Anselm Hannemann

About The Author

Anselm Hannemann Anselm Hannemann is a freelance front-end developer and architect. He curates WDRL — a weekly, handcrafted web development newsletter. Apart from that he helped the RICG, built opendevicelab.com and organizes the NightlyBuild 2015 conference in Cologne, Germany. He is available for freelance jobs.

Web Development Reading List #103

What's happening in the industry? What important techniques have emerged recently? What about new case studies, insights, techniques and tools? Our dear friend Anselm Hannemann is keeping track of everything in the web development reading list, so you don't have to. The result is a carefully collected list of articles that popped up over the last week and which might interest you. — Ed. ...

What's happening in the industry? What important techniques have emerged recently? What about new case studies, insights, techniques and tools? Our dear friend Anselm Hannemann is keeping track of everything in the web development reading list so you don't have to. The result is a carefully collected list of articles that popped up over the last week and which might interest you. — Ed.

Hey there! I gathered some useful articles for you again this week. Let me inspire you to do something new, improve yourself or just think outside the box.

News

GitHub
Github now finally supports options for protected and required status checks in branches now.
  • Github now finally supports options for protected and required status checks in branches now. That means you can now restrict the master branch so people can’t force push (edit history) or only allow merges when the status checks (like CI, unit/integration tests ran successfully) pass.
  • Following the announcement of a shared video codec alliance, Microsoft Edge will get WebM/VP9 support soon.
  • This week Opera Mini on Android got a big update with a new data saving mode. You can now choose between speed and experience. The new speed mode can save up to 90% of data but will remove much of the page layout and heavily compresses images while the experience mode still saves about 30-40% of data but will display most of the layout features and videos. Want to know more about how that affects you as developer? Here you go.
  • Ashley Nolan just published the results of a front end tooling survey. The results are very interesting and show how uncommon JavaScript unit testing still is or that Gulp is already used more than Grunt while Sass is dominating the market.
  • io.js and node.js are united again. node.js 4.0 now gives you the best of both worlds and from now on it will be less confusion again. It has an updated V8 (4.5) engine and things like a long term support plan.

Concepts & Design

GitHub
Overpass, a new sans-serif, free, open source web font.

Tools

  • gulp-shell lets you execute shell commands right from within your gulpfile. This can become very handy when you don’t want to or can’t use a gulp plugin for certain actions.
  • By using Release It!, you can save yourself the endless pain of manually updating version numbers, tagging, linting, writing a changelog and publishing to npm. The interactive wizard guides you through the release in five steps. If you’re using Grunt, there’s also grunt-release available.

Privacy

Web Performance

  • By using ServiceWorker and AppCache, UpUp will help you set up your website to be available offline.
  • If you don’t want all your images be loaded directly on page load, this simple technique by Christian Heilmann might be for you: By wrapping images with a <template> element and some lines of JavaScript the load gets deferred in all browsers that support the <template> element.

HTML / SVG

Accessibility

  • Most of us, even if we add accessibility improvements to our code, don’t know much about how screen readers are used. That’s why the results of the screen reader survey are very handy to look at.

JavaScript

CSS / Sass

Work & Life

Go beyond…

  • If it was for Geoffrey A. Fowler, we need the right to repair our gadgets. The industry wants us to waste broken gadgets and buy new ones, even if it would only take minutes for anyone to repair it. But without companies sharing how we can repair things, it’s a tough task. We, including the gadget vendors need to start thinking about how to produce less waste.

And with that I’ll close for this week. In case you like what I write each week, please support me via PayPal, gratipay or share this resource with other people. You can learn more about the costs of the project here. It’s available via E-Mail, RSS and online.

Thanks and all the best,
Anselm


More Articles on

It's The Smashing Birthday Party, And You Are Invited (With Goodies!)

by Vitaly Friedman

Exactly 9 years ago we published the very first article on this very website. Many things changed since then, but one thing remained the same: our obsession for publishing valuable, practical quality content. We proudly stand behind our work — the books, the eBooks, the conferences; our craft is ours, but our work serves the community and belongs to everybody. As a team, we are happy and...

Read more

The New Smashing Mystery Riddle: Have You Figured It Out Yet?

by Vitaly Friedman

Ah, these mystery riddles never stop, do they? To celebrate our ninth birthday, we’ve prepared yet another riddle, and this time it will require a bit more teamwork. We've hidden secret keys in different (physical) locations across the world. To move from one level to another, you'll have to find a hidden print-out in all (four) locations. Watch out for GIF file names. Tip: Watch out for...

Read more

Web Development Reading List #102

by Anselm Hannemann

What's happening in the industry? What important techniques have emerged recently? What about new case studies, insights, techniques and tools? Our dear friend Anselm Hannemann is keeping track of everything in the web development reading list so you don't have to. The result is a carefully collected list of articles that popped up over the last week and which might interest you. — Ed. ...

Read more