CSS-Tricks Chronicle XXXVIII
Hey hey, these “chronicle” posts are little roundups of news that I haven’t gotten a chance to link up yet. They are often things that I’ve done off-site, like be a guest on a podcast or online conference. Or it’s news from other projects I work on. Or some other thing I’ve been meaning to shout out. Stuff like that! Enjoy the links!
I chatted with Paul Campbell the other day during Admission Online, an online conference put together by the Tito crew . They’ve published all the videos there including mine.
I had a chance to chat with Paul about his Tito service about last year on ShopTalk in a really great episode. Tito is a best-in-class software tool for running a conference. It helps you build a site, sell tickets, manage attendees, run reports, and all that. Clearly the COVID-19 situation has impacted that business a lot, so I admire the accelerated pivot they are doing by creating Vito, a new platform for running online conferences, and running these conferences super quickly as a way to showcase it. If you’re running an online conference, I’d get on that invite list ASAP.
Jina Anne has been doing something new as well in the online event space. She’s been doing these 30-minute AMA (Ask Me Anything) sessions with interesting folks (excluding me). Upcoming events are here. They are five bucks, and that gets you live access and the ability to actually ask a question. Jina publishes past events to YouTube. Here’s one with me:
I was interviewed on Balance the Grid. Here’s one exchange:
What do you think are some of the best habits or routines that you’ve developed over the years to help you achieve success in your life?
I’m quite sure I have more bad habits than good, so take all this with a bucket of salt. But one thing I like to do is to try to make as much of the time I spend working is spent working on something of lasting value.That’s why I like to blog, for example. If I finish a blog post, that’s going to be published at a URL and that URL is going to get some traffic now, and at least a little bit of traffic forever. The more I do that the more I build out my base of lasting content that will serve me forever.
Over at CodePen, we’ve been busier than ever working toward our grand vision of what CodePen can become. We have a ton of focus on things lately, despite this terrible pandemic. It’s nice to be able to stay heads down into work you find important and meaningful in the best of times, and if that can be a mental escape as well, well, I’ll take it.
We’ve been building more community-showcasing features. On our Following page there are no less than three new features: (1) A “Recent” feed¹, (2) a “Top” feed, and (3) Follow suggestions. The Following page should be about 20× more interesting by my calculation! For example, the recent feed is the activity of all the people you follow, surfacing things you likely won’t want to miss.
You can toggle that feed from “Recent” over to “Top.” While that seems like a minor change, it’s actually an entirely different feed that we create that is like a ranked popularity feed, only scoped to people you follow.
Below that is a list of other recommended CodePen folks to follow that’s created just for you. I can testify that CodePen is a lot more fun when you follow people that create things you like, and that’s a fact we’re going to keep making more and more true.
We’re always pushing out little stuff, but while I’m focusing on big new things, the biggest is the fact that we’ve taken some steps toward “Custom Editors.” That is, Pen Editors that can do things that our normal Pen Editor can’t do. We’ve released two: Flutter and Vue Single File Components.
- The word “feed” is new. We don’t actually use that term on the site. It’s a word we use internally on the team and what’s used by the technology we’re using. But I think it’s a good general description for the CodePen community as well, since CodePen is a developer-facing site anyway. I suppose “stream” is also a good descriptor (and just so happens to be the literal name of the tech we’re using.
This is about the time of year I would normally be telling you about the Smashing Conference I went to and the wonderful time I had there, but those in-person conferences have, of course, been re-scheduled for later in the year. At the moment, I’m still planning on Austin in October and San Francisco in November, but of course, nobody knows what the world will be like then. One thing is for sure though: online workshops. Smashing has been doing lots of these, and many of them are super deep courses that take place over several weeks.
Lots of conferences are going online and that’s kinda cool to see. It widens the possibility that anyone in the world can join, which is the web at its best. Conferences like All Day Hey are coming up in a few weeks (and is only a handful of bucks). Jamstack Conf is going virtual in May. My closest-to-home conference this year, CascadiaJS, is going virtual in September.
I got to be on the podcast Coding Zeal. I can’t figure out how to embed a BuzzSprout episode, so here’s a link.
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