

Top picks — 2021 March
source link: https://pawelgrzybek.com/top-picks-2021-march/
Go to the source link to view the article. You can view the picture content, updated content and better typesetting reading experience. If the link is broken, please click the button below to view the snapshot at that time.

Top picks — 2021 March
Published: 2021.03.31 | 3 minutes read
free-for.dev #
This resource is an extensive list of services for developers that offer a free tier. R.I.Pienaar puts it together. I love little helper pages like this one.
Icons - Google Fonts #
You can download Material Design Icons straight from the Google Fonts website. It is one of the best-designed icons set ever created and since now more accessible than ever before. Thanks, Google!
Global Privacy Control (GPC) #
Global Privacy Control (GPC) is a proposed specification designed to allow Internet users to notify businesses of their privacy preferences, such as whether they want their personal information to be sold or shared. It helps users signal their desired privacy to websites and services just by using their web browser. Several products come with GPC implementation, and I would expect more to come soon. From an implementation point of view, Sec-GPC
header is all you need to signal that the user’s Global Privacy Control preference is set. Check more details in GCP specification.
Simulating color vision deficiencies in the Blink Renderer #
Mathias Bynens explains all the technical nitty-gritty of the vision deficiencies colour simulations. A great explainer of SVG filters and all possible ways how you can take advantage of this feature in your web projects. It is nice that Matthias shows the exact low-level C++ implementation, which I found super interesting.
Introducing Amazon S3 Object Lambda – Use Your Code to Process Data as It Is Being Retrieved from S3 #
Beneficial announcement from AWS team — Amazon S Object Lambdas. It allows returning a customized S3 object. There is no need to store multiple copies of the same master data in a bucket to serve numerous consumers — this is not cost-effective and error-prone. There is no need to create a custom proxy anymore as S3 Object Lambdas give a native, easy to implement, and cost-effective solution.
Joining forces on better browser compatibility in 2021 #
Google, Microsoft, Igalia, and other web giants join forces to work through the main CSS incompatibility pain-points: CSS Flexbox, CSS Grid, CSS position: sticky
, the CSS aspect-ratio
property, and CSS transforms. “Compat2021: Eliminating five top compatibility pain points on the web” provides more detailed stats on why they decided to focus on these features.
We’re excited to join with Google, Igalia, and the broader web community in committing resources to a cross-browser effort called #Compat2021, with the goal of substantial improvements in each area.
Announcing the Deno Company #
With 4.9 million dollars of seed capital from multiple investors, Deno becomes a real company. I am looking forward to the future of this platform. It can’t go wrong after the success of Node.js being build by the same people.
This investment means we will have a staff of full-time expert engineers working to improving Deno. We will ensure that issues are addressed, bugs are fixed, timely releases are made; we will ensure Deno is a platform others can build on with trust.
Practical Go Lessons #
This free book by Maximilien Andile is a golden gem for everyone keen to learn Go language. You can read it online for free, order a digital copy or purchase paper copy. This resource goes in depth into computer science core constructs first and then explains how to work with them using Go language. Really great resource!
CSS Container Queries: A First Look + Demo #
This is going to be a revolution for CSS responsive components. We have been waiting for container queries for long years now and we finally can play around with its experimental implementation in Google Chrome. Bramus Van Damme put together a quick explainer and simple demo. Finally!
If you liked this article, please share it on Twitter.
What'ya think?
👆 you can use Markdown here
Recommend
-
12
Top picks — 2021 JanuaryPublished: 2021.01.31 | 3 minutes readMaximally optimizing image loading for the web in 2021
-
18
Top picks — 2021 FebruaryPublished: 2021.02.28 | 3 minutes readnpm 7 is now generally available!
-
9
Top picks — 2021 AprilPublished: 2021.04.30 | 2 minutes readundici — An HTTP/1.1 client, written from scratch for Node.js
-
10
Top picks — 2021 MayPublished: 2021.05.31 | 2 minutes readLight Years Ahead | The 1969 Apollo Guidance Computer
-
10
Top picks — 2021 JunePublished: 2021.06.30 | 3 minutes readReact 18 Alpha is out! Now what?
-
10
Top picks — 2021 JulyPublished: 2021.07.31 | 1 minutes readIn JS functions, the ‘last’ return wins
-
7
Top picks — 2021 AugustPublished: 2021.08.31 | 3 minutes readAutomating with Alfred App with Chris Messina
-
12
Top picks — 2021 SeptemberPublished: 2021.09.30 | 2 minutes readAn Introduction to JQ
-
4
Top picks — 2022 March Published: 2022.03.31 | 6 minutes read Announcing Type...
-
10
Top picks — 2023 MarchPublished: 2023.03.31 · 3 minutes read
About Joyk
Aggregate valuable and interesting links.
Joyk means Joy of geeK