Thursday, December 8, 2016

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11 Amazing Google Calendar Hacks

The beauty of working on a Google application is generally its intuitive nature. From the simplicity of the search engine, to the ease of use of application like Google Drive, even the least experienced user can fulfill basic tasks necessary to accomplish specific goals - increasing productivity...

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This week's JavaScript news, issue 313

This week's JavaScript newsRead this e-mail on the Web
JavaScript Weekly
Issue 313 — December 8, 2016

A huge thanks to everyone who nominated people, tools, or libraries for the JS Awards - we had about 700 nominations! :-) You can now vote for the winners up until December 18. Thanks!

A great, snappy introduction to, and rationale for, Flow, a static type checker for JavaScript.
Alex Booker

Babel, a JavaScript compiler, has become an essential part of the JavaScript ecosystem in the last year. This post is a thorough tour of what’s going on with it.
Henry Zhu

Yehuda Katz is on the TC39 committee responsible for evolving the language behind JavaScript.
Yehuda Katz

Frontend Masters
Building and deploying complex front-end applications can get complicated. Webpack simplifies this with tons of features catering to all JavaScript apps.
Frontend Masters   Sponsor

Bills itself as ‘like lodash for dates’, it has over 140 functions for manipulating dates in a variety of ways (e.g. distanceinWords, addDays, isSameWeek, differenceInHours)
Lesha Koss et al.

V8 5.6 will go into production with Chrome 56 in several weeks. It includes a new optimization pipeline and promises key performance and memory usage improvements, specifically for ES6/ES2015.
Michael Hablich

A full-featured release that includes downlevel async function support, object rest and spread, the keyof operator, mapped types, and more.
Microsoft

Angular 1.6 is in the final release candidate stage and should be released this week. Here’s the low down on what to expect.
Todd Motto

Want to see how React Native ticks without any setup or devices? Learn React Native with interactive examples on this site.
React Native Express

From one of the team behind Yarn comes a call for less negativity, fewer personal attacks, and more conversations that work towards positive outcomes.
James Kyle

Jobs

  • Web Platform Architect at Twitch (SF)Join the Twitch JavaScript team as a Web Platform Architect and help define our next gen React web platform that scales across our distributed product engineering org while achieving a highly performant web experience!  Twitch
  • Frontend Engineer at Zalando Tech in BerlinZalando is the leading fashion platform in Europe. Work in one of our 200+ autonomous engineering teams and build the technologies and products that connect all parts of the fashion ecosystem. Zalando SE
  • One Application, 4,000+ Opportunities - Try HiredFinding the right role can be daunting, but not on Hired. Get empowered to find the right role with multiple job offers and free personalized support. Hired

In brief

Angular 2.3.0 Now Available news

A Quick Look at the JS Foundation (formerly the jQuery Foundation) news
SitePoint

A RxJS Workshop with Ben Lesh (Online or in Silicon Valley) news

Vote in the 2016 JS Awards news

Testing with Webpack 2, inject-loader, Karma, Mocha, Chai and Sinon tutorial
Perry Mitchell

Writing Efficient JavaScript tutorial
Felix Maier

Getting Started with React Native in 20 Minutes tutorial
Scott Domes

Getting Started with D3.js video
Elisabeth Engel

Beginning Your Code Quest: How to Write Your First React Component video
The Reactionary

Komodo IDE: The Best IDE for Web and Mobile Developers tools
Web & mobile devs get all their favorite frameworks, languages, and tools in one cross-platform, polyglot IDE
ActiveState  Sponsor

Innovation in JS, Get Used to It: A DotJS 2016 Conference Report opinion
Christopher Zimmermann

Have You Moved From React to Vue? If So, Why? opinion
Reddit

You Might Not Need TypeScript (or Static Types) opinion
Eric Elliott

Pull to Refresh.js: A 'Pull to Refresh' Feature with No Markup Needed code
Box Factura

Cleave.js: Format Input Text Content While Typing code
For example, with credit card or phone numbers.

Styletron: A Universal, High Performance CSS-in-JS Engine code
Ryan Tsao

Best in Class UI Components for Angular 2 Development – Kendo UI for Angular 2 code
jQuery-free Angular 2 components built from ground-up which deliver the business app essential building blocks.
Progress  Sponsor

scrollMonitor: A Simple and Fast API to Monitor Elements As You Scroll code
Stu Kabakoff

premonish: Predicts Which DOM Element A User Will Interact With Next code
Matthew Conlen

Curated by Peter Cooper and published by Cooperpress.

Like this? You may also enjoy: FrontEnd Focus : Node Weekly : React Status

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by via JavaScript Weekly

How to Monetize Your Blog with Sponsored Content

Sponsored content

Back in the early days of the web, or at least, when we first started to monetize it, display advertising was a lot more lucrative. First of all, ad-blockers were a thing of the future and you could easily fall victim to a display ad if you didn’t know any better. Nowadays we’re more web-savvy; we know where to look for ads, or more accurately, where we can look if we don’t want to see them. It’s not that display adverts are particularly dangerous, because they can certainly yield results on a trustworthy website, but we do seem to have learned to subconsciously avoid them (eye-tracking studies indicate this).

Sponsored content (sometimes known as sponsored posts, but different to advertorials), on the other hand, is a type of native advertising that’s designed to weave into the webpage almost unnoticed, and better yet, it doesn’t embezzle valuable screen real estate that can otherwise be used for optimizing the user experience. Let’s take a deeper look at sponsored content.

How Native Advertising Puts the Audience First

Native advertising is a type of media where the ads’ layout follows the natural form and function of the website where the ad exists. By form I mean the visual design — it looks and feels like it belongs there. By function I mean behavior — it acts as the user would expect it to when interacted with.

Sponsored content isn’t the only kind of native advertising, but what they all have in common is that the user comes first; the user experience isn’t hindered by the advert in any way, despite the fact that native ads appear in the users’ direct line-of-sight, whereas banner ads appear within the users’ peripheral vision (i.e. they can be ignored easily).

Sponsored content should always be fully disclaimed, at the top before the reader has chosen to invest time in reading. Best practices also dictate that the content is developed by editorial staff or (in the case of solo blogs, etc) yourself, with the client advising and approving but not unduly influencing the process. This provides sponsored content with genuine utility to the reader, and makes it a form of advertising with a great deal of integrity — unlike the advertorials of the past.

Why Native Advertising Yields Results

Native advertising can also appear as in-feed content (think Facebook’s new “Suggested Post” feature that appears in your timeline), within search results, within related article boxes, and so on. Because of their increased visibility in comparison to display ads, and because they’re deemed more trustworthy* (because of how they calmly blend into the website), native ads receive 52% more attention than banner ads.

*depending on the integrity of the site.

Advertising metrics

And then there’s purchase intent, which sees an 18% increase in comparison to display adverts. Why? Because when a user comes across a native ad, the user is looking for something (i.e. when you’re scrolling through your Facebook feed, you’re looking for something to captivate your attention, when you reach the end of an article, you’re looking for something else to read).

Platforms like Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Amazon are monetizing with native advertising because it connects those that are looking for something with interesting products and services, based on the users’ interests and browsing history.

Native advertising only works when done with integrity; when the user is shown ads that are both relevant and useful to them, all-the-while clearly stating that the advert is sponsored.

Where to Find Relevant Sponsored Content

Like many advertising networks, there’s a lot of contradiction as to which one is “best,” and you could probably waste a lot of your valuable time trying to figure out the answer by reading online reviews. It really depends on the niché of your website/blog, what your traffic is like, and how much of your own time you’re willing to invest into managing ads/advertisers, so I’d recommend applying to all of them and comparing the results.

Taboola for example can feel a little linkbaitey depending on the niché of your blog (and requires 500,000 monthly views anyway), whereas Cooperatize is considerably smaller but has a focus on high-quality travel blogs. Some sponsored content networks deal with “related content” widgets exclusively, whereas others (like BuySellAds) will let you hand-approve actual, written, high-quality content.

Here’s a list of sponsored content advertising networks:

Continue reading %How to Monetize Your Blog with Sponsored Content%


by Daniel Schwarz via SitePoint

What’s New and Exciting in PHP 7.1?

The PHP community has gone viral with the latest PHP 7 announcement and all the goodies it brings to the language. The PHP 7.1 release has more good news and features to offer. This article highlights the most important ones, and you should check PHP RFC for the full list.

Flying baloon-tied elephpant

ArgumentCountError Exception

Earlier versions of PHP allowed for function calls with fewer arguments than specified, emitting a warning when you have a missing argument.

// PHP 5.6

function sum($a, $b)
{
    return $a + $b;
}

sum(); 
// Warning: Missing argument 1 for sum()
// Warning: Missing argument 2 for sum()

sum(3);
// Warning: Missing argument 2 for sum()

sum(3, 4);

Warnings are not useful for this case, and the developer should check if all arguments are set correctly. In PHP 7.1, those warnings have been converted into an ArgumentCountError exception.

// PHP 7.1

function sum($a, $b)
{
    return $a + $b;
}

sum(); 
// Fatal error: Uncaught ArgumentCountError: Too few arguments to function sum(), 0 passed in /vagrant/index.php on line 18 and exactly 2 expected in /vagrant/index.php:13

sum(3); // skipped

sum(3, 4); // skipped 

Nullable Types

PHP 7 added type declarations for parameters and return types, but it seemed that something was missing! Nullable types enable for the specified type to take either that type or null. Here's an example:

Continue reading %What’s New and Exciting in PHP 7.1?%


by Younes Rafie via SitePoint

Get Started With Android VR and Google Cardboard: Panoramic Images

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