I actually find it really hard to collaborate in Scratch. But it doesn’t matter because it’s great for small projects + easy to “view source” and learn from others. So my nephew is already off to the races, leveling up on his own. And we can collaborate on many other things.
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Prikaži ovu nit
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... like building a web page. Last week I thought it would be cool to show him how to build a website/homepage. A place where he can put links to his Scratch games, but also his drawings, music, etc. Plus his own domain name, because that makes it 10x more fun.
1 reply 0 proslijeđenih tweetova 6 korisnika označava da im se sviđaPrikaži ovu nit -
I remember this was a huge creative avenue for me as well, in high school. I never had cool clothes or dyed hair or stickers on my backpack, but I made a lot of fun websites. That was my preferred form of self-expression.
0 proslijeđenih tweetova 16 korisnika označava da im se sviđaPrikaži ovu nit -
One interesting conversation we had last week was around copyright. He was worried about other people stealing his drawings! I tried to explain the difference between the copyright/patent mentality and the CC/open source mentality. He 100% wanted his IP locked down
1 reply 1 proslijeđeni tweet 31 korisnik označava da mu se sviđaPrikaži ovu nit -
I hope this is something he’ll come to understand differently as he gets older. What a compliment it is to be copied! But I also remember liking that feeling of ownership when I was younger. I wanted to slap a © on everything I made! I wonder where that came from.....
0 proslijeđenih tweetova 14 korisnika označava da im se sviđaPrikaži ovu nit -
Today I showed him the Chrome “inspect element”/dev tools console. It’s great to be able to tweak things and watch the page react instantly. But it’s also crazy just how complicated the modern web has become.
0 proslijeđenih tweetova 23 korisnika označavaju da im se sviđaPrikaži ovu nit -
I don’t know how to strike the right balance between the precision and intelligibility of low-level tooling (e.g. HTML) vs. the power of high-level tooling (e.g. a template language + CSS). How important is it these days to understand the web from the bottom up?
0 proslijeđenih tweetova 14 korisnika označava da im se sviđaPrikaži ovu nit -
(Also, I realize that one person’s “bottom layer” is another person’s towering abstraction. Even raw HTML is impossible far from the metal. But at least it’s a consistent/coherent/portable technology, unlike much of what gets written on top of it.)
1 reply 0 proslijeđenih tweetova 21 korisnik označava da mu se sviđaPrikaži ovu nit -
Anyway, that’s all for now. More later I hope. Thanks for letting me brain-dump!
1 proslijeđeni tweet 23 korisnika označavaju da im se sviđaPrikaži ovu nit -
Odgovor korisniku/ci @KevinSimler
For teaching, modern web is a fucking tower of babel. Suspect the best learning is when there are as few moving parts as possible. Like scheme or some other minimal lisp variant. I wonder if there's some lisp-y sandbox built on something like clojurescript to make pages in?
0 proslijeđenih tweetova 3 korisnika označavaju da im se sviđa
For all my time in software, I don’t thing I’ve heard the “tower of babel” metaphor! But... god, yes. That’s exactly how it feels.
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Odgovor korisniku/ci @KevinSimler
sometimes the jokes are just out there in the wild, unintentionally self-satirizing. https://babeljs.io/ (may even be a good project)
0 replies 0 proslijeđenih tweetova 1 korisnik označava da mu se sviđaHvala. Twitter će to iskoristiti za poboljšanje vaše vremenske crte. PoništiPoništi
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