Julia Reda – 10 everyday things on the web the EU Commission wants to make illegal: Oettinger’s legacy
https://juliareda.eu/2016/12/10-illegal-things/ Those ideas do not look good. →
https://juliareda.eu/2016/12/10-illegal-things/ Those ideas do not look good. →
http://webkay.robinlinus.com/ Take a look at here to get idea how much your web browser knows about you and can tell to web apps when properly asked. →
http://searchengineland.com/fun-robots-txt-263796 →
Cats and the Internet belong together as images and videos of domestic cats make up some of the most viewed content on the web according to Wikipedia (funny Lolcat pictures and cats like Grumpy Cat and Lil Bub). The subject has attracted the attention of various scholars and critics, who have analyzed why this form →
https://medium.freecodecamp.com/is-mvc-dead-for-the-frontend-35b4d1fe39ec#.1q38fj8mz This article shows that popular classic MVC model does not seem to be the best approach to build many modern web applications. →
https://www.onthewire.io/more-than-half-of-all-pages-on-chrome-loaded-over-https/ Google’s efforta to make HTTPS default protocol for web sitea is starting to pay off. →
https://www.smartly.io/blog/how-we-scaled-architecture-to-handle-thousands-of-image-rendering-requests-per-second?utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=RECRUITMENT+-+FINLAND+-+Juuso+Blog+Post+-+Interests%2C+students+%26+job+titles&utm_source=facebook&utm_content=RECRUITMENT+-+FINLAND+-+Juuso+Blog+Post+-+Interests%2C+students+%26+job+titles+-+Interests+-+Link+Post+-+Juuso+blog+post+-+more+text+-+23842518671240650&utm_id=58144a441aa2929f618b4571 How to build high performance image processing and web server system. →
The Linux Foundation Unites JavaScript Community for Open Web Development tells that The Linux Foundation, the nonprofit advancing professional open source management for mass collaboration, has announced that JS Foundation is now a Linux Foundation Project. JS Foundation is designed to help JavaScript application and server-side projects. Initial projects being welcomed into the mentorship program →
Mozilla Reduces Threat of Export-Grade Crypto to Firefox article tells that Logjam was one of several downgrade attacks discovered in the last 18 months that could theoretically allow a resourced attacker to take advantage of lingering export-grade cryptography to read and modify data over a supposedly secure connection. Other related recent crypto problems are recent OpenSSL →
https://opensource.com/alternatives/dreamweaver This article has a good list of HTML editors. →