The world has changed.
I feel it in the water.
I feel it in the Earth.
I smell it in the air.
Much that once was is lost.
Hello, I am Cory Brown
I am a Senior Frontend Engineer at Aumni
And I am learning Scottish Gaelic
The (possible) return of the thin client.
This section is from a presentation I gave 7 years ago. Consider how relevant it is still today.
"One of W3C's primary goals is to make these benefits available to all people, whatever their hardware, software, network infrastructure, native language, culture, geographical location, or physical or mental ability."
(http://www.w3.org/Consortium/Points/)
"When you make a link, you can link to anything. That means people must be able to put anything on the Web, no matter what computer they have, software they use or human language they speak and regardless of whether they have a wired or wirless Internet connection."
Tim Berners-Lee, Long Live the Web; 2010 (http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/long-live-the-web/)
"It should be accessible from any kind of hardware that can connect to the internet: stationary or mobile, small screen or large."
Tim Berners-Lee, Long Live the Web; 2010 (http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/long-live-the-web/)
"What started out as a method to optimize your designs for various screen widths has turned, ever so slowly, into multiple canvas design."
Mark Boulton, The In-Between; 2013 (http://www.markboulton.co.uk/journal/theinbetween)
"'Responsive' isn’t so much a technique or process, but a fundamental characteristic of the platform"
Paul Robery Lloyd, The Web Aesthetic; 2012 (http://alistapart.com/article/the-web-aesthetic)
"This philosophy implies that the characteristics of a material
should influence the form for which it is used."
Kauffman, Architecture in the Age of Reason; 1955
"To cover brick with plaster, and this plaster with fresco, is perfectly legitimate… But to cover brick with cement, and to divide this cement with joints that it may look like stone, is to tell a falsehood; and is just as contemptible a procedure as the other is noble."
John Ruskin, The Seven Lamps of Architecture, 1849
Frank Chimero (http://www.frankchimero.com/writing/the-webs-grain/)
"It is the nature of the web to be flexible, and it should be our role as designers and developers to embrace this flexibility, and produce pages which, by being flexible, are accessible to all."
John Allsopp, The Dao of Web Design; 2000 (http://www.alistapart.com/articles/dao/)
"No metaphors or analogies are needed for insight, only the willingness to listen to the subject speak for itself, even if it contradicts received wisdom."
Frank Chimero (http://www.frankchimero.com/writing/the-webs-grain/)
"We need to stop thinking of our roles as a division of a whole with well defined lines. If we consider a cake as a metaphor for an application, we tend to think of our individual roles as a slice of that cake. But this is inaccurate. What we do affects the whole outcome...
...Rather we are an ingredient in a cake. We are dispersed throughout it's entirety, interacting with other ingredients in particular ways to produce a poundcake, shortcake, angel-food cake, bundt cake, red velvet, chocolate, strawberry, sheet. There are endless possibilities of the whole when we operate as an ingredient."
Cory, Just now.
CSS has two responsibilities that are interrelated and which pertain to being _of_ the web. The first is to provide visual structure to the web. It performs for the visual input, what proper HTML provides for the cognitive. Where HTML provides semantics, CSS provides visual meaning. They are really two sides to the same coin.
The other responsibility CSS provides is ornamentation. Don't let that label trivialize it's importance though. Ornamentation is not simply making things "look pretty" as so many have patronizingly reduced the craft of the front-end to in the past.
"ORNAMENT. Integral element of architecture, ornament is to architecture what efflorescence of a tree or plant is to its structure. Of the thing, not on it. Emotional in its nature, ornament is - if well conceived - not only the poetry but is the character of structure revealed and enhanced. If not well conceived, architecture is destroyed by ornament."
Frank Lloyd Wright, Language of an Organic Architect; 1953
"It's not just what it looks like and feels like. Design is how it works."
Steve Jobs The Guts of a New Machine, Rob Walker; 2003 (http://www.nytimes.com/2003/11/30/magazine/30IPOD.html)
There is not a single thing in this that I would retract.
SEO
ADA compliance
Internal tooling customer support teams
Support for power users
Accessibility
Internationalization
Customization
Mobile devices
VR
Things heretofore unimagined
Aria
Block-level elements
Inline elements
Forms
Inputs
Picture
Video
Audio
CORS
Preloading
Layout rules
Decoration rules
CSS Variables
CSS Flexbox
CSS Grid
aspect-ratio
houdini
color functions
universal selectors (*, *|*)
type selectors (a, p, figure, li)
class selectors (.active, .error)
id selectors (#first_name, #section1)
attribute selectors ([open], [href^="http"], [class*="fs"], [class~="card"], [href$=".edu"], [alt="reactjs meetup" i])
selector grouping
screen size
device size
hoverablity
pointability
aspect-ratio
color
color-gamut
inverted-colors
orientation
overflow
prefers-color-scheme
prefers-contrast
prefers-reduced-motion
scripting
Container Queries
CSS Toggles
I hope you enjoyed the presentation.
Thank you!