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محتوای ارائه شده توسط David East and Adam Argyle. تمام محتوای پادکست شامل قسمتها، گرافیکها و توضیحات پادکست مستقیماً توسط David East and Adam Argyle یا شریک پلتفرم پادکست آنها آپلود و ارائه میشوند. اگر فکر میکنید شخصی بدون اجازه شما از اثر دارای حق نسخهبرداری شما استفاده میکند، میتوانید روندی که در اینجا شرح داده شده است را دنبال کنید.https://fa.player.fm/legal
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Worth Knowing with Bonnie Habyan


1 #11: From OJ Simpson Case to Best Selling Author - Marcia Clark Shares Latest Real Crime Book Release and How Resilience Is Key to Success and Reinvention 34:35
Marcia Clark, best known as the lead prosecutor in the O.J. Simpson trial, has become a trailblazer for women in law and beyond. Her journey from courtroom to bestselling author reflects her resilience and determination to redefine herself amidst intense public scrutiny. On this episode of Worth Knowing, Clark dives into her latest book, *Trial by Ambush*, which examines the 1953 Barbara Graham case—a story that highlights gender bias, media sensationalism, and the notion that all cases are subject to societal, cultural, and political winds. Clark shares how her experiences during the Simpson trial shaped her perspective on societal pressures and the role of women in high-stakes professions. Her reflections on how media, forensic science, and legal practices have evolved over decades offer valuable insights into the intersection of law and culture. This conversation is a compelling exploration of true crime, personal growth, and how Clark’s groundbreaking career continues to inspire a new generation of women to challenge norms and forge their own paths. Marcia Clark is a bestselling author and a criminal lawyer who began her career in law as a criminal defense attorney and went on to become a prosecutor in the L.A. District Attorney's Office in 1981. She spent ten years in the Special Trials Unit, where she handled a number of high-profile cases, including the prosecution of stalker/murderer Robert Bardo, whose conviction for the murder of actress Rebecca Schaeffer resulted in legislation that offered victims better protection from stalkers as well as increased punishment for the offenders. She was lead prosecutor for the O.J. Simpson murder trial. In May of 1997 her book on the Simpson case, "Without a Doubt," was published and reached #1 on the New York Times, Wall St. Journal, Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, and Publishers Weekly bestsellers lists. In February 2016, Clark re-released the book with a new foreword. Resources Sign up for the Worth Knowing LinkedIn Newsletter to stay up to date: https://www.linkedin.com/newsletters/worth-knowing-7236433935503618048/ Follow Bonnie on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/bonnie-habyan/ Go to the Worth Knowing website: https://www.worthknowing.show Check out The Agile Brand Guide website with articles, insights, and Martechipedia, the wiki for marketing technology: https://www.agilebrandguide.com The Agile Brand is produced by Missing Link—a Latina-owned strategy-driven, creatively fueled production co-op. From ideation to creation, they craft human connections through intelligent, engaging and informative content. https://www.missinglink.company…
Eric Meyer and Estelle Weyl wrote 1000+ pages of CSS... we had questions
Manage episode 436945033 series 3520094
محتوای ارائه شده توسط David East and Adam Argyle. تمام محتوای پادکست شامل قسمتها، گرافیکها و توضیحات پادکست مستقیماً توسط David East and Adam Argyle یا شریک پلتفرم پادکست آنها آپلود و ارائه میشوند. اگر فکر میکنید شخصی بدون اجازه شما از اثر دارای حق نسخهبرداری شما استفاده میکند، میتوانید روندی که در اینجا شرح داده شده است را دنبال کنید.https://fa.player.fm/legal
CSS: The Definitive Guide is exactly 1126 pages, written by Eric Meyer and Estelle Weyl. As they both said, "We read the CSS spec so you didn't have to." We ask them a ton of CSS questions and they gave us a ton of CSS answers.
14 قسمت
Manage episode 436945033 series 3520094
محتوای ارائه شده توسط David East and Adam Argyle. تمام محتوای پادکست شامل قسمتها، گرافیکها و توضیحات پادکست مستقیماً توسط David East and Adam Argyle یا شریک پلتفرم پادکست آنها آپلود و ارائه میشوند. اگر فکر میکنید شخصی بدون اجازه شما از اثر دارای حق نسخهبرداری شما استفاده میکند، میتوانید روندی که در اینجا شرح داده شده است را دنبال کنید.https://fa.player.fm/legal
CSS: The Definitive Guide is exactly 1126 pages, written by Eric Meyer and Estelle Weyl. As they both said, "We read the CSS spec so you didn't have to." We ask them a ton of CSS questions and they gave us a ton of CSS answers.
14 قسمت
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×Do backend developers like CSS? Usually not. But that really doesn't matter because you don't have to like everything. So to get into the mind of what a backend developer thinks about CSS and how it affects their daily life, we brought on Lane Wagner, a true bonafide backend developer. Links https://www.youtube.com/@backendbanterfm/ https://boot.dev https://x.com/wagslane https://x.com/badatcss https://x.com/argyleink https://x.com/_davideast…

1 We need better design tools. Mattias Ott tells us why. 1:06:38
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Web design tools are great but they still fall short of all the incredible intrinsic based features of CSS. While there are features like auto-layout in Figma, they still fall so short of all the content driven features of The Web. Why is it that we still try to paint pretty pictures in a design tool and act like the web works that way? We can't control every details of what happens when our website is loaded on different devices over different networks and across different user preferences. Mattias Ott joins the show to discuss why design tools have fallen behind CSS and the mindset and skills we need to progress in our web designs. Links Mattias Ott - https://matthiasott.com/ Bad at CSS - https://x.com/badatcss Adam Twitter - https://x.com/argyleink David Twitter - https://x.com/_davideast…

1 Eric Meyer and Estelle Weyl wrote 1000+ pages of CSS... we had questions 1:17:19
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CSS: The Definitive Guide is exactly 1126 pages, written by Eric Meyer and Estelle Weyl. As they both said, "We read the CSS spec so you didn't have to." We ask them a ton of CSS questions and they gave us a ton of CSS answers.

1 14 CSS talks covered in 1 hour — CSS Day recap 1:06:04
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Apologies for the audio only upload. There were issues with getting the video feed published but check out YouTube for the video. CSS Day put on 14 different talks about some pretty interesting topics in CSS. It ended up being almost 12 hours of amazing CSS content and we’re going to give you an overview of each talk in just an hour. We’re going to talk about how design tools are falling behind with CSS, which I’m starting to really believe more and more every day. We’ll cover How Tailwind CSS isn’t at all like inline styles and this talk was brave. Then there’s incredible font features in CSS, like seriously these ones are unreal. And also the magic of Anchor Positioning... to be honest I still barely know this one is. And so many other great topics so, let us be your guide. Links CSS Day - https://cssday.nl/2024 CSS Day Playlist - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLjnstNlepBvO0-I7iwqpkOY_fwAop6Pl- Bad at CSS - https://x.com/badatcss Adam Twitter - https://x.com/argyleink David Twitter - https://x.com/_davideast…

1 You might be wasting your time. Time wasters disguised as time savers. 1:01:59
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There are so many things we spend time on thinking they’ll save us more in the long run but really, do they? Today on Bad at CSS we’re going to dive into a list of things we think are Time Wasters disguised as Time Savers. 0:00 - Is the juice worth the squeeze? 0:50 - Tests 6:07 - CI/CD* 13:37 - Build systems 16:02 - Rewrites 22:42 - Note taking apps 31:27 - Courses 38:37 - A tangent on Objective-C and fixing squiggles 41:37 - More CI/CD problems 44:07 - Append Only 46:07 - Color and Dark Mode 56:28 - Designing with constraint 60:00 - Not engagement farming… tell us your time wasters Links Bad at CSS — https://x.com/badatcss Adam Argyle — https://x.com/argyleink David East — https://x.com/_davideast…
What can you do with a single CSS keyframe? A metric ton. 0:00 - 50% keyframes are magic 0:49 - Animation is easier than you think 2:17 - Why at 50%? 6:51 - Trick 1 Shake 12:00 - Trick 2 Pulse 23:25 - Trick 3 Glitch 27:55 - Trick 4 Flip 32:45 - Trick 5 Fill 41:20 - Trick 6 Sheen 44:25 - Trick 7 Emphasize 46:50 - Trick 8 Censor 48:35 - Trick 900 Tony Hawk Links Bad at CSS - https://twitter.com/badatcss Adam Twitter - https://twitter.com/argyleink David Twitter - https://twitter.com/_davideast Codepen Demo: https://codepen.io/davideast/pen/MWxvzjm Open Props: https://open-props.style…
Container Queries are one of those CSS features everyone is so hyped about and with good reason. They give us a modern way to build and scope responsive components based on the size of the parent element rather than the browser view port. But, I’m not gonna lie. There’s a lot to this new feature.

1 Styling better custom inputs with Dave Rupert 1:02:56
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Dave Rupert knows his inputs and we got a lot to learn. Dave's great blog - https://daverupert.com/ Dave on Twitter - https://twitter.com/davatron5000
CSS is Hard. Each and every year. So what are the things that we should improve on in 2024?

1 What CSS is Jason Lengstorf bad at? 1:04:11
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We promise that after this episode you'll never forget the three parameters of the clamp() function ever again.
We promise. This episode is actually about CSS... I mean we get to it eventually. But what happens when you get a TypeScript fan (David) and a TypeScript skeptic (Adam) in a discussion? Well, a lot of spicy things are said. NOTE: We swear we recorded this before the whole DHH Turbo TypeScript fiasco.…
The amazing Chris Coyier (founder of CSS-Tricks.com and CodePen.io) sat down with us to tell us all the things in CSS that he's bad at. He even brought us a list.
Figma has a brand new feature called Dev Mode! Adam was at Figma's big conference Config and he came here to teach us everything he knows about what Dev Mode has to offer. We also discuss why design handoffs are so difficult and tricks we've learned along the way. Chapters: 0:00 - Is Figma bad at CSS too? 0:29 - We are bad at design handoffs. 1:46 - Adam was at Figma Config 2:59 - A designer and developer story 5:34 - The difficulties from a design to CSS 7:45 - “Micro-decisions” in design 9:54 - Handoffs were the inspiration for Visbug 10:42 - It’s hard to get consistently get the design correct 12:44 - What is DevMode? 13:40 - 30% of Figma users are developers. 15:10 - How DevMode works 18:48 - Figma can be the “source of truth” for Components 20:39 - Visually coding in Figma 21:53 - Designers can mark things “ready for dev” 21:59 - Generates a changelog 21:30 - A copy SVG button! 23:24 - DevMode still needs some work with layouts 25:23 - There’s a Box Model in Figma! 27:00 - A tangent on :has() 28:20 - display: contents is a hidden gem 30:02 - A recap of DevMode features…
View Transitions are a brand new totally rad cutting edge feature in the browser. They allow you to specify animation states from one state to another a lot easier than ever before. But guess what? We’re still bad at them. In this episode Adam explains how awesome View Transitions are by explaining the difficulties of the FLIP animation technique. Adam then discusses how he struggled, but finally succeeded, to build a morphing button with View Transitions. Oh and we also discuss how Adam isn’t a TypeScript fan, but you’ll have to listen to the end for that part. Links: Morphing Button - https://youtu.be/N2BKAKwGP6M View Transition Pseudos Visualized - https://codepen.io/bramus/full/xxQKvJP View Transitions like isotope.js - https://codepen.io/argyleink/pen/VwBKjwj Chapters: 0:00 We are bad at CSS 0:54 Why are we talking about View Transitions? 4:03 Adam sings MMMBop 4:24 What problem are View Transitions solving? 5:29 Adam’s Mickey Mouse impression 5:44 Using FLIP to explain what View Transitions solve 6:27 Adam’s amazing getBoundingClientRect() joke 6:45 Using FLIP to explain what View Transitions solve 9:00 Tweening was easier in Flash 10:45 View Transitions simplify the amount calculations needed to animate 12:54 David is plugged into the Matrix 13:40 MPA View Transitions require no work! (but need a flag) 14:20 We are going to see some of the most wild transitions 16:35 What is Adam bad at with View Transitions? 22:04 What is a functional pseudo selector and why is it so fun to say? 23:50 Adam continues to be bad at View Transitions 25:35 Adam gets to talk to browser engineers to tell him why he’s bad 26:33 A rare case where height 100% did something 29:10 Adam gets even worse at View Transitions 30:00 Understanding view transition image pair and view transition group 35:29 David is bad at Sesame Street 37:55 An amazing visual of View Transition Groups and Pairs 39:52 Can you use other properties than transform and opacity? 40:27 Adam’s leaves to go tend to his kids 42:00 We’re finally wrapping up 45:33 Fun fact: Adam is not a TypeScript fan 47:12 View Transitions like isotope.js 49:32 Stay humble or CSS will humble you Video moments 23:10 - functional pseudo selector 30:00 Understanding view transition image pair and view transition group 34:00 Especially here 37:55 An amazing visual of View Transition Groups and Pairs 47:12 View Transitions like isotope.js…
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