

An email is sent out a week beforehand with connection details. If you’re interested in attending the next Beer and Tell, sign up for the mailing list. Users may then provide proof that they fixed a bug, and once it is approved by the bidders, they receive a payout. They provide a browser extension that allows users to bid on bugs as well as name their price for fixing a bug. Last up was groovecoder and John Dungan, who shared codesy, an open-source startup addressing the problem of compensation for fixing bugs in open-source software. The frontend is built using React and Webpack. It allows four players to play the classic Chinese game online by using socket.io and a Node.js server to connect the players. Pomax: HTML5 MahjongĪlso presented by Pomax was an HTML5 multiplayer Mahjong game. While built as a side-project, the component can be seen in use on the Web Literacy Framework website. The component is very configurable and can by styled with CSS as it is generated via SVG. Pomax was up next with a new React component: react-circletree! It depicts a tree structure using segmented concentric circles. Neat! Pomax: React Circle-Tree Visualizer He then uses a Jupyter notebook to pull data from the API and analyze it to guide his market activities in the game. Lorchard also shared eve-market-fun, a Node.js-based service that pulls data from the EVE Online API and pre-digests useful information about it.

He used to generate a layout serialized in JSON, and then used Plate & Case Builder to generate a CAD file for use with a laser cutter.Ī flickr album is available with photos of the process. Next was lorchard, who talked about the process of making a DIY keyboard using web-based tools. The feature that emceeaich demoed was “Going to Brooklyn”, which gives any link a 1/5 chance of showing shadow pictures briefly before moving on to the linked photo. The project is presented as a non-linear collection of photographs, in contrast to the traditionally linear format of memoirs. emceeaich: Memory Landscapesįirst up was emceeaich, who shared Memory Landscapes, a visual memoir of the life and career of artist and photographer Laurie Toby Edison. There’s also a recording available courtesy of Air Mozilla. There’s a wiki page available with a list of the presenters, as well as links to their presentation materials. Once a month, web developers from across the Mozilla Project get together to talk about our side projects and drink, an occurrence we like to call “Beer and Tell”.
