Pedro Tavares
Writing Code Was Never The Bottleneck
The marginal cost of adding new software is approaching zero, especially with LLMs. But what is the price of understanding, testing, and trusting…
Hi, I'm Nicolas Hoizey.
I've been passionate about the Web since 1996. I also love photography (here's my photography portfolio), and have many other interests.
Pedro Tavares
Writing Code Was Never The Bottleneck
The marginal cost of adding new software is approaching zero, especially with LLMs. But what is the price of understanding, testing, and trusting…
Elena Rossini ,
Samuel Aaberg and
Riyen Patel
Introducing the Fediverse: a New Era of Social Media is a 4-minute video explainer about the Fediverse, a galaxy of interconnected, free, open-source…
#TIL the Object Name
field in #IPTC contains the title but truncated at 64 characters, whereas the ImageTitle
field in #XMP or Title
field in #DublinCore contain the full title. 🤷♂️
When you want to find the needle in the haystack… hum wait, no, a field in a photo metadata, there's #ExifTool: https://exiftool.org/TagNames/
Benj Edwards
AI video just took a startling leap in realism. Are we doomed?
As these tools become more powerful and affordable, skepticism in media will grow. But the question isn't whether we can trust what we see and hear.…
Your design system is an idea. Every asset you build will require compromise of some kind. […] You have to think of your design system as a concept…
JAMstack is fast only if you make it so
JAMstack often promotes itself as an excellent way to provide performant sites. It's even the first listed benefit on jamstack.wtf, a "guide [which] gathers the concept of JAMstack in a straight-forward guide to encourage other developers to adopt the workflow". But too many JAMstack sites are very slow.
Can we monitor User Happiness on the Web with performance tools?
I really like that SpeedCurve tried to innovate with this recent "User Happiness " metric (original version ). It aggregates multiple technical metrics to decide if users visiting the page are happy or not with it. But I see several issues in this metric.
Evan Minto wrote a great article showing the Internet Archive has tested the actual root font-size set by their visitors, and the result shows a lot of people still change the default one: Pixels vs. Ems: Users DO Change Font Size.
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