Intern is a new testing framework for JavaScript which attempts to combine the best features of many other testing tools. It supports multiple test styles (BDD, TDD, Object), works both client and server-side, and has support for many popular tools (grunt, Travis CI, Selenium) baked in.
WordPress 10th Anniversary Blogging Project
May 1st, 2013The official 10th anniversary of the release of WordPress is May 27, 2013. It has been an amazing 10 years, during which WordPress evolved from a simple blogware to a very full-featured CMS (Content Management System), used to power some of the biggest and most popular web sites on the internet. All over the world, people are planning celebrations. As much as I like a good party, I thought this would also be a good time to celebrate WordPress by actually using WordPress — for blogging.
So much of our content sharing these days tends to be via centralized “social” platforms like Twitter, Facebook, Google+, Tumblr, etc., that some of us neglect our blogs. I know I’m guilty of that. But this anniversary is a good excuse for the WordPress community to take a few minutes to consider their time with our favorite website building tool. Here’s what I propose…