Monster Mash: A Sketch-Based Tool for Casual 3D Modeling and Animation: https://t.co/kJBLXl3GaT. The demo is really impressive: https://t.co/eJ8hRNTRrt.
@oliverturner @geoffreycrofte FWIW, here’s the waterfall of my blog, where I have implemented said splitting (and where this is a clearly over-engineered pattern), and it works just fine thanks to H/2: https://t.co/dhtvw42K6C (Yes, I need to fix my cach
@oliverturner @geoffreycrofte An interesting idea for certain scenarios might be to inline the split files as data URLs. Like that you have a clear separation and no additional HTTP requests, at the expense of caching. With HTTP/2, request overhead often
New arXiv paper 🔄: Accessing HID Devices on the Web With t#WebHIDHID API: How to play the Chrome Dino Game by Jumping With a Nintendo Joy-Con Controller in One’s Pocket.arxiv.org/abs/2104.02392z3VYre@TheWebConfeWebConf Developers Track.
@geoffreycrofte @oliverturner For small sites I wouldn’t bother with separate files, but for typical large sites (think e-commerce sites for example) or high-performance sites (think Google) with dozens of rules needed to deal with special cases or load