
👋 Oi, mga repapips, Brian Dys here! I love music, photography, and creative stuff like UX design and art. This is a place where I collect my thoughts and works. Apart all these, I’m Jaycelle’s better half and Bryce’s dad. 🥰
Due to clumsiness, I lost a Photoshop file I was working on last Friday. It was an Android “mock-app” and prior to working on it, it was supposed to be a template file so the file name was something like “android-app_template_1a.psd.
Now, it’s Monday and it’s back to work, I was looking for the file with the project file name in mind. So, tough luck for me finding it.
I know, I could have looked up files modified by Friday but Windows 7 Search thinks you could just describe what you’re searching for in the Search field.
I never had this “difficulty’ in Windows XP. Makes me miss Benny the dog whom we shooed away far too many times. *sniff*
Since we can’t do anything about it, might as well memorize operators, keywords, and wildcards for Windows 7 Search.
I recently joined The Noun Project — a site that crowdsources icons from designers and uploaders.
From their About page:
The Noun Project is a platform empowering the community to build a global visual language that everyone can understand.
Visit my page; I’m working on a facial expression series: Dys on The Noun Project
All WordPress .assistive-text and .screen-reader-text are being hidden superficially — screen readers would still be able to read them.
Here’s the CSS snippet from HTML5 Boilerplate v4.0:
.visuallyhidden { border:0; clip:rect(0 0 0 0); height:1px; margin:-1px; overflow:hidden; padding:0; position:absolute; width:1px; }
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By the way, I would write a separate post here how I write the class or ID name of an HTML element rather than placing the pre-defined class selector in the HTML code. For example, instead of putting .visuallyhidden in all elements that I want to be displayed according to the style, I would put its class or ID name along with .visuallyhidden in the stylesheet.
My Rebels at Work answered questionnaire.
About Rebels at Work:
This Rebels at Work community is for corporate rebels to share experiences, insights and advice with other rebels and aspiring rebels. By rebels we’re talking about those people who feel compelled to create ways to improve, change, and innovate. They are brave (or foolhardy) enough to stand against the prevailing mindset of the organization and argue for a better way. The hope is that rebels can find courage and ideas to be more successful, and executives can see why their success depends on encouraging rebels.
You may share your story, too, if you’re a “rebel”.