Mozilla Hacks Weekly, September 22nd

It’s Thursday, and time for reading suggestions from the Mozilla Developer Engagement team!

Weekly links September 22th 2011

If there is anything you think we should read or know about, don’t hesitate to post a comment, contact us on Twitter or through any other mean.
The picks this week are:

Christian Heilmann

A picture of Christian Heilmann Responsive web design from the future is a very cool presentation talking about the need for responsive data interfaces.

If you want to read more tips or discuss the web with Christian, he’s available on Twitter as @codepo8.

Havi Hoffman

A picture of Havi Hoffman The work of data journalism: Find, clean, analyze, create … repeat – An interview with Simon Rogers, The Guardian’s pioneering data journalist, on effective and accurate data-driven storytelling.

Havi can be found on Twitter as @freshelectrons

Janet Swisher

A picture of Janet Swisher If you like Jacob Gube’s article 7 Best Practices for Improving Your Website’s Usability, you’ll love Ginny Redish’s book Letting Go of the Words: Writing Web Content that Works.

If you want to read more tips or discuss the web with Janet, she’s available on Twitter as @jmswisher.

Jeff Griffiths

A picture of Jeff Griffiths Migrations Map A slick data-driven map of worldwide immigration patterns, including a nice offline feature, and source hosted on github.

If you want to read more tips or discuss the web with Jeff, he’s available on Twitter as @canuckistani.

Joe Stagner

A picture of Joe Stagner Central to HTML concepts is the ability to design and build a Web app with an off-line experience. Here is a quick introduction to HTML5 caching, a core concept to building a standards based Web Application with disconnected support.

If you want to read more tips or discuss the web with Joe, he’s available on Twitter as @MisfitGeek.

Rob Hawkes

A picture of Rob Hawkes
WebGL and HTML5 Challenges For The Future is an interesting look at some of the important features that need to be supported for HTML5 and JavaScript games to really take hold.

If you want to read more tips or discuss the web with Rob, he’s available on Twitter as @robhawkes.

Robert Nyman

A picture of Robert Nyman BrowserID demo from the Mozilla All-Hands – Identity on the web At the Mozilla All Hands last week, BrowserID was demoed and described in more detail, and the goals and ideas for it.

If you want to read more tips or discuss the web with Robert, he’s available on Twitter as @robertnyman.

About Robert Nyman [Editor emeritus]

Technical Evangelist & Editor of Mozilla Hacks. Gives talks & blogs about HTML5, JavaScript & the Open Web. Robert is a strong believer in HTML5 and the Open Web and has been working since 1999 with Front End development for the web - in Sweden and in New York City. He regularly also blogs at http://robertnyman.com and loves to travel and meet people.

More articles by Robert Nyman [Editor emeritus]…