I lost it completely, when all these adafruit and sparkfun boards statrted showing up in the search results.
What's wrong with Adafruit and Sparkfun? They make a lot of things that are handy for beginners, and especially outside of USA, they can be hard to get sometimes. Having access to them via DK is useful, and having them in DK's catalog doesn't somehow make other components less available!
Oh don even let me get started on web development. So for the last two years, I cannot convince our software team, that dumb "let the computer decide" autoscaling on graphs is not good. We have vertical scales like "16.1 16.6 17.0 17.5" because how the data is, and rounding problems. And then we got this gift that keeps on giving, our new website designer. So this bliss, had the idea, that we will replace all fonts with this beautiful, corporate approved font. We have GPS coordinates, and complete excel sheet sized tables, that people work with. decided to use this unreadable font, that gave me complete dyslexia. It took us 3 months to convince her to only use these for the headlines.
Sometimes I thinkk we should just slap these designers back to the earth. We just want a usable, Web 1.0 website, that doesnt have like button and doesnt overwrite the scroll functionality. We dont need your creativity, we need a website. You can create a my little pony fanclub website on your own time, and be creative there.
I couldn't agree more, and I've worked in web design. I am appalled at the direction web (and software) design has taken the past few years, with all the gains in screen size decimated by "airy" layouts that have microscopic amounts of information. Don't get me wrong, not everything in old-style websites was great, but damn…
When I bought my 24" 1920x1200 display in 2008, it gave me massive amounts of screen real estate, so I could easily open two documents side by side, or several web windows, and see plenty of content. Thanks to the dumb "whitespace" layouts of today, on the 27" 2560x1440 display I have now, I can see
less content. Absolutely maddening, and IMHO disrespectful of the user. If I want extra space around your content, I'll make the window the size I want and put a blank background behind that window.
What I also
hate about modern web technologies is how 99% of the time, they break the "back" functionality. In ages past, clicking "back" just took you right back, every time. Now, even on pages that aren't obviously dynamic, it usually plunks me back at the top of the page, rather than where I was scrolled to before. On dynamic pages like the Facebook timeline, "back" literally does not take you back to where you were, but to a new point in the timeline. The only modern, dynamic site that I have seen where "back" works 100% as it should is Twitter. I don't know how they did it, but they got it exactly,
exactly right. They've managed to manipulate the browser history just so, and have their backend designed just so, that together, even with a page reload, you're right where you left off, at the same place in a dynamically loaded timeline. My hats off to them. Now if only I found Twitter itself to be useful...