Weekly Digest 08/2021

Marco Biedermann
4 min readFeb 28, 2021

Welcome to my Weekly Digest #8 of this year and the last one of February.

This weekly digest contains a lot of interesting and inspiring articles, videos, tweets, and designs I consumed during this week.

Interesting articles to read

Getting Deep into Shadows

Let’s talk shadows in web design. Shadows add texture, perspective, and emphasize the dimensions of objects. In web design, using light and shadow can add physical realism.

The Future of CSS: Scroll-Linked Animations with @scroll-timeline

The “Scroll-linked Animations Specification” is an upcoming addition to CSS that defines a way for creating animations that are linked to a scroll offset of a scroll container. Let’s take a look at how it works and what results we can achieve with it.

.new — Google Registry

Browse the full list of .new shortcuts available today from Adobe, Spotify, and many more.

A DRY Approach to Color Themes in CSS

The other day, Florens Verschelde asked about defining dark mode styles for both a class and a media query, without repeat CSS custom properties declarations.

Maximally optimizing image loading for the web in 2021

In this post, Malte Ubl outlines 8 image loading optimization techniques to minimize both the bandwidth used for loading images on the web and the CPU usage for image display.

Hiding Content Responsibly

In this article, Kitty Giraudel discusses all the ways to hide something, be it through HTML or CSS, and when to use which.

Some great videos I watched this week

Spring Forces

Boing! Time to simulate a spring force! This challenge fits into chapters 2 and 3 of the Nature of Code and demonstrates how to simulate the oscillating motion of a spring using vectors and forces.

How Disney’s Magic Mirror Works | Enchanted Tales with Belle

Chrome 89 — What’s New in DevTools

Building Collision Simulations: An Introduction to Computer Graphics

Collision detection systems show up in all sorts of video games and simulations. But how do you actually build these systems? Turns out that the key ideas behind these systems show up all over a field of computer science called computer graphics.

Upgrading DevTools’ architecture to the modern web

The Chrome DevTools codebase is around 150,000 lines of first-party JavaScript, with some parts being over ten-years old. As with any large, legacy codebase, there are a range of challenges to navigate, whether it be testing, code style and consistency, or simply understanding what the code is doing! This session steps through how we plan, implement, and maintain code migrations in Chrome’s DevTools.

Useful GitHub repositories

Engineering Manager Resources

A list of engineering manager resource links.

qiankun

An implementation of Micro Frontends, based on single-spa, but made it production-ready.

dribbble shots

Foodoo Mobile

Pulver : Render Showcase Responsive

QUAN — minimum awesome product

Refreshing UI for a watch app

Tweets

Picked Pens

Reading Application

Glassmorphism Creative Cloud App Redesign

Talk to you next week and stay safe! 👋

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Marco Biedermann

Full-Stack JavaScript Engineer with focus on React, Redux & Node.js and passioned about Open Source working @Mobime based in Berlin, Germany marcobiedermann.com