Welcome to On Our Radar, a weekly round-up of news, trends and other cool stuff from the world of web development.
This week, Microsoft's relations with Google continued to deteriorate, as Google's Security team disclosed three new bugs in Windows before Microsoft was able to patch them. Microsoft had already criticized Google claiming that the search giant's behavior needlessly endangers customers, while in a bizarre turn of events, it was announced that Google won't fix a bug affecting 60 percent of Android phones.
Elsewhere ShipYourEnemiesGlitter.com, a service that anonymously delivers an envelope chock-full of glitter to someone you hate (or, to someone who really likes glitter), was making headlines. As the site went viral, the 22-year-old entrepreneur behind the scheme begged people to stop using it. He then cashed in his chips and put the site up for sale on Flippa.
And finally Mark Zuckerberg entered the office with the launch of the 'Facebook At Work' pilot, meaning that the social network responsible for sucking up hours of your working day may soon be one of your company's critical productivity tools.
Frameworks - Where Do You Stand?
I've been on the fence about JavaScript frameworks for a while now, so it was with some interest that I read an opinion piece by Peter-Paul Koch (of QuirksMode fame) citing the problem with AngularJS. The article generated quite a lot of debate in a comment thread on Hacker News, which is also worth checking out.
Continue reading %On Our Radar This Week: Monolithic Frameworks and Firefox OS%
by James Hibbard via SitePoint
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