Please enjoy some curated links to online content I have enjoyed this past month. π
Tech and Web
A Debugging Manifesto - Julia Evans
A friendly approach to reframing software bugfixing as a learning activity.
If something is breaking, itβs often because thereβs something wrong in my mental model
A CSS challenge: skewed highlight - Vadim Makeev
A really nice highlighter effect with modern CSS. It achieves the slant using gradients, rather than separate elements or pseudo-elements. It also leverages a little-known CSS property for getting the effect to work across line breaks.
Clever Code Considered Harmful - Josh W. Comeau
A well-articulated case against complex and overly "clever" code. The most compelling takeaways for me are:
- consider whether your code can be understood by a junior dev,
- when complexity is necessary, encapsulate it to prevent it bleeding all over your codebase.
Unicorn Icons - Kushmeen
ππ» I love these. And I immediately want to start a project where I can use them.
The 12-Bit Rainbow Palette - Kate Rose Morley
This pleases me a lot. In fact, I have half-formed plans to implement a similar rainbow palette on this here blog. Stay tuned.
Career
Lessons learned since posting my salary history publicly - Jamie Tanna
This is really interesting to consider, and something I would love to do later in my career. Being a woman in tech means I'm statistically likely to be underpaid for the work I do, and that's some heavy baggage to carry. I appreciate this transparency and I hope it can become a norm in the industry.
Miscellaneous
How to Do Laundry When You're Depressed - KC Davis
A poignant TED talk on the burden of daily caretaking tasks. It's focussed on shifting your self talk from one of punishment to one of compassion. As someone with a chronic health condition that can affect my functioning, this was tearful and healing.
Care tasks are morally neutral.
Anything worth doing is worth doing half-assed.
Wonders of Street View - neal.fun
A sometimes hilarious, sometimes awe-inspiring collection of the weird and wonderful snapshots that can be found on Google Street View.
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