Good Thursday, dear Mozilla Hacks readers! The Mozilla Developer Engagement Team has a new fresh list of reading suggestions for you!
Weekly links September 29th 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 tutorial series on Box2D and JavaScript should get you on the way to write the next Angry Birds.
If you want to read more tips or discuss the web with Christian, he’s available on Twitter as @codepo8.
Havi Hoffman
Marketing your startup with a steady drumbeat of data by Kelly Ford of Hunch.com, offers great suggestions for building reputation and credibility by sharing authoritative insights and crafting interesting stories and infographics.
Havi can be found on Twitter as @freshelectrons
Jeff Griffiths
Coffeescript in Firebug console with Acebug Lots of people complain about Firebug being sluggish, but lots of other people keep hacking cool stuff into it!
If you want to read more tips or discuss the web with Jeff, he’s available on Twitter as @canuckistani.
Joe Stagner
OpenStack Diablo Open Source Cloud Platform Accelerates High-Availability – A serious Open Source PaaS / Cloud option lets you develop Cloud Based applications your way!
If you want to read more tips or discuss the web with Joe, he’s available on Twitter as @MisfitGeek.
Rob Hawkes
Slideshare has finally ditched Flash for HTML5. This is a great move by the main player in the slide-hosting scene. Still, I’m interested to see how newcomer Speaker Deck improves in the near-future.
If you want to read more tips or discuss the web with Rob, he’s available on Twitter as @robhawkes.
Robert Nyman
The makeup of the Open Web stack – Comprehensive & accurate listing of the APIs & specs by David Storey
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.