I'd recommend Patterns in Network Architecture by John Day. I had him as a professor at Boston University and loved hearing his war stories from his days working on ARPANET.…
I tried to buy a logo, but received a "Purchase Failed. Please try again or contact support" message. Not a great UX, to say the least.
I tried to buy a logo, but kept receiving a "Purchase Failed. Please try again or contact support." Needless to say, not a good first impression.
Still a wonderful resource, along with You Might Not Need jQuery. Fun fact: I interviewed with you for a front-end developer job in 2013(?) when you worked at a different company in Cambridge. Let's just say: I didn't…
Not a bad idea.
lol
I'm glad someone else picked up on that! :)
This looks great. Rebecca Murphy's JS Assessment is also a good resource for testing your JavaScript chops: https://github.com/rmurphey/js-assessment
Banning language is doubleplus ungood.
Bought the book a few weeks ago. Have not finished yet, but it's an excellent read thus far. I knew it was a must-read after hearing Reg's interview on the Javascript Jabber podcast.
I'd recommend Patterns in Network Architecture by John Day. I had him as a professor at Boston University and loved hearing his war stories from his days working on ARPANET.…
I tried to buy a logo, but received a "Purchase Failed. Please try again or contact support" message. Not a great UX, to say the least.
I tried to buy a logo, but kept receiving a "Purchase Failed. Please try again or contact support." Needless to say, not a good first impression.
Still a wonderful resource, along with You Might Not Need jQuery. Fun fact: I interviewed with you for a front-end developer job in 2013(?) when you worked at a different company in Cambridge. Let's just say: I didn't…
Not a bad idea.
lol
I'm glad someone else picked up on that! :)
This looks great. Rebecca Murphy's JS Assessment is also a good resource for testing your JavaScript chops: https://github.com/rmurphey/js-assessment
Banning language is doubleplus ungood.
Bought the book a few weeks ago. Have not finished yet, but it's an excellent read thus far. I knew it was a must-read after hearing Reg's interview on the Javascript Jabber podcast.