등록신청기 이스북 트위터

Bitcoin vs Litecoin

PHP vs Node.JS

등록신청기 이스북 트위터
이 름 사 진 강� 내용 프로필
Richard D. Worth The State of jQuery

jQuery has grown over nearly 7 years to become the most widely used JavaScript library ever. What is planned for jQuery 2.0, and related projects jQuery UI, jQuery Mobile, QUnit, and TestSwarm. We will also discuss the jQuery Foundation, which supports the development of these and the community around them.
Richard is Executive Director of the jQuery Foundation and former lead of the jQuery UI project. He lives in the Washington, D.C. area and works for Bocoup, training mobile and web developers in JavaScript, jQuery, and HTML5.
Ralph Whitbeck In-depth look at the mechanics of mobile app framework

According to the jQuery Mobile team, South Korea is the most popular country for jQuery Mobile development in the world. This session will take an in-depth look at the mechanics of this excellent mobile app framework as well as cover widget creation, plugin integration, and custom theming. And that's not all.
Ralph Whitbeck is a front-end web developer with over 15 years experience in web development including HTML5, CSS3, and JavaScript with a focus in jQuery. Ralph also has experience in developing web strategies, usability testing, working with ASP.NET and SQL Server. Ralph is a co-author of O'Reilly's jQuery Cookbook and is currently working on another piece for O'Reilly based on jQuery Mobile. Ralph is a board member on the jQuery Foundation as well as a co-host on the Official jQuery Podcast.
Kris Borchers The New Hotness in jQuery UI

The jQuery UI team has been working really hard lately to not only update the website, add an API site, and fix bugs and further stabilize the library, but to also add a number of new, and highly requested widgets. In this talk, we will take a brief look at the status of the jQuery UI project and its planned roadmap going forward. From there, we'll dive a little deeper into the new widgets that were introduced in 1.9, then we'll take a quick look at what's coming in 1.10, 1.11 and 2.0 and hopefully give you a clear picture of where the project is headed and how you could possibly jump in and help us out.
Kris is a front-end/mobile web app developer, primarily focused on JavaScript, HTML5 and CSS3. He is a Senior Software Engineer on the AeroGear team at Red Hat where their goal is to help JBoss, and non-JBoss users alike, bring enterprise level web, hybrid and native applications to mobile devices. Kris is also a committer on the jQuery UI project and has been dabbling in open source projects for years.
Corey Frang jQuery Animation

Animation is not a simple thing. We will learn to avoid some common problems people face when trying to animate, learn how to best use and extend jQuery's animation capabilities, and explore the new animation options in jQuery 1.8 and UI 1.9.
Corey is an active contributor to most of the jQuery teams and is active in the jQuery community on IRC, and Stack Overflow. He has restructured the effects modules in both UI and Core, maintains the jQuery Color Animations plugin, and puppeteers the new jQuery servers.
Julian Aubourg Ask Julian about XHR

Think you know everything about $.ajax()? Think again! Prefilters, transports, converters: there are so many ways you can hook into jQuery's network architecture and make your life that much easier. Illformed JSON you have no way to fix on the backend? Solved! Need to load a stylesheet and wait for it to be loaded? Solved! Need to parse error messages automagically? Solved! If you're using $.ajax() on a daily basis, then that's a session you don't wanna miss.
Julian is a member of the jQuery Core Team living in Brussels. He is the man behind the Ajax rewrite and the implementation of Deferreds in the library. While not working on jQuery and other open-source JavaScript projects, Julian creates web sites and gives JavaScript and jQuery trainings through his own Paris-based company: Creative-Area.
Dan Heberden Getting In Sync With Async

Asynchronous code is hard. Especially when it needs to happen synchronously. We'll cover a great solution to this problem using jQuery's Deferreds and Callbacks API. We'll also take a look at how flow control and asynchronous operations can be easily managed and utilized to their fullest potential.
Dan Heberden is a Portland, Oregon based web developer and Director of Technology at the jQuery Foundation. He's an expert on deployment and the author of Gith, an open-source tool for deployment.
Alex Schmitz jQuery Mobile: Common Pitfalls and Gotchas.

jQuery Mobile makes developing mobile apps and sites easy, semantic and familiar. However those familiar with typical desktop patterns may find themselves banging their heads against the wall when something “simple” doesn’t work as expected. This session will go through some of the most common problems and pitfalls facing those jumping into jQuery Mobile. Areas covered will include injecting and enhancing dynamic content, working with enhanced form elements, refactoring for pageinit vs $(document).ready(), and the navigation model / page events.
Alex Schmitz is a Portland, Maine based web developer and the newest member of the jQuery Mobile team. He has been a web developer for over 16 years and is passionate about the future of the mobile web. He is currently the Internet Development Administrator for a chain of car dealerships and co-founder of Splyst LLC a Miami, Fl based technology startup.
Wonsuk Lee HTML5 and New Era

We have entered a "mobile era" in which standard technologies have opened doors to an open web platform -- a new generation platform that provides freedom with app compatibility. In this session, we will look at HTML5 industry trends, W3C standardization (including Web OS and app stores), and what this new era has to bring.
2011~NOW Samsung Electronics
2012~NOW W3C System Applications WG Co-Chair
2010~NOW W3C HTML5 Korean Interest Group Chair
2008~NOW W3C Device APIs WG, Media Annotation WG Editor

Cryptocurrency Trading Bot Comparison