In case anyone else is unclear on the title, they mean Sass as in "Syntactically Awesome Stylesheets", the CSS extension language: http://sass-lang.com
I would like them to elaborate on their naming convention. How do you avoid name collisions? I always run into situations where I want something general on two different places and where they don't share anything. I usually end up prefixing the classes with something unsemantic like the section or part of page they're in. That also makes it harder to re-use since it's suddenly bound to that section.
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[ 3.6 ms ] story [ 19.5 ms ] threadhttp://design.canonical.com/2014/03/making-ubuntu-com-respon...
Still doesn't make much sense though. Perhaps they are using SaSS as a culture term.
It makes sense if one is aware of what they mean be Sass. They created a design/layout architecture for their site using Sass style sheets as a basis.
(IOW, it's not a misspelling of SaaS.)