This gist shows how to create a GIF screencast using only free OS X tools: QuickTime, ffmpeg, and gifsicle.
To capture the video (filesize: 19MB), using the free "QuickTime Player" application:
| /* | |
| This document has been created with Marked.app <http://markedapp.com>, Copyright 2011 Brett Terpstra | |
| Please leave this notice in place, along with any additional credits below. | |
| --------------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Title: LaCroix Design Co. Proposal | |
| Author: James LaCroix — www.LaCroixDesign.net | |
| Description: Styles for outputting proposals to PDF using Marked. | |
| */ | |
| body { |
“I perfectly understand our CSS. I never have any issues with cascading rules. I never have to use !important or inline styles. Even though somebody else wrote this bit of CSS, I know exactly how it works and how to extend it. Fixes are easy! I have a hard time breaking our CSS. I know exactly where to put new CSS. We use all of our CSS and it’s pretty small overall. When I delete a template, I know the exact corresponding CSS file and I can delete it all at once. Nothing gets left behind.”
You often hear updog saying stuff like this. Who’s updog? Not much, who is up with you?
This is where any fun you might have been having ends. Now it’s time to get serious and talk about rules.
Writing CSS is hard. Even if you know all the intricacies of position and float and overflow and z-index, it’s easy to end up with spaghetti code where you need inline styles, !important rules, unused cruft, and general confusion. This guide provides some architecture for writing CSS so it stays clean and ma
| Somebody asked me how to become a Product Manager. Here's what I wrote them. | |
| --------------------------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Hi Jon, | |
| Those are a lot of questions. Let me try to simplify it. | |
| I think a Product Manager is a person who is responsible for determining | |
| what a product should be and how it should evolve. This is a design role |