The HTML5 Future is Now: Using Modernizr, Poly-fills, and HTML5 Boilerplate - UserGroup.tv
The video of my Tulsa TechFest 2011 talk is up on UserGroup.tv.
I don’t know if I’ll watch, but feel free yourselves.
The video of my Tulsa TechFest 2011 talk is up on UserGroup.tv.
I don’t know if I’ll watch, but feel free yourselves.
Early-bird ($49) registration is open!
I’ll be there.
Michael Mason, editor of This Land Press, interviews Luke Crouch during the first Tulsa Hackathon, which took place this weekend at Fab Lab Tulsa.
I can occasionally be seen in my red t-shirt, but it’s worth watching anyway.
The slides from the talk I gave at Tulsa TechFest 2011.
My presentation modus operandi is to improvise my talk with my slides as prompts, so this may not be very informative on its own. There are quite a few useful links in there, though.
The talk was recorded by UserGroup.tv, so it should be available online in a month or so. I’ll post a link when it’s up, unless it makes it humiliatingly obvious that it’s my first public presentation.
My bio is literally shorter than my job title.
This instructional video is really informative, but this is driving me nuts.
@danbenjamin’s latest Twitter Avatar stares into your very soul.
The solution we came up with came to be known as the “leap smear.” We modified our internal NTP servers to gradually add a couple of milliseconds to every update, varying over a time window before the moment when the leap second actually happens. This meant that when it became time to add an extra second at midnight, our clocks had already taken this into account, by skewing the time over the course of the day. All of our servers were then able to continue as normal with the new year, blissfully unaware that a leap second had just occurred.
Genius.
(via Trello is here | Trello Blog)
I love how every time I’m about to write something for myself, the Interwebs provide a better solution than I’d have made.1
This time around it’s Trello, simple web based task boards.
What with the cobbler’s children going barefoot and all. ↩