It is the true teacher who leaves the class knowing they have learned the most.

Tucson, AZ
Joined September 2006
Filter
Exclude
Time range
-
Near
Replying to @BrunoFigueiredo @k
Thank heavens for Internet Archive. What a list. 2003 seems possible, 2006 I don't believe so. I am really awful with historical dates. This is great. SO fun Bruno!
1
Replying to @BrunoFigueiredo @k
Another epic treasure, Flash no less. Awesome Bruno, thanks for the share :)
1
Replying to @BrunoFigueiredo @k
It was right around that time for sure. as for exact dates, I'm old(er) ;-)
Pure delight, and such an honor too. :) Hope yer great!
I'd found this in my "big dig" which I am enjoying so much I can fire my therapist :) I promised the talented and very funny @K Kevin Cheng I'd post it. Had to be 2000 or so, maybe earlier? If you remember this? You've been doing Web a long time. What an epic treasure!
1
1
27
Medical portals in office and small clinics often are set up by folks who are not paying attention. The portal I use most could be hacked by a 2 year old. I told them they needed UX, a11y and security asap. Crickets. Sigh.
Replying to @eccenux
This was largely @Hixie as I recall - WaSP published them. It was very interesting to observe both tests in a time where implementation and layout engines were all over the place.
1
Replying to @jonbloy @madnewsboy
The most awful part to me is that these beautiful people we lose to covid are often kept away from family or loved ones because they can't be there so they die without the comfort of loved ones and that just sucks for those who need and want that. most people do.
Replying to @shanselman
In my recent digging up archival material, I KNOW I saw a few of you too. Thanks for this :)
1
Replying to @shanselman
Many folks re unaware how advancedd Monterrey is in tech. I've been looking at Mexico for retirement! Nations were warm and welcoming alwayys, but no nation has been moreso than Mexico. Of course, my journeys there are nearly lifelong due to proximity. That was a wonderful event.
1
1
Replying to @shanselman
It's amazing what we saw coming in spite of our inability to think we'd were able to look into the future we saw something Scott in those moments that is very revealing about how the web unfolded since very interesting to revisit. You are a remarkable interviewer.
1
1
Me as well. Life, huh? It mimics the childhood game 'telephone' and after whispered words go through 20 people, the meaning and words are completely different :) all health, happiness and awesome to you and fam! M
Found this interview with the incomparable @shanselman who goes deep. We talk BBSs, SGML, HTML, XML, CSS. MIME types, DOCTYPEs. W3C, HTML5 in, XHTML out and XML in HTM5, Chrome Frame, Monoculture browsers, apps, social media. Commodore 64s... #webHistory hanselminutes.com/182/the-hi…
1
1
18
I hang on to social principles, declarative and XML especially for exensive documentation. I'd like to see a Semantic Web included in our JS/API driven world. I believe apps may well be better off NOT forcing Web languages. We tried media all. It sucks. :)
2
Rebecca's work was always refined. I remember we had some talks as Movable Type and blogging were emerging and her insight remains invaluable. We were a nomadic tribe as Web/UX folks. Seems natural for a global system, but we're all either on to other adventures or in covid hold.
1
Replying to @porter @segdeha @jjg
YES! Crepes on Cole. Impressive memory, my friend. Look at your t-shirt. I LOLd. And you and Laura were def in need of aloe vera :) Wonderful memories indeed. xo to you and fam
1
And this is one possible outcome but I do not have Hepatocellar Carcinoma. I am winning. "Molly has liver cancer." #Misinformation
3
And this one just is horrifying: "Molly Founded the W3C" OH FFS!!! #Misinformation
1
3
[Molly Holzschlag] "She ended the browser wars." I did? HA, please. #misinformation
2
2