Kanban vs. Iterative Development — Agile Web Operations
If you need big synchronization points, e.g. for big marketing campaigns, you might be better off using an iterative development approach. If you want to ensure a continuous flow of features, which are optimized for time to market (cycle time), Kanban might work better for you.
Related cards:
Web Operations 101 For Developers
This post is not about devops, it's not about lean startups, it's not about web scale, it's not about the cloud, and it's not about continuous deployment. This post is about you, the developer who's main purpose in life has always been to build gr...
Here’s what we’ve learned about doing UI for mobile web apps with WebKit
Lately, we’ve been exploring ways to offer web apps that perform like native apps on mobile devices. For this short sprint we targeted mobile WebKit browsers—especially the default browsers on iOS and Android—because of their widespread use and ex...
Super-simple Ruby Subversion Command Line Wrapper — Agile Web Operations
I was setting up a Subversion repository one year ago. Of course, I also wanted to have regular backups of my Subversion repository. As I was tired of writing bash scripts for such a task, I looked into writing a simple Ruby script for backing up ...
Using local fonts with Webpack / Webpacker
When we want to use our own (or bought) fonts in an application with Webpack(er), we have two options. We can
- put the fonts directly into your Webpack's assets folder or
- write an npm package with an own sass file that can be imported from the...
How to run a small web server (one-liner)
Sometimes you just want to have a small web server that serves files to test something.
Serve the current directory
On Ruby 1.9.2+ you can do the following (".
" for current directory).
ruby -run -ehttpd . -p8000
Python 2.x offers a s...
YSlow for Firebug
YSlow analyzes web pages and tells you why they're slow based on the rules for high performance web sites. YSlow is a Firefox add-on integrated with the popular Firebug web development tool.
Matching elements on complex web pages with Webrat
XPath matchers can be combined with CSS-selector matchers. This is really useful if not, for example, the content of an element should be matched but the element itself like in the following example. Here a form is used to display data as default ...