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HTML5 Boilerplate 2.0 And The Value Of A Better Starting Point
A practical article about HTML5 Boilerplate 2.0 and why a better project base mattered for front-end work in 2011.
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WordPress 3.2 And The End Of Designing Around IE6 In The Admin
A practical article about WordPress 3.2, the faster admin direction and what dropping IE6 support meant for real website work.
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CSS Preprocessors And The First Signs That CSS Needed Structure
An article about why Sass and LESS started to feel useful as CSS files became larger and front-end work needed more structure.
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Modernizr And The Case For Feature Detection
An article about why feature detection felt more reliable than browser detection as HTML5 and CSS3 support became increasingly uneven.
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Custom Post Types One Year Later
A follow-up article about custom post types after the initial excitement, focusing on how structured content changed WordPress builds in practice.
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Working With HTML5 Without Forgetting Older Browsers
A practical article about using HTML5 elements and behaviours in 2011 while still keeping websites usable in older browsers.
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The problem not having code on repeat, repeat, repeat.
A 2010-era reflection on the growing need for reusable front-end patterns across buttons, forms, grids, navigation and internal interfaces.
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Moving From Photoshop Comps To Designing In The Browser
A practical reflection on why static Photoshop visuals were starting to feel limited once websites needed flexible layouts, real typography and interactive behaviour.
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Why Every Website Build Needs A Cleaner Starting Point
A practical article about creating a reusable project base so each build begins with clearer structure, better defaults and fewer repeated setup decisions.
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Building A Website With HTML5 Boilerplate
A practical look at why a cleaner project starting point matters when every website build repeats the same browser fixes, reset styles and setup decisions.