This blog post demonstrates how to tie together Vue.js and GraphQL using the Apollo Client. This is not something that I’ve tried yet, but it’s on the horizon.
If you have any other handy links for either Vue.js or GraphQL, please throw them my way.
I work in technology sector. And I do round a clock, not only from 9 to 5. It is my bread and butter, it is my hobby, it is the fascination of my life. And with the current rate of change particular in information technology (IT), there is always something new to learn, to try, to talk about. I often post news, thoughts, and reviews. And when I do, this is the category I use.
This blog post demonstrates how to tie together Vue.js and GraphQL using the Apollo Client. This is not something that I’ve tried yet, but it’s on the horizon.
If you have any other handy links for either Vue.js or GraphQL, please throw them my way.
I’ve done a little spring cleaning of some plugins installed and activated on this site. You shouldn’t notice much of a difference, except, maybe, fewer quirks and issues. Here are some of the plugins that were removed:
That’s 6 plugins fewer – not bad. Especially considering that some of them were quite heavy on the rendering side of things, and they were inserting useless CSS and JavaScript assets into every page of this site. I think I should do it more often.
“How we designed our Kubernetes infrastructure on AWS” is a case study of how Atlassian (the kind people behind BitBucket, HipChat, Jira, and a few other popular tools) setup their infrastructure on Amazon AWS.
With all the popularity of the cloud in general and AWS in particular, there is still not enough articles like this one.
Botwiki is an impressive collection of bots for a variety of social networks and collaboration tools – Twitter, Slack, Tubmlr, Facebook and Messenger, YouTube, Reddit, Telegram, Snapchat, and more. You can browse all these by network or by category.
Here’s a random Twitter bot for you:
@holidaybot4000 is a Twitter bot that tweets holidays around the world for the given day, typically together with an image of the country’s flag.
“50 Things You [Probably] Forgot To Design” is a collection of all those tiny (and not so tiny) details that are often left out during the design process for a website, web application, or mobile app. It covers a variety of bits from favicons to login forms, splash screens, pagination, and welcome emails.
If you only it was available now as a checklist …