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The Four Big Ways Jetpack Helps with Image Performance


We've been working with Jetpack around here as a sponsor. It's a great match because as someone with a bunch of self-hosted WordPress sites, Jetpack is one of those no-brainer plugins for me. Jetpack can do a ton of good things for any site in a variety of very different ways. Here's one way...

Show FPS for Steam Games


There’s nothing more frustrating to a top gamer (outside of bugs in a game) than dropped frames in a video game.  If you’re playing a competitive multiplayer game like PUBG or Fortnite, where up to 100 people are simultaneously competing, dropped frames can be the difference between...

Uppy File Uploading


One of the big tasks I was charged with at my first job was setting up a system by which any customer or potential customer (aka anonymous user) could upload PDF and image files. I had loads of constraints to deal with: browser support, server settings, variance in user tech knowledge, etc....

Manipulating Pixels Using Canvas


Modern browsers support playing video via the <video> element. Most browsers also have access to webcams via the MediaDevices.getUserMedia() API. But even with those two things combined, we can’t really access and manipulate those pixels directly. Fortunately, browsers have a Canvas...

console.logTime


I work on a really complex debugger at Mozilla but, and don’t tell my colleagues, I sometimes enjoy simply using console.log and other console commands to get some simple output.  I know, I know, but hey — whatever gets the job done.  A few years ago I detailed console.time...

console.timeLog


I work on a really complex debugger at Mozilla but, and don’t tell my colleagues, I sometimes enjoy simply using console.log and other console commands to get some simple output.  I know, I know, but hey — whatever gets the job done.  A few years ago I detailed console.time...

Animate Images and Videos with curtains.js


While browsing the latest award-winning websites, you may notice a lot of fancy image distortion animations or neat 3D effects. Most of them are created with WebGL, an API allowing GPU-accelerated image processing effects and animations. They also tend to use libraries built on top of WebGL such...

What’s Next for Hybrid App Developers? (Sponsored)


The story of hybrid application development is a never-ending one. Each framework has to continuously strive and innovate to remain relevant, and the discussion of which framework to use is a question often asked. Most hybrid applications are built using a combination of HTML, CSS, and JavaScript....

Script & Style Show: Episode 11: Ionic Framework with Max Lynch


In this episode:  David blames his wife for getting sick and missing last week’s show, Todd’s got a new Jeep, and David then blames his wife for not letting him have a Jeep.  Oh, and Max Lynch of Ionic Framework fame stops by to talk about Ionic, Stencil, Web Components, the state...

OpenRates Currency API (Sponsored)


Creating your own APIs can be a total nightmare: worrying about uptime, load balancing, data accuracy, caching, and all of the other risks would keep me up at night.  And if your API relates to money in any way?  If you get that wrong you could be costing yourself, your employer, or your client...

How to Delete Untracked Files in a Mercurial Repository


Working around Firefox at Mozilla means that you need to get acquainted with mercurial, the version control system that rivals git and svn.  Like any tool, hg (mercurial) can be difficult until you’re well versed with it.  And if you hg import a URL that doesn’t match up with...

Script & Style Show: Episode 10: Dojo


In this episode: David and Todd welcome Dojo and JavaScript legend Dylan Schiemann and TypeScript and Dojo 2 superhero Nick Nisi.  We cover the early days of Dojo, the road to 2.0, and what’s in Dojo 2.0 and beyond.  Enjoy! The post Script & Style Show: Episode 10: Dojo appeared first...

Regain Disk Space from Homebrew


One of my favorite utilities is Homebrew, the shell utility for installing and upgrading other utilities — it’s a lazy developer’s dream.  Dreams can easily turn to nightmares, however, and I recently learned that Homebrew caches older versions of installed packages, leading...

Detect WebVR Support with JavaScript


It’s been two years since I was heavily involved with WebVR at Mozilla but, despite not contributing every day, I can see VR making leaps and bounds, from Firefox making an increased effort to Chrome pushing VR and Oculus and HTC (Vive) improving their offerings.  Native games are getting...

CDN, Web Security, and DDoS Protection from Incapsula (Sponsored)


There used to be day that you could have a small to large website that didn’t require protection and worldwide CDN but, with how easy it is to initiate a DDoS attack and how important website speed is for search engine placement, it’s a given that you should look for a service to handle...

Get a React Component by DOM Node


Retrieving a React component’s DOM node is fairly simple from within the component itself, but what if you want to work backward:  retrieve a component’s instance by DOM node?  This is a task that the old Dojo Toolkit’s Dijit framework allowed with the dojo.byId method, so it made...

How to Get a React Component’s Element


JSX is an amazing pseudo-language for React, and if I’m honest, it’s what brought me to love React so much.  Using React without JSX is cumbersome and frustrating, while using JSX is such an easier way to express your code.  One drawback of JSX, however, is that it makes accessing...

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