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[Webinar] Mindmapping Requirements For Agile Projects

By Robert Dempsey | May 23, 2013 mindmapping, webinars
Medium

Learn how to use mindmapping to create requirements and manage ideas for agile projects.

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Introducing Socialspring: Business Software, Humanized

By Intridea | May 23, 2011 socialspring, announcements, product, collaboration, answers, q&a, Q&A, qna
Medium
Socialspring is business software, humanized. The suite offers a complete set of tools for internal social collaboration, productivity, expert search and more. Unlike current social enterprise software, Socialspring is not just a dressed-up social network. We’ve re-imagined how business software can mimic real world social connections to help you be more productive and make work a more pleasurable experience overall. Socialspring apps will be united with single sign-on and although all of the apps can be used standalone, the more apps you use within the suite, the more powerful Socialspring becomes for your company. Read more…

It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds...with ZSH

By Jon Kinney | May 18, 2011 zsh, bash, oh-my-zsh
Medium

Captain Hammer told me they call it bash for a reason... don't say I didn't warn you. Of course I'm talking about my favorite superhero and the default shell in OS X respectively. Now, I'm not here to tell you that using bash is dumb and that you can only be a good developer if you use an alternate shell like ZSH, but I am here to say that when I use bash I feel dumb. Bash just seems to get in my way, probably because I never took the time to properly customize it. But now the hard work of terminal customization has been done for us by the oh-my-zsh community. A big thanks to all that have contributed!

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Rails 3: Fully Loaded

By Andy Wang | May 13, 2011 rails, tips, gems, rails 3
Medium

It's been close to a year since Rails 3 came out and I've had the pleasure of working on several Rails 3 projects since its release. Some existing gems became irrelevant with the release of Rails 3, while others lived. Additionally, we've seen many new gems come to life. I'd like to share a stack of gems that I've been using this year. Hopefully they will give people a bit of help while developing a new Rails 3 app.

Most of these gems have good documentation on their project wiki (every great gem should be well documented, right?), so I won't go into great detail about the mechanics. Instead, my aim is to introduce you to some of the gems I find most useful and separate them into meaningful categories, as a sort of reference guide.

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Presently Chrome Extension - Official Release

By Intridea | May 12, 2011 announcements, presently, update, chrome, extension
Medium

It's been in beta since the beginning of this year, but today it's official - we're releasing the Presently Chrome Extension as a full-fledged Presently client. We released the first version in January, and since then our developers have been adding functionality and making tweaks to give it bring functionality to the extension - so Presently users can enjoy a seamless integration of their corporate collaboration app within their Chrome browser. Now you can do almost everything you do on the native web app! In this version 0.1 you can:

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Designing for High Resolution Displays: Thinking Beyond 72 DPI

By Charles Martucci | May 9, 2011 tips, OS X, display, PPI, ipad, iphone, retina, development, design, apple
Medium

It’s been nearly a year since the release of the iPhone 4, and much to the dismay of the tech community, it’s still the only product in the Apple lineup with a high pixel density ‘Retina’ display. While the much-hyped feature drew universal praise when the device was unveiled, some were wondering the following:

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I Heart SASS, But HAML, I'm Just Not That In To You

Medium

Emacs vs Vim. iPhone vs Android. Of all of the nerd arguments, none hits closer to home for Ruby developers than HAML vs ERB. Proponents of HAML look at writing HTML as a dirty practice to be avoided at all costs and look down upon "mere" ERB authors. Meanwhile there's SASS, a language syntactically close kin to HAML and, until last week, one that even rode along inside the HAML gem. HAML abstracts HTML, SASS abstracts CSS. I'm not here to stop you from using HAML if you like it. Go for it. However, I'm tired of having an aesthetic choice that some developers make bandied about as if it were "the only way" to do things.

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