InfoQ Homepage Rich Internet Apps Content on InfoQ
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Interview with Tom Schindl on the State of Java FX Within Eclipse
Recorded at EclipseCon NA 2015, Tom Schindl talks to Alex Blewitt about the state of Java FX within Eclipse, from being used to create performant GUI tools to rendering the E4 Eclipse IDE with JavaFX as a replacement for SWT.
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Tomomi Imura on Mobile Web, Future of CSS
Tomomi Imura discusses the state of the mobile web, responsive design, device APIs, how CSS preprocessors helped evolve the CSS standard, and much more.
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Feross Aboukhadijeh on WebRTC, PeerCDN, WebTorrent
Feross Aboukhadijeh explains WebRTC, peer to peer networking with WebRTC, how PeerCDN uses WebRTC, WebTorrent, and much more.
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Evan Czaplicki on FRP in the Browser with Elm, Time Travelling Debugger
Evan Czaplicki explains Elm, an FRP language that compiles to JavaScript/HTML/CSS, the different approaches to reactive programming, the Elm time travelling debugger and much more.
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Zach Holman on all Things Github
Many of today's most prominent app developers rely upon GitHub, a popular website that facilitates online collaboration between members of all areas of the software engineering community. Learn about the nuts and bolts of GitHub; like Repositories, Contributions, projects and streaks from Zach Holman in this InfoQ interview recorded live at QCon San Francisco 2013.
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Chris McMahon on Open Software Testing at Wikipedia
Chris McMahon discusses radically open source testing at Wikipedia and has put out a call for the testing community to participate, as well as discussing approaches to browser test automation.
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Software Engineer Panos Astithas of Mozilla on Debugging Tools and Open Source
JavaScript expert Panos Astithas discusses the latest trends in mobile app development. The tools that Panos employs in his work as Software Engineer at Mozilla help to keep their applications as bug-free and smooth running as possible. Effective debugging is all about having the best developer tools available.
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Content Security Policy with Mike West
The Content Security Policy specification is a mechanism web applications can use to mitigate a broad class of content injection vulnerabilities, such as cross-site scripting (XSS). Content Security Policy is a declarative policy that lets web developers inform the client about the sources from which the application expects to load resources.
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Frank Greco on WebSocket
Frank Greco explains the reasons behind the WebSocket standard, the current implementations, how WebSocket relates to AJAX and Comet for event driven applications, and much more.
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Kevin Moore on Dart
Kevin Moore explains the motivations behind Dart, the status of the Dart language and VM, the Dart library ecosystem and much more.
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Bijan Vaez on HTML5, Mobile Development with Web vs Native Apps
Bijan Vaez explains how and why the EventMobi conference mobile app was built with HTML5 instead of native technologies, the challenges and advantages, and much more.
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Faruk Ates on Modernizr, Shims and Polyfills
Faruk talks about Modernizr and the challenges he faced trying to build it. He also talks about the release cycles of browsers, HTML5 APIs and the evolutions of JavaScript.