SitePoint Podcast
By SitePoint
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Podcast Description
News, opinion, and fresh thinking for web developers and designers. The official podcast of sitepoint.com.
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SitePoint Podcast #163: Man Down | Episode 163 of The SitePoint Podcast is now available! This week the panel is made up of 3 of our 4 our regular hosts, Patrick O’Keefe (@ifroggy), Kevin Dees (@kevindees) and Stephan Segraves (@ssegraves). Listen in Your Browser Play this episode directly in your browser — just click the orange “play” button below: Download this Episode You can download this episode as a standalone MP3 file. Here’s the link: SitePoint Podcast #163: Man Down (MP3, 28:24, 27.3MB) Subscribe to the Podcast The SitePoint Podcast is on iTunes! Add the SitePoint Podcast to your iTunes player. Or, if you don’t use iTunes, you can subscribe to the feed directly. Episode Summary The panel discuss Google’s Chrome briefly taking the number one browser spot, Youtube’s 7th birthday, the thoughts on different possible responsive image standards HTML5 could use and more. googletag.cmd.push(function() { googletag.display('div-gpt-ad-1328644474660-10'); }); Here are the main topics covered in this episode: Chrome is the most popular browser in the world, says StatCounter | The Verge ref Usage share of Web Browsers YouTube Blog: It’s YouTube’s 7th birthday… and you’ve outdone yourselves, again Jeremy Keith on possible Responsive Image Future Standards Free Zocial Button Set: Social CSS3 Buttons | Smashing Coding Browse the full list of links referenced in the show at http://delicious.com/sitepointpodcast/163. Host Spotlights Patrick: PointsHoarder – Building a Better Trip by Hoarding Points Stephan: Panic – Coda – One-Window Web Development for Mac OS X Kevin: WorkFu + Find work opportunities. Discover talent. The opportunity network. Interview Transcript Patrick: Hello and welcome to another edition of the SitePoint Podcast, my name is Patrick O’Keefe and I am filling in today for our usual lead host, Louis Simoneau; kind of an impromptu, unplanned role change as we just found out that Louis was in a bit of a car accident. He was hit by a car on a bicycle of some kind and he fractured both of his arms; he’s alright, but yeah, it’s a little bad news there, and I’m just going to read tweets I received literally minutes ago because he said he fractured both arms and I asked him, I said I’m looking at tweets, I said it looks like you got hit by a car, were you on a bike? And he said, “Yeah, bleep driver wanted that parking spot too badly to bother checking his mirrors and blind spot; fell off and landed on my hands, wrists fine, WTF, but small fractures near my elbow, so they’re pretty much immobilized.” So, Louis is on the mend, and yeah, we hope he heals quickly. Stephan: Yeah, get better soon, Louis. Patrick: Yeah, and if you want to wish Louis well you can leave a comment in the comments at sitepoint.com/podcast, or hit him on Twitter @rssaddict. He seems even with his arms immobilized he’s able to tweet a little bit, so I’m sure he’d appreciate the well wishes. Other than that, news, which is terrible news, how are you guys doing? Kevin: I’m doing well, my arms are fine (laughter). Patrick: Your arms are fine. You know it’s those things you don’t fully appreciate until you break them. Kevin: Right. Patrick: And I’ve been lucky I haven’t broken any bones in my life. Kevin: Knock on wood, Patrick, quickly. Patrick: Yeah, exactly, exactly. So, yeah, even with Louis out the show, well, I guess it must go on, so we’re going to talk about some news stories and have our usual back and forth. Stephan why don’t you get us started. Stephan: Okay, well, the first story is on The Verge, theverge.com, it is about Chrome overtaking Internet Explorer as the most popular browser in the world. Now I know a bunch of people, a bunch of listeners, are going woo-hoo! in their cars or wherever they’re listening to this, but the truth of the matter is it was only for a week, and looking at the [...] | 25 5 12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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SitePoint Podcast #162: Taking Google For A Drive | Episode 162 of The SitePoint Podcast is now available! This week the panel is made up of 3 of our 4 our regular hosts, Patrick O’Keefe (@ifroggy), Kevin Dees (@kevindees) and Stephan Segraves (@ssegraves). Listen in Your Browser Play this episode directly in your browser — just click the orange “play” button below: Download this Episode You can download this episode as a standalone MP3 file. Here’s the link: SitePoint Podcast #162: Taking Google For A Drive (MP3, 44:50, 43.0MB) Subscribe to the Podcast The SitePoint Podcast is on iTunes! Add the SitePoint Podcast to your iTunes player. Or, if you don’t use iTunes, you can subscribe to the feed directly. Episode Summary The panel discuss Adobe launching a host of Cloud services to go with CS 6 and also kicks off a new website dedicated to the open web. We also take a moment to remember web design pioneer Hillman Curtis and talk about the future of advertising on the Web. googletag.cmd.push(function() { googletag.display('div-gpt-ad-1328644474660-10'); }); Here are the main topics covered in this episode: ComScore: Samsung Widens Lead As Top Mobile Brand In U.S., Android 51% Of All Smartphones | TechCrunch via Mobile Marketshare on Revenews.com Foursquare Launches New “History” Page Silent Browser Upgrades | David Walsh Official Google Blog: Google+ Hangouts On Air: broadcast your conversation to the world Google Drive Browse the full list of links referenced in the show at http://delicious.com/sitepointpodcast/162. Host Spotlights Patrick: BlameSociety Videos Stephan: Reviews In Depth | Why Everyone Should Learn to Program Kevin: 20 Inspiring Examples of Big Backgrounds in Web Design | Inspiration Interview Transcript Patrick: Hello and welcome to another edition of the SitePoint Podcast. This is Patrick O’Keefe and I’m joined today by my usual co-hosts Kevin Dees and Stephan Segraves; hey guys, how’s it going? Kevin: Howdy, howdy. Stephan: Hi. Patrick: As you may notice we are without our other usual fourth co-host, he usually introduces the show, Louis Simoneau, he’s off with important business-like errands to attend to, or something along those lines, and we’ll be holding the fort down today in his absence. So I guess let’s go ahead and jump into the stories. I’ll take the first story today, on TechCrunch there was a story by Ingrid Lunden that caught my eye, it is about mobile hardware and operating system market share for the three months ending in March, this is according to ComScore and I found this story through Revenues. So the story has essentially three main numbers, like I said, hardware, software and then also usage through mobile, like use a downloaded app, use the browser, etcetera. So here are some of the numbers: for hardware you have Samsung in the lead with 26% of the market, that is a gain of .7% from the three months ending in December, in other words the previous three-month period. LG second with 19.3% with a small loss, Apple is third at 14% with a 1.6% gain, then you have Motorola fourth and HTC 5th, Motorola with 12.8% of the market and HTC with 6.0%, and that represents small losses for both of those brands. As far as our branding systems go, Google remains in the lead by a healthy margin with 51% of the market, that is a 3.7% change, and then you have Apple at 30.7%, a gain for them as well of just over a percentage point. And then you have a big loss from Blackberry from Research in Motion moving down to 12.3%, losing 3.7 percentage points. Microsoft is in at 3.9, a loss for them, and then Symbian, finally, maintains its ground at 1.4%. I don’t know, I guess Symbian is what I have, right? I don’t know what’s in this small, little, cheap pay-as-you-go phone. Kevin: So, looking at these numbers for the platform specifically, not the hardware but the platform side, it comes to my attention [...] | 11 5 12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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SitePoint Podcast #161: The Return of the Yank with Kevin Yank | Episode 161 of The SitePoint Podcast is now available! This week our regular interview host Louis Simoneau (@rssaddict) interviews long-term podcast host, Kevin Yank (@sentience) who now works at Learnable and is releasing the fifth edition of his book on PHP and MySQL now called PHP and MySQL: Novice To Ninja (formerly Build Your Own Database Driven Website using PHP and MySQL). Listen in Your Browser Play this episode directly in your browser — just click the orange “play” button below: Download this Episode You can download this episode as a standalone MP3 file. Here’s the link: SitePoint Podcast #161: The Return of the Yank with Kevin Yank (MP3, 43:37, 41.9MB) Subscribe to the Podcast The SitePoint Podcast is on iTunes! Add the SitePoint Podcast to your iTunes player. Or, if you don’t use iTunes, you can subscribe to the feed directly. googletag.cmd.push(function() { googletag.display('div-gpt-ad-1328644474660-10'); }); Episode Summary Louis and Kevin talk about how the changes in PHP over the 10 years since the launch of the book’s first version have driven the need for the different versions, and how the latests version differs to the previous editions. They also talk about how PHP still makes a great choice for getting beginners into server-side coding. Browse the full list of links referenced in the show at http://delicious.com/sitepointpodcast/161. Interview Transcript TLouis: Hello and welcome to another episode of the SitePoint Podcast. We are kicking it old school today on the podcast, we have an alum from the SitePoint Podcast joining us, and also the author of a new book from SitePoint, if you haven’t guessed yet it’s Kevin Yank; hi, Kevin. Kevin: Hello! Hi, I’m here, I’m back! Louis: Welcome back, it’s good to have you back. Kevin: Thank you. Yeah, it feels weird to be introduced still on this show. Louis: I was toying with the idea of letting you do the introduction and playing it all backwards and surreal. Kevin: It’s the lost episode. Louis: So, yeah, lately you’ve been hard at work cranking out the latest edition of SitePoint’s most venerable title. Kevin: Yeah. Louis: It used to be not only SitePoint’s most venerable title, but also SitePoint’s longest title in terms of the title. Kevin: Oh, yeah, it was really long! I think we’ve had others, it used to be called Build Your Own Database Driven Website Using PHP and MySQL, and I’ve gotten really used to saying it that way over the years, and now I can’t even call it that, that’s not the title of my book anymore; it’s now PHP & MySQL: Novice to Ninja, but even though it’s a different title it’s still the fifth edition. It blows your mind. Louis: My mind is blown, I have no reaction. Kevin: (Laughs) Louis: So, yeah, this is sort of our, as the title now says, Novice to Ninja, so beginner title for PHP and MySQL. Kevin: Yep. It was the first-ever book that SitePoint published way back in I want to say 2001, I think the book might have actually been published in 2002 for the first time. But, yeah, back when SitePoint wasn’t even a book publishing company someone said “You know these articles we have on PHP and MySQL are really popular, we should put them out as a book that we can sell.” And I said, “You’re crazy, these articles are available for free online, why would anyone pay for them?” And it turned out a lot of people wanted them in a book format, and it’s just a whole lot nicer to read that way. These days you can’t get the whole thing for free online, I’m afraid, sorry dear listener, you’ll have to buy a copy of the book (laughs). This is the fifth edition; it’s had five whole editions over the years. Louis: Why don’t we just talk a little bit about what’s changed in the world of PHP since the good olden days. Kevin: Well, since the first edition a lot has changed, and [...] | 4 5 12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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SitePoint Podcast #160: Adobe and HTML Sitting in a Tree | Episode 160 of The SitePoint Podcast is now available! This week the panel is made up of our regular host Louis Simoneau (@rssaddict), Kevin Dees (@kevindees), Stephan Segraves (@ssegraves) and Patrick O’Keefe (@ifroggy). Listen in Your Browser Play this episode directly in your browser — just click the orange “play” button below: Download this Episode You can download this episode as a standalone MP3 file. Here’s the link: SitePoint Podcast #160: Adobe and HTML Sitting in a Tree (MP3, 35:15, 33.9MB) Subscribe to the Podcast The SitePoint Podcast is on iTunes! Add the SitePoint Podcast to your iTunes player. Or, if you don’t use iTunes, you can subscribe to the feed directly. Episode Summary The panel discuss Adobe launching a host of Cloud services to go with CS 6 and also kicks off a new website dedicated to the open web. We also take a moment to remember web design pioneer Hillman Curtis and talk about the future of advertising on the Web. googletag.cmd.push(function() { googletag.display('div-gpt-ad-1328644474660-10'); }); Here are the main topics covered in this episode: Hillman Curtis, a Pioneer in Web Design, Dies at 51 – NYTimes.com via Nathan King (NathanRKing) on Twitter Adobe Officially Unveils CS6 And Its $49/Month All-Inclusive Creative Cloud Subscription Service | TechCrunch Adobe and HTML Internet Ad Revenues Hit $31 Billion in 2011, Historic High Up 22% Over 2010 Record-Breaking Numbers | Business Wire via Cashing Out: Week of April 15th – 21st 2012 in Online Marketing News | ReveNews Browse the full list of links referenced in the show at http://delicious.com/sitepointpodcast/160. Host Spotlights Patrick: JimGaffigan.com and Jim Gaffigan’s Trailer Louis: VIM Adventures Stephan: Noah Stokes | Es Bueno / How We Operate – The Potential Client Kevin: Impact – HTML5 Canvas and JavaScript Game Engine Interview Transcript Louis: Hello and welcome to another episode of the SitePoint Podcast, it’s a full panel show this week to talk about the news and happenings in the world of the Internet; hi guys. Kevin: Howdy. Patrick: Hey! Stephan: Hello, hello. Louis: Very dynamic intro, I felt really energetic about that one. Patrick: Yeah, yeah, you sound — you’re a pro; you’re an old pro now. Louis: Ha, ha, seasoned hand (laughs). Patrick: You are. Louis: How you all doing? Patrick: Pretty good, pretty good. I actually got an email this week that was pretty short and to the point. Louis: Congratulations (laughter). Kevin: A whole email, Patrick. Patrick: Yeah, I got an email (laughter) through my contact form, and I’ll tell you the email, it was from Sam, Sam at sam.com, I doubt that’s the real address, but it was just one sentence and it was, “So, if you are a web designer do you think your website looks good? It looks like crab.” (Laughter) And that is “crab” with a b. Louis: I think I saw that on your Facebook or your Twitter or something. Patrick: Yeah, I like that. Louis: (Laughing) pretty classy. So many things wrong with that. Patrick: Right. I’m not a web designer, I don’t think my website looks good necessarily; I’m not that high on myself. Louis: It definitely doesn’t look like a crab. Patrick: Yeah, I’m not — it looks like crab; it’s not even red. Anyway. Louis: Alright, so with that out of the way let’s talk about people who are web designers, or who were web designers. Patrick: Yeah, so I picked up a story through Nathan R. King on Twitter that Hillman Curtis had passed away, and I’ll just read from the New York Times story about it by Paul Vitello, the title is: Hillman Curtis, A Pioneer in Web Design, Dies at 51. It says that “Hillman Curtis was an art director of a San Francisco software company, in ’96 he designed the first website for a new technology called Flash Player, a browser plugin that could be used to turn out high [...] | 27 4 12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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SitePoint Podcast #159: PHP Master with Tim Boronczyk | Episode 159 of The SitePoint Podcast is now available! This week our regular interview host Louis Simoneau (@rssaddict) interviews Tim Boronczyk (@zaemis), the Managing Editor of phpmaster.com about the new features in PHP5.4, PHP’s strengths and weaknesses, and the DIY approach of the PHP community. Listen in Your Browser Play this episode directly in your browser — just click the orange “play” button below: Download this Episode You can download this episode as a standalone MP3 file. Here’s the link: SitePoint Podcast #159: PHP Master with Tim Boronczyk (MP3, 20:27, 19.6MB) Subscribe to the Podcast The SitePoint Podcast is on iTunes! Add the SitePoint Podcast to your iTunes player. Or, if you don’t use iTunes, you can subscribe to the feed directly. Episode Summary Louis and Tim Boronczyk talk about the starting up of phpmaster.com, about the new features in PHP5.4 including traits and the Session Upload Progress Indicator, PHP’s strengths and weaknesses including an exhaustive blog post made recently on the topic, and the DIY approach of the PHP community. googletag.cmd.push(function() { googletag.display('div-gpt-ad-1328644474660-10'); }); Browse the full list of links referenced in the show at http://delicious.com/sitepointpodcast/159. Interview Transcript Louis: Hello, and welcome to another episode of the SitePoint Podcast. We’ve got a bit of an interview show this week, with me on the show is Timothy Boronczyk, or Tim, do I call you Tim? Tim: You can call me Tim, Tim is fine. Louis: Alright, let’s go with Tim. Tim Boronczyk is the managing editor of phpmaster.com which is one of SitePoint’s latest ventures, so it’s a blog that’s all about the wonderful world of PHP. So, hi Tim, and welcome to the show. Tim: Hi, thanks for having me, it’s exciting. Louis: It’s great to have you. Have you been managing PHP Master from the get-go, or pretty much from the get-go? Tim: Yeah, right from its beginning, probably I want to say about eight months, six, seven, eight months, thereabouts. Louis: Alright. So do you want to just maybe for anyone listening who’s not familiar with PHP Master, or who hasn’t had a chance to see the site, what kind of things do you tend to publish about, how are things going, what’s the pitch? Tim: Well, it’s a little bit of everything, we publish three times a week on Monday, Wednesday and Friday, so fire up your RSS readers if you haven’t already. We try to have a little bit of everything for everybody. We have some beginner level articles on there to help new programmers improve their skills and become a PHP master, we have some intermediate for those who have done their time in PHP apprenticeship land and are looking to improve their skills, and we have some really in-depth nitty-gritty articles for those who already consider themselves PHP masters. Louis: Right. So I figured given that I got a chance to have you on the show we could talk a little bit about just PHP in general, where it’s at and where it’s heading, so, first and foremost, the latest version of PHP is version 5.4 and that’s a relatively new release, right? Tim: Yes, it’s out probably a couple months now. Louis: I’ve only been superficially aware of PHP in version 5.4, I work a little bit with PHP but mostly with Ruby and Rails, so maybe can you talk a bit about what the really cool features are in PHP 5.4. Tim: There’s a lot of new features in 5.4 that you can be excited about, for me there are probably three or four that I personally think are pretty neat, the first one being the Session Upload Progress Indicator; the PHP developers have stuck information into the session while you’re doing a file upload so you don’t have to do any weird, hacky, flash, weird — just dirty code things; you can submit your form to post your file to the server and spin off an Ajax request [...] | 20 4 12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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SitePoint Podcast #158: Drinking and Technology | Episode 158 of The SitePoint Podcast is now available! This week the panel is made up of Louis Simoneau (@rssaddict), Kevin Dees (@kevindees), Stephan Segraves (@ssegraves) and Patrick O’Keefe (@ifroggy). Listen in Your Browser Play this episode directly in your browser — just click the orange “play” button below: Download this Episode You can download this episode as a standalone MP3 file. Here’s the link: SitePoint Podcast #158: Drinking and Technology (MP3, 37:55, 34.8MB) Subscribe to the Podcast The SitePoint Podcast is on iTunes! Add the SitePoint Podcast to your iTunes player. Or, if you don’t use iTunes, you can subscribe to the feed directly. Episode Summary The panel discuss the UK Government’s new Design Principle site, the ongoing debate about the role of alcohol in the tech community, and a cool new HTML5 music video project put out by Microsoft to promote Internet Explorer 10. googletag.cmd.push(function() { googletag.display('div-gpt-ad-1328644474660-10'); }); Here are the main topics covered in this episode: GDS design principles Just A Friend – An Interactive Music Video ryanfunduk.com » Our Culture of Exclusion I drink for a reason Wikipedia dumps Google Maps | Digital Media – CNET News Browse the full list of links referenced in the show at http://delicious.com/sitepointpodcast/158. Host Spotlights Patrick and Louis: ZeFrank – A Show Stephan: Instagram Engineering • Keeping Instagram up with over a million new users in twelve hours Kevin: Snipt | Share and store code or command snippets. Interview Transcript Louis: Hello and welcome to yet another episode of the SitePoint Podcast, I’m back after a brief hiatus, last week Kevin interviewed Paul Boag for the show, but this week we’re back with a full panel; hi guys. Kevin: Howdy, howdy. Stephan: Howdy, howdy. Patrick: Hello. Louis: How you guys doing? Don’t answer all at once! Stephan: It’s a Monday (laughter). Patrick: Full of Easter candy. Louis: Yeah, so you guys have got the day off today, right, is it a holiday there? Stephan: No, we only got Friday off. Louis: Only Friday, alright. Patrick: When you work for yourself you don’t get days off, so, um, no; I didn’t have Easter off. Louis: Alright, well, hey, it’s good to have you all back on the show, so let’s just kick into it, who wants to go first with the first story? I’m going to nominate Kevin. Kevin: Okay, yes! Sweet, I like being the nominee, it’s a pleasure. Patrick: But will you win? (Laughter) Kevin: Yes, I will. My link, or story for today, comes from the gov.uk, they’re working on a new project for the government to use, and basically what I want to talk about is a portion of that. The design team has released some design principles that they’ve been using throughout their website, and so this isn’t necessarily a set of principles for “the designing world,” but they did craft this for this specific site, so these are kind of guidelines that they’re using within their project, but I believe that these could definitely be used throughout the web design community as well; I think these are really good principles, and I’ll just go through them quickly here. The first, there are ten of these, the first is Starting with Needs, and they talk about user needs there, and they talk about doing less than designing with the data that you have, doing the hard work to make things simple basically make things usable. And then Iterate, and then Iterate Again, is the 5th one; 6th we have Build for Inclusion, so they talk about accessibility in this section, and we’ll discuss all these in a second, or at least some of the highlighted points. And then Understanding Context, Build Digital Service, Not Websites, Be Consistent, Not Uniform, and Make Things Open, It Makes Things Better. And the 10th one is kind of the flavor of this post in [...] | 13 4 12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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SitePoint Podcast #157: Client Centric Web Design with Paul Boag | Episode 157 of The SitePoint Podcast is now available! This week Kevin Dees (@kevindees) interviews Paul Boag (@boagworld) of BoagWorld and Headscape about his new eBook Client Centric Web Design. Listen in Your Browser Play this episode directly in your browser — just click the orange “play” button below: Download this Episode You can download this episode as a standalone MP3 file. Here’s the link: SitePoint Podcast #157: Client Centric Web Design with Paul Boag (MP3, 41:15, 39.6MB) Subscribe to the Podcast The SitePoint Podcast is on iTunes! Add the SitePoint Podcast to your iTunes player. Or, if you don’t use iTunes, you can subscribe to the feed directly. Episode Summary Kevin and Paul talk in some detail on how we need to make sure our communications with our clients put them at the center of the design process, have them feeling a sense of ownership of the project, and use all their knowledge and skills as well as ours. googletag.cmd.push(function() { googletag.display('div-gpt-ad-1328644474660-10'); }); Browse the full list of links referenced in the show at http://delicious.com/sitepointpodcast/157. Interview Transcript Kevin: Hi, and welcome to the SitePoint Podcast. I’m Kevin Dees and today I’m joined by Mr. Paul Boag; welcome, Paul. Paul: Hi, it’s really good to be on the show, thank you for having me yet again, it’s good to be back. Kevin: Yes, yes. So I don’t believe I interviewed you before on the SitePoint podcast, but we have spoken a few times now so it’s good to hear your voice. Paul: Yes, and of course we met at South by, not this time round but previously, so it’s good to catch up again. Kevin: Yes, it is. So, today we have you on to talk about something I feel deeply about and I know you feel deeply about, which is the focus of websites and designs. And not only that, but also where agency and application development on the Web kind of come into play and some of the parts of that. And this is going to be an interview about your book, Paul, which is Client Centric Web Design, correct? Paul: Yep, that’s right. Kevin: Okay. So, before we get into that I feel that I should introduce you, a proper introduction anyways. Paul: Okay. Kevin: So, Paul, if you don’t know who Paul is, Paul does the Boagworld website, he also does the Boagworld Podcast which has been going on for some time now, many years; how many years now? Paul: I’ve no idea how many years. Kevin: (Laughs) Paul: All I know is that there weren’t any others around when I started. Kevin: Right. So, Paul is an established speaker, you’ve written a few books now, self-authored a few, and you also have The Website Owner’s Manual, correct? Paul: Yep, that’s right. Kevin: And so again today we want to talk about Client Centric Web Design which is your new eBook, self-published book, correct? Paul: Yeah, it’s to go with the third season of the podcast I do, so each season I’m trying now to do an associated eBook with it. Kevin: Well, I think this book is an interesting perspective on the way websites are developed because usually, if you haven’t noticed from the title already, it’s Client Centric Web Design, not user centric web design, which is really what most web designers, or designers in any field, think about is design based around the user. Paul: Hmm-mm. Kevin: And so you have this different take on where agencies and freelancers and those who work on the Web should put their focus, which is on the client. And so I’m hoping maybe you can explain just a little bit about Client Centric Web Design, and then I’ll have more questions around the way. Paul: Sure. Kevin: But what is Client Centric Web Design. Paul: It’s interesting, isn’t it? We’ve been going on about we must user centric, we must be user centric, which of course is true, we know this to be true; I’ve got three principles of [...] | 6 4 12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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SitePoint Podcast #156: Paywalls Revisited | Episode 156 of The SitePoint Podcast is now available! This week the panel is made up of Louis Simoneau (@rssaddict), Kevin Dees (@kevindees) and Patrick O’Keefe (@ifroggy). Listen in Your Browser Play this episode directly in your browser — just click the orange “play” button below: Download this Episode You can download this episode as a standalone MP3 file. Here’s the link: SitePoint Podcast #156: Paywalls Revisited (MP3, 34:00, 32.7MB) Subscribe to the Podcast The SitePoint Podcast is on iTunes! Add the SitePoint Podcast to your iTunes player. Or, if you don’t use iTunes, you can subscribe to the feed directly. Episode Summary Here are the main topics covered in this episode: Content Folding | CSS-Tricks The NYT Paywall Hums Along NY Times Paywall Nears Half a Million Monthly Subscribers A plea for progressive enhancement | Stephanie Rieger Why Developers Should Worry About Google Play Browse the full list of links referenced in the show at http://delicious.com/sitepointpodcast/156. googletag.cmd.push(function() { googletag.display('div-gpt-ad-1328644474660-10'); }); Host Spotlights Patrick: Books have a big future – Readmill Kevin: Rainbow – Javascript Code Syntax Highlighting Louis: Replacing the -9999px hack (new image replacement) – Jeffrey Zeldman Presents The Daily Report Interview Transcript Louis: Hello, and welcome to another episode of the SitePoint Podcast. I’m back; I’ve been off for a couple of weeks sort of touring around Australia with my brother who’s come to visit. We’re back with a panel show; unfortunately Stephen couldn’t make it today, but hi Patrick and Kevin. Kevin: Howdy, howdy. Patrick: Hey guys. Kevin: How’s it going? Louis: Going great. Thanks for filling in with those interview shows, Kevin, much appreciated. Kevin: Oh yeah, no problem, it was fun, a bunch of really good guests and knowledgeable folks. Louis: Nice. Patrick: That sounded almost a little too slick (laughter), a little too slick, “A bunch of good guests and knowledgeable folks,” wink! Kevin: That’s right. Patrick: Well, it’s been a full month, it’s been a full month since we met up and did a group show. Louis: Yeah. Patrick: And I’ve been — we went to SXSW which is where Kevin got those interviews, and I got to say hi to him down there, and, yeah, just a mess of travel and being sick and having a cold and whatnot, but it’s good to be back. Kevin: But you’re better now, right? Patrick: I am. I’m almost 100%. Kevin: Good job, yay. Patrick: Yes. This isn’t like the poor podcast the other night that I couldn’t help coughing on; I had to keep muting the mic every 30 seconds. Kevin: Yeah. Patrick: Where does your brother live, Louis? Louis: Lives in Montreal. Patrick: Okay, wow, so that’s quite a trip. Louis: Yeah, quite a trip, pretty significant. Patrick: My brother only lives four hours away, so I’m thankful for that (laughter), not quite as long. Louis: It’s a bit more manageable. So who wants to go first with a story this week? Kevin: I’ll go first. I have an article from Chris Coyer on content folding, and he posted this a few days ago and it’s kind of relevant, but at the same time it’s a little future friendly, not necessarily now friendly, if that even makes sense. But basically he’s talking about the way you flow content with Responsive Web Design and what the W3C is doing in accordance to that with the — I think it’s the Regents Module. And basically he does a little tutorial on an interesting technique donated by Adobe on how to basically send pieces of content from one div to another based on how wide your screen is. So if you can imagine like with most sites you have a sidebar and a content area, and then as you lower the size of the screen the sidebar tends to jump all the way to the bottom, and so if you have like six or seven items [...] | 30 3 12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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SitePoint Podcast #155: Conferences and CodePoet at South By Southwest | Episode 155 of The SitePoint Podcast is now available! This week Kevin Dees (@kevindees) has two more interviews for us from South By South West. He interviews firstly Christopher Schmitt (@teleject) and Ari Styles (@ari4nne) of e4h.tv on conferences, and then Evan Soloman (@evansolomon) who works for Automatic as a Growth Engineer on WordPress.com and specifically CodePoet too. Listen in Your Browser Play this episode directly in your browser — just click the orange “play” button below: Download this Episode You can download this episode as a standalone MP3 file. Here’s the link: SitePoint Podcast #155: Conferences and CodePoet at South By Southwest (MP3, 31:58, 30.7MB) Subscribe to the Podcast The SitePoint Podcast is on iTunes! Add the SitePoint Podcast to your iTunes player. Or, if you don’t use iTunes, you can subscribe to the feed directly. googletag.cmd.push(function() { googletag.display('div-gpt-ad-1328644474660-10'); }); Episode Summary Kevin, Christopher and Ari cover conferencing including the different ways of running conferences, the benefits of those different ways and how to get the most from conferences. Kevin then talks with Evan about his work as a Growth Engineer at Automatic, and specifically the new development work taking place on CodePoet and how that will work for people who build websites for people with WordPress. Browse the full list of links referenced in the show at http://delicious.com/sitepointpodcast/155. Interview Transcript Kevin: Hi and welcome to the SitePoint Podcast. I’m Kevin Dees and today I have two interviews for you recorded remotely from South by Southwest. In the first of these interviews I speak with Ari Styles and Christopher Schmitt from Environments for Humans about web conferences and how you can get involved. So I’m here with Christopher Schmitt and Ari Styles, hello guys. Ari: Hey! Christopher: Hey, Kevin, how’s it going? Kevin: So this is my first like remote interview, so pardon the audio quality if it’s not the best. Ari: He’s taken it on the road. Kevin: Yes. But I’m making up for that with some awesome guests to talk with me about conferences. Christopher: Where, where are they? Ari: (Laughs) Kevin: They just left, dang it, end of interview. Ari: Sorry, you’re going to have to talk to us I guess. Kevin: Well, since I’m stuck with you guys, you both do online conferences, the Environments for Humans, and you also do a conference called the In Control, and that’s in Orlando; it’s been in Orlando for how long now? Christopher: This is our third year, but we have been doing In Control for four years, the first year was in Cincinnati, and then for the last three years been in Orlando. Well, actually we go with — we work with AIGA, which is a graphic design professional network in America, and so we work with the AIGA Orlando chapter to have a web design kind of program not only for the community in Orlando but nationwide, actually they’re international, in fact, a lot of international attendees come in for the content. And In Control, it’s a two-day conference, it’s one track, we have keynotes on both days, but what makes In Control a little bit different is that Ari and I we really want to make sure that attendees get takeaways, they’re actionable, and that we actually kind of do something mean to our speakers who aren’t doing keynotes, and that makes you have sessions that are about an hour and forty minutes long. Kevin: Right. Which is very unique to the conference world. Christopher: Yeah, there’s workshops for sure, they’ve got three six hours or maybe longer, you add more days to them, and sessions are sometimes an hour, but they’re not really an hour, they’re usually like forty minutes and then some Q&A, and then if you have some technical difficulties with the speaker setting it up and getting everything [...] | 23 3 12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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SitePoint Podcast #154: Education and CSS3 at South By Southwest | Episode 154 of The SitePoint Podcast is now available! This week Kevin Dees (@kevindees) has two interviews for us from South By South West. He interviews firstly Bob Simonette (@Bongo_Bob) and Jeremy Stepp on web education, and then Chris Mills (@chrisdavidmills) who works for Opera about HTML5 and CSS3. Listen in Your Browser Play this episode directly in your browser — just click the orange “play” button below: Download this Episode You can download this episode as a standalone MP3 file. Here’s the link: SitePoint Podcast #154: Education and CSS3 at South By Southwest (MP3, 35:51, 35.4MB) Subscribe to the Podcast The SitePoint Podcast is on iTunes! Add the SitePoint Podcast to your iTunes player. Or, if you don’t use iTunes, you can subscribe to the feed directly. googletag.cmd.push(function() { googletag.display('div-gpt-ad-1328644474660-10'); }); Episode Summary Kevin, Bob and Jeremy cover various things about Web education including how web educators can improve their courses and also how students can play their part in improving the courses they take part in. Kevin then talks with Chris about how we can take a pragmatic approach to the use of HTML5 and CSS3. Browse the full list of links referenced in the show at http://delicious.com/sitepointpodcast/154. Interview Transcript Kevin: Hi, and welcome to the SitePoint Podcast. I’m Kevin Dees and today we have two remotely recorded interviews at South By Southwest this year for you. The first of these is with Jeremy Stepp and Bob Simonette on Web education. Both of these men are practiced Web educators and have been in the field for some time. So I’m here with Bob Simonette and Jeremy Stepp, tell me if I butcher your name in any way. Bob: No, that’s pretty good, you got it. Kevin: So, I’ve been following Bob on Twitter for a good two years now, and we’re still at South by, we’re at the Hampton Inn, and Bob and Steven are teachers, they’ve been teaching on the Web for quite a while from what I understand; how long has it been? Bob: I’ve been — as far as doing Distance Ed or just teaching in general? Kevin: Teaching, teaching. Bob: Eleven years, so almost eleven and a half years now. Kevin: So, you teach the Web specifically, and that’s why I wanted to talk to you because in the Web space there’s a lot of this kind of negative connotation that goes along with education in the Web, and not without good reason, because the Web is young, it’s only been around 20 some-odd years now, and so it’s very hard to have a solid curriculum with something so young; other things that they teach have hundreds of years of studies and things that you can go off of, such as mathematics and language. Bob: Right. Kevin: But the Web is a different beast in and of itself, and you get to teach that on a day-to-day basis. And one of the things I want to kind of make the topic of this conversation is how students can work to make education better for themselves because, you know, the learning has to come from the student, right, it can’t — it does come from a teacher but the student has to communicate that to the higher education, right, I would say to help you push that to the people that you have to talk to to get the curriculum. And so while there is a little bit of background noise here, it’s a little bit earlier in the day, I would like to get maybe some viewpoints that you have on some of the day-to-day things that you do in your classes. Bob: Okay, well, in my classes in particular I teach most of the front-end stuff, the HTML, CSS, JavaScript, I also have a class that deals with putting video and audio and those types of things onto the Web. And so for me especially, and you’re right, it is the student, it does have to be up to the student moreso now than ever, that wasn’t the case really when I started eleven years ago, started teaching [...] | 20 3 12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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SitePoint Podcast #153: Mobile First with Luke Wroblewski | Episode 153 of The SitePoint Podcast is now available! This week our regular interview host Louis Simoneau (@rssaddict) interviews Luke Wroblewski (@lukew), author of Mobile First by A Book Apart about what it means to design for mobile first, and why that is a winning approach for web designers. Listen in Your Browser Play this episode directly in your browser — just click the orange “play” button below: Download this Episode You can download this episode as a standalone MP3 file. Here’s the link: SitePoint Podcast #153: Mobile First with Luke Wroblewski (MP3, 28:46, 27.6MB) Subscribe to the Podcast The SitePoint Podcast is on iTunes! Add the SitePoint Podcast to your iTunes player. Or, if you don’t use iTunes, you can subscribe to the feed directly. Episode Summary Louis and Luke cover how you design for mobile platforms first and how this can provide a real ‘focus’ to the content and layout which benefits the design for all platforms. googletag.cmd.push(function() { googletag.display('div-gpt-ad-1328644474660-10'); }); Browse the full list of links referenced in the show at http://delicious.com/sitepointpodcast/153. Interview Transcript Louis: Hello and welcome to another episode of the SitePoint Podcast. Today on the show I’m very happy to have with us on the program Luke Wroblewski who’s an interaction designer and author based in the United States; hi, Luke. Luke: Hey, how you doing? Louis: Good, good, how are you? Luke: Great. Louis: So I wanted to have you on the show for some time now, I tried to get in touch with you a bit end of last year and finally managed to work out a schedule, and you’ve been pretty busy with conferences because you’re latest book came out at the end of last year. Luke: Yeah, that was around October I believe on A Book Apart. Louis: Right. And so this is a book called Mobile First, and this is an idea you’ve been talking about for some time even before the book came out. Luke: Yeah, several years now actually. Louis: Right. And I guess it’s maybe reaching a more critical mass point now with mobile. Luke: Yeah, absolutely, it’s several years ago back in 2008, 2009 timeframe there were very few people who took it very seriously, but now I think it’s almost the exact opposite in that there are very few people that aren’t giving it some attention. Louis: Right. So we’ll have a lot of opportunity to talk about Mobile First and what you mean by that in detail, but we could start by just sort of defining what you mean when you say Mobile First, and that’s the name of the book, and that’s the idea you’ve been throwing out for some time. What exactly does that mean? Luke: Yeah, so it’s pretty simple, basically it means working on the mobile version of your software products first. Traditionally we’ve sort of done it the opposite way, we do the desktop/laptop versions, if you will, and then mobile if teams thought about it at all, it was a significant afterthought. Louis: Right, and so obviously this comes at a good time, and like we were saying before, mobile is exploding in growth now, so we can sort of see why teams would want to start doing more mobile, but, what do you see is really the advantage above and beyond just getting access to that traffic, because you could get access to that traffic by doing mobile second, right. Luke: Hmm-mm. Louis: So what are the other reasons you suggest that people should go with mobile first. Luke: Yeah, so there’s essentially three pieces to the reasons why, one you touched on which is just this crazy growth we’re having, and I think people will begin to operate differently, for example, in Japan, Mixi, largest social network there, 85% of their traffic comes from mobile now, whereas 4 ½ years ago it was 14%. So you start to really prioritize things differently when 85% of your traffic is coming from a [...] | 9 3 12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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SitePoint Podcast #152: The Opposite Of Finland | Episode 152 of The SitePoint Podcast is now available! This week the panel is made up of Louis Simoneau (@rssaddict), Stephan Segraves (@ssegraves) and Patrick O’Keefe (@ifroggy). Listen in Your Browser Play this episode directly in your browser — just click the orange “play” button below: Download this Episode You can download this episode as a standalone MP3 file. Here’s the link: SitePoint Podcast #152: The Opposite Of Finland (MP3, 37:16, 35.8MB) Subscribe to the Podcast The SitePoint Podcast is on iTunes! Add the SitePoint Podcast to your iTunes player. Or, if you don’t use iTunes, you can subscribe to the feed directly. Episode Summary Here are the main topics covered in this episode: Has the address bar had its day? | Feature | .net magazine VentureBeat Flubs Flickr/Pinterest Restrictions Ringmark Facebook Sends 60M Monthly Vistors to 3rd Party Apps – The Next Web Microsoft Reveals the New Windows 8 Logo » SitePoint Browse the full list of links referenced in the show at http://delicious.com/sitepointpodcast/152. googletag.cmd.push(function() { googletag.display('div-gpt-ad-1328644474660-10'); }); Host Spotlights Patrick: A Show with Ze Frank by Ze Frank — Kickstarter Louis: Tower.js – Full Stack JavaScript Framework for Node.js and the Browser Stephan: OpenGeocoder.net Interview Transcript Louis: Hello and welcome to another episode of the SitePoint podcast. Got a bit of a panel show going on this week, unfortunately Kevin could not be with us, but Patrick and Stephan are both here, hi guys. Stephan: Howdy, howdy. Patrick: Hey, it’s good to be here. Louis: It’s good to be here for sure, how you guys been? Stephan: Pretty good, pretty good. Patrick: Pretty good, just working hard, keeping busy, looking forward to going to South by Southwest in about, what is it, two weeks, March 11th I’ll be headed — oh, I’m sorry, March 9th I’ll be heading out, and Kevin will be down there, get to see him and see a lot of other random interactive tech design people. Louis: Very nice. Patrick: It should be fun. Louis: Yeah, I really, um, I should try and make it out there sometime, it’s a long flight when I was living in Quebec, but now it’s become an insane flight, so. Patrick: Yeah. Louis: Maybe someday, but I’m not making it easy for myself. Patrick: Yeah, it’s like another extra couple days in the air. Louis: Yeah. Patrick: Stephan knows all about that. Stephan: (Snickers) Louis: Alright. So, what’s new on the Web this week, who wants to kick it off? Patrick: Well, I’ll go ahead and kick it off with a story from .net Magazine, which gave us the Podcast of the Year Award a couple years ago, thank you for that again (laughter). Louis: We’re just never gonna get over that. Patrick: Yeah, it’s like give it to us again please, no. Anyway, kind of an interesting fodder story, not really news, but the story is Has the Address Bar had Its Day by Gus Andrews, and it talks about how Safari, Chrome and Firefox have experimented with getting rid of the address bar and how it has maintained nonetheless, covers some different viewpoints, like Jacob Nielson who says that he would support the idea of temporarily hiding elements of the interface like the address bar, but warned that “doing so is dangerous, what’s out of sight is often out of mind, and you definitely cannot rely on short-term memory in user interface design,” and that’s a quote from him. And other people say the address bar is a security feature because it shows people that they are on the right website, and then you have Jeffery Zeldman and Kevin Hoffman at Happy Cog who say it’s often a feature for advanced users because a lot of more novice people who surf the Web don’t really go to the address bar, they use the search engines or like Google.com and they type in addresses into the search box or find a [...] | 2 3 12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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SitePoint Podcast #151: Vender Prefixes vs Web Standards with Rachel Andrew | Episode 151 of The SitePoint Podcast is now available! This week our regular interview host Louis Simoneau (@rssaddict) interviews Rachel Andrew (@rachelandrew), one of the co-author of Everything You Know About CSS is Wrong and the author of The CSS Anthology (about to go into it’s fourth version) about the ongoing vendor prefix saga and how that affects the future of Web standards. Listen in Your Browser Play this episode directly in your browser — just click the orange “play” button below: Download this Episode You can download this episode as a standalone MP3 file. Here’s the link: SitePoint Podcast #151: Vender Prefixes vs Web Standards with Rachel Andrew (MP3, 30:55, 28.4MB) Subscribe to the Podcast The SitePoint Podcast is on iTunes! Add the SitePoint Podcast to your iTunes player. Or, if you don’t use iTunes, you can subscribe to the feed directly. googletag.cmd.push(function() { googletag.display('div-gpt-ad-1328644474660-10'); }); Episode Summary Louis and Rachel cover Mozilla considering supporting the WebKit vendor prefixes for certain CSS properties Firefox already supports and how that could lead us away from having an effective set of Web Standards for the future. Browse the full list of links referenced in the show at http://delicious.com/sitepointpodcast/151. Interview Transcript Louis: Hello and welcome to another episode of the SitePoint Podcast coming to you a little bit late this week, we had a little bit of trouble getting the schedule together, but I hope it was worth the while because we have with us today on the show Rachel Andrew; hi, Rachel. Rachel: Hello. Louis: So Rachel is a web developer, will be well known to any long time SitePoint fans, she’s the author of a few of our books actually, co-authored Everything You Know About CSS is Wrong with Kevin Yank, who was the former host of the podcast, and also wrote The CSS Anthology, and you’re currently working on a fourth edition, is that right? Rachel: That’s right, yeah. Louis: Just putting the finishing touches now, if I understand it. Rachel: That’s right, yeah. Louis: We’re expecting that in a month or two maybe. Rachel: Hmm-mm, yeah, I believe so. Louis: Fantastic. I want to talk to you a bit about what’s new in the book a bit later, give you the chance to plug it a little bit, but before that, the main reason I wanted to talk to you is this ongoing I guess you could call it a drama concerning vendor prefixes, which came out of a W3C meeting recently, and you wrote a blog post on it about the issue for the Web Standards Project’s blog. Rachel: Hmm-mm. Louis: So, we talked about this a little bit on the podcast last week, but for anyone who’s either just tuning in, or to get a more complete breakdown of the issue, do you want to just go over sort of what happened and why it’s important. Rachel: So what’s really happened is that because of the mobile web particularly being very WebKit-centric, you know, most of the browsers that people are using on mobile devices are running some form of WebKit, or the ones people are caring about, they’re thinking about iPhones and Android devices as well. So, web developers are implementing the new features of CSS3 using these vendor prefixes and only using WebKit prefix, when in fact we’ve got prefixes for Mozilla, for other browsers as well, but these aren’t being used. And so what’s happening is that obviously in the browsers that have support for these CSS features with their own prefix, people aren’t seeing the site in the same way they’re seeing it on WebKit browsers, which obviously for those other browser they want the site to look as good. So the danger is that what will happen is that other browsers will start implementing WebKit prefixes rather than allowing people to use their own prefixes or the standard feature, and this is becoming a real sort of [...] | 27 2 12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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SitePoint Podcast #150: The Vendor Prefix Kerfuffle | Episode 150 of The SitePoint Podcast is now available! This week the panel is made up of Louis Simoneau (@rssaddict), Kevin Dees (@kevindees), Stephan Segraves (@ssegraves) and Patrick O’Keefe (@ifroggy). Listen in Your Browser Play this episode directly in your browser — just click the orange “play” button below: Download this Episode You can download this episode as a standalone MP3 file. Here’s the link: SitePoint Podcast #150: The Vendor Prefix Kerfuffle (MP3, 38:29, 35.3MB) Subscribe to the Podcast The SitePoint Podcast is on iTunes! Add the SitePoint Podcast to your iTunes player. Or, if you don’t use iTunes, you can subscribe to the feed directly. Episode Summary Here are the main topics covered in this episode: TL;DR on Vendor Prefix Drama | CSS-Tricks 2011 Top Level Domain Sales 24 Hours » The Kickstarter Blog — Kickstarter Top Domains: ViSalus Dishes Out $825K To Buy “Challenge.com” and “Vi.com”\ Browse the full list of links referenced in the show at http://delicious.com/sitepointpodcast/150. googletag.cmd.push(function() { googletag.display('div-gpt-ad-1328644474660-10'); }); Host Spotlights Patrick: Superbowl Ad Video (comedy) Stephan: YOURLS: Your Own URL Shortener Kevin: SSH tricks Louis: Subscribe — Destroy All Software ScreencastsHow and Why to Avoid Nil — Destroy All Software Screencasts Interview Transcript Louis: Hello and welcome to another episode of the SitePoint Podcast, I think it’s episode 150, is it not? Stephan: It is 150, I believe. Patrick: Everyone believes, no one knows, that’s how all opt-in we are (laughter). Louis: That’s how organized we are. So we’ve got a panel show this week; Patrick, Kevin and Stephan are all on the line, hi guys. Kevin: Howdy, howdy. Patrick: Hello. Louis: How you guys been? Stephan: Busy. Patrick: Pretty good; last show I was down in Orlando to record it with Kevin on his couch, and spend some time in Atlanta, spoke at CNN, and I’m actually drinking a Coke from a glass bottle right now, so, there’s that, I got it from the World of Coke in Atlanta. Which if you know me you know I love soda, and I love the World of Coke where you can drink over 60 different soft drinks from around the world, but also the new Coca-Cola Freestyle machine which dispenses another 100+, so, yes, it’s a great place. Kevin: I absolutely hate those Coke dispensers because they are not as carbonated as they should be, and it feels like a mixed drink that hasn’t been mixed thoroughly, so, you know, and you don’t want to mix a coke because then you lose all your carbonation, so it’s like you don’t have enough carbonation and then you mix it and they don’t have any carbonation anymore, so now you’re drinking a flat soda. Cool idea, bad implementation. Louis: (Laughs) Patrick: And then it turned into the soda show (laughter). No, I love the Freestyle, I love the Coca-Cola Freestyle, but I will say that there are some sodas, and it’s really like one or two that I prefer the standard mix versus the Freestyle, but the Freestyle is actually kind of new and kind of cool technology that our audience might appreciate because it dispenses the syrup and the carbonation and the water in like a precise formula so that the restaurant can’t change that and mess it up, so this is how it’s supposed to actually taste, so, I thought that was interesting. Louis: Years ago when I was traveling through the U.S. I was in a, um, I think it was a McDonald’s, and they served I think it was a Sprite where it was too much syrup, where they’d messed up the mix, and it was just like — it was just like liquid sugar with a little bit of water and a little bit of carbonation, it was awful. Patrick: Yeah. Louis: Anyway, I don’t do soda anymore, not because of that (laughter). Patrick: You came to America and America totally turned him off to soda [...] | 18 2 12 | Free | View In iTunes |
| Total: 14 Episodes |
Customer Reviews
Well informed
If you do web design for a living, then I would highly recommend subscribing to this. The SitePoint podcast is presented by a very well informed panel who discuss the latest news and developments in the world of the world wide web. There are also plenty of tips and advice as well.
Love this podcast
No other web podcast do the group discussion as well as these guys. And being punctuated by well executed interview episodes it's simply brilliant. Well recommended.
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