If you?ve spent the last few months under a rock, then we?ve got a surprise for you. We are working on two brand new Smashing Books. The first, New Perspectives on Coding, will cover state-of-the-art techniques, case studies and coding strategies ? all neatly packed into a gorgeous printed hardcover (and available as an eBook, of course).
So if you?ve always wanted to leave a trace of yourself to posterity, now you can (well, kind of). From the very first Smashing Book, we?ve reserved space to feature our readers in the book, and our fourth undertaking will be no exception.
Add Your Twitter Avatar To The Book!
A picture says more than a thousand words, and a Twitter avatar says more about one?s personality than a name ever could! So, following our tradition, we welcome you to submit your Twitter avatar for a double-page spread in the (printed and digital) book. Space is very limited, with only 750 slots available, so please be quick!
How Does It Work? Easy!
- Type in your Twitter username, and ? voil? ? your spot it reserved!
- We?ll grab your avatar automatically and will notify you about the status of the submission via email.
Presto! And if for some mysterious reason, you happen to feel like a Jedi afterwards, well, why not tweet about it using the hash tag #feellikejedi
? No pressure: just sayin?!
What Is The Book About?
We?ve assembled a remarkable lineup of authors for the book. All of them are well-respected designers and developers who will be divulging practical insights, design strategies and hands-on tools as they share new perspectives on Web design today. Here is a quick summary of the book?s theme and table of contents.
Summary
What works in theory sometimes doesn?t quite work as expected in practice. In this pragmatic book, well-respected designers and developers analyze their personal experiences, failures and successes from working on common front-end issues, and share the tools they use to tackle these issues effectively. You?ll learn state-of-the-art techniques and strategies to make your workflow more effective.
The book will feature valuable insights into large-scale projects, front-end architecture, maintainable code and responsible responsive Web design. It will also uncover smart front-end strategies, CSS and JavaScript tricks and obscure back-end techniques, and it will explore what it takes to improve performance for faster and more robust websites and Web apps.
Table of Contents
AUTHOR | CHAPTER | DETAILS |
Addy Osmani | Rendering Performance Optimization For Mobile | |
Whether it?s on desktop or mobile, users want their web experience to be snappy, smooth and delightful. What this means is that even if the browser is busy rendering the page (i.e drawing it) or loading in content, the user should still be able to scroll around and interact with it without any slow-down. No one likes seeing visual glitchyness. In this chapter, Addy Osmani, the mastermind behind Yeoman and Devtools, provides a walkthrough on how to find and fix visual jitter in your pages. If you care about providing fast and smooth experiences, you will care about this chapter, too. Keywords: tools, techniques, strategy, workflow, optimization, rendering. | ||
Harry Roberts | Breaking Good Habits: CSS Architecture For Tomorrow | |
You?ll explore a new frame of mind that is better equipped for building more powerful, pragmatic front-ends. Chapter keywords: CSS, OOCSS, BEM, architecture, strategy, semantics, code structure, front-end, naming conventions, performance. | ||
Nicholas C. Zakas | The Roadmap to Maintainable, Clean and Effective Code | |
We are rarely taught how to deal with messy code. However, someone is going to have to maintain that code. That someone might be you next month or it might be someone else next year, but someone eventually will need to maintain that code. On a large project with many developers, the problem is magnified. How can everyone work in the same code base in such a way that making changes in the future are easy? That?s what this chapter is about. Chapter keywords: maintenance, architecture, conventions, code style, documentation, components, legacy code, testing, CSS, JavaScript. | ||
Tim Kadlec | The Culture of Performance | |
Chapter keywords: performance budget, optimization, speed, efficiency, mobile, latency, loading, rendering | ||
Paul Tero | How To Fix The Web: Obscure Back-end Techniques And Terminal Secrets | |
This chapter starts with the worst case scenario and works inwards, exploring the infrastructure of the Internet and the make-up of a Web server, imparting lots of little tips and commands along the way, opening up a new perspective on how websites can stop working and be fixed. Chapter keywords: back-end, DNS, servers, networking, infrastructure, SSH, firewalls, DOS, hacks, debugging, backup, Apache, security. | ||
Aaron Gustafson | Building Adaptive Interfaces | |
In this chapter, Aaron explores the layers of a typical Web experience and breaks down the development process into manageable steps that enable accessible, functional and empathetic interfaces. He also describes his own process and various techniques that help him to achieve this very goal in daily routine. Chapter keywords: adaptive interface, progressive enhancement, empathy, layer cake, constraints, lazy loading, UI Construction Flow, JavaScript, adaptive components, patterns, style tiles | ||
Mat Marquis | Robust, Responsible, Responsive Web Design (Filament Group?s Case-Study) | |
There are good solution though. We can?t blame responsive Web design for mistakes that we, developers, have been making. This is on us, and you don?t see any carpenters writing blog posts about how hammers are a failed methodology because of the time they dropped one on their foot. We can do better than blaming our tools for our mistakes. This chapter is about exactly that: tools, techniques, lessons learned and practical tips to manage responsible responsive designs in real-life projects. Chapter keywords: Responsive Web design, responsive images, conditional loading, progressive enhancement, optimization, CSS, JavaScript, workflow, optimization, case-study. | ||
Andy Hume | Real-Life Responsive Web Design (The Guardian?s Case-Study) | |
Chapter keywords: Responsive Web design, optimization, performance, RESS, case-study. | ||
Christian Heilmann | Vanilla Web Diet | |
That?s a sign of the Web being broken. It?s time to fix it. Let?s try to take a break in our drive to be cool and new and innovative the whole time and check out what we are doing ? analyze our eating habits so to say. Christian Heilmann calls this the ?Vanilla Web Diet,? much like people start calling using JavaScript without any libraries ?Vanilla JavaScript.? This chapter explores some of the fundamental ideas and thoughts that you can apply to slim down your next app or existing solution. Chapter keywords: optimization, performance, speed, strategy, browsers, quality of code. |
Authors of the ?New Perspective on Coding?, a book about state-of-the-art techniques, strategies and workflow for Web developers.
A tasty early preview of Anna Shuvalova?s beautiful illustrations for The Smashing Book #4: namely, for Christian Heilmann?s chapter ?Vanilla Web Diet? on the left, and Mat Marquis? chapter ?Robust, Responsive, Responsive Web Design? on the right. (Large view)
Technical Details
Source: http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2013/07/10/add-twitter-avatar-smashing-book-4/
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