65: Strand Web Components
MediaMath (@MediaMath) has created an open source project built on top of Web Components & Polymer (@Polymer) called Strand. It was created for their internal web product Terminal One but is available and easy to get on Github. Daniel Lasky (@aerolith), Justin Moore (@jcmmit), & Anthony Koerber (@DrDooganMeister) chat with us about the pains of migrating from Polymer 0.5 to 1.0 as well as what it has been like to drive an open source Web Components library with Polymer Elements ranging from basic buttons to complex grids. Check out Strand’s documentation for further detail
O’Reilly Media Partner DiscountsThe Web Platform Podcast is a proud O’Reilly Media Partner. As such, one of the benefits we provide our listeners are special discounts such as 50% off ebooks and 40% in printed material. This includes but is not limited to books on the web technologies. Your discount code is PCBW so head over to http://www.oreilly.com/ right now to get all your favorite tech books at much lower prices.
Your Latest O’Reilly Discounts Free eBook: Data-Informed Product Designhttp://www.oreilly.com/pub/cpc/1220
Designers must understand user needs to create any product. But what type of data should you look at? In her new book, Data-Informed Product Design, Pamela Pavliscak outlines a way to use data of all kinds to understand the relationship between people and technology. Generally speaking, big data is quantitative; it gives you the what, where, and when, while “thick data” provides the qualitative perspective—the how and the why.
Up until now, there hasn't been much information on how to combine quantitative big data with qualitative thick data. That's where this report can help. If you're involved in any aspect of product design, this is indispensable reading. It's useful, and we're pleased to offer it to you, for free! Get the free ebook now.
Design Sprint: A fast start to creating a great digital producthttp://www.oreilly.com/pub/cpc/1221
October 20 | 10:00am PT | Banfield, Lombardo, & Wax
The Design Sprint is the first, and for some projects the most significant, phase of a design thinking process. It gets the entire product design and development team on the same page, reduces the risk of downstream mistakes, and generates vision-lead goals for the team to measure their success. Join Richard Banfield, C. Todd Lombardo, and Trace Wax as they explain why and how Design Sprints work and how you can use Design Sprints to enhance your own design process.
Resources
- MediaMath Strand Library - https://mediamath.github.io/strand/ http://strand.mediamath.com
- Strand on Github - https://github.com/MediaMath/strand/
- Strand Docs -http://mediamath.github.io/strand/article_getting_started.html
- Polymer Project - https://www.polymer-project.org/1.0/
- MediaMath - http://www.mediamath.com/
- Backbone.js - http://backbonejs.org/
- Steal.js - http://stealjs.com/
- How should I name my element? - http://webcomponents.org/articles/how-should-i-name-my-element/
Panelists
- Erik Isaksen (@eisaksen) - Front End Development Lead at Deloitte Digital & Google Developer Expert in Web Technologies
- Justin Ribeiro (@justinribeiro) - Wearables & HTML5 Google Developer Expert & Partner at Stickman Ventures or random person who keeps finding Hangout link. You decide