Monthly Shaarli

All links of one month in a single page.

July, 2020

"Measuring and examining TLS 1.3, IPv4, and IPv6 performance", Matt Hobbs (@TheRealNooshu)

Results show that enabling TLS 1.3 is a good idea. It offers more security and better performance for your users. It’s also worth noting that TLS 1.3 will be a requirement to use the QUIC transport layer network protocol in the future. This will pave the way to HTTP/3. And once 0-RTT becomes more prevalent, for repeat website visits the purple on the graphs displayed above will disappear completely. Even faster connections for all (at least for those that use a browser that supports it anyway).

"Le racisme & moi (et surtout vous…)", Dju
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Une explication très complète et didactique sur les privilèges, le racisme, le racisme ordinaire, la fragilité blanche…

Perf Track by the Chrome Team
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track and measure the performance of sites that use popular JavaScript frameworks and libraries.

"We need more inclusive web performance metrics", Scott Jehl (@ScottJehl)
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It would be useful to have insight into the moment when assistive technology is able to interact with and communicate page content, so that we can know when a page is “ready” for all users, and not just some.
[…] It’d be interesting to know which existing metrics are irrelevant to assistive tech
[…] it might be interesting to measure “jank” and stability in the process of arriving at a usable accessibility tree.
[…] how are metrics like First Input Delay translating to the interaction time that someone experiences when using assistive technology?

"CSS Vocabulary", Ville V. Vanninen (@sakamies) #teaching #css

Un précis de vocabulaire pour se rappeler des termes CSS.

"Des emoji accessibles", Anne-Sophie Tranchet (@annso_)
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Par son côté visuel, un emoji choisi de manière pertinente peut apporter de l’impact à un message, pour peu qu’on respecte quelques bonnes pratiques.

"Webwaste", Gerry McGovern (@gerrymcgovern)
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We must start by trying to use the option that damages the environment least, and that is text. Don’t assume that images are automatically more powerful than text. Sometimes, text does the job better.

"ImageOptim-CLI: automates image optimization on OSX", Jamie Mason (@fold_left)

Automates ImageOptim, ImageAlpha, and JPEGmini for Mac to make batch optimisation of images part of your automated build process.

"Modèle Trello de check-list Opquast", Denis Grugeon (@DeNisGrUgEon)

Complémentaire à votre outil de préparation à la certification et adapté au travail en équipe, ce "tableau vivant" vous permettra de visualiser votre avancement, pour la préparation à la formation comme pour la mise en oeuvre (audit)...
Comme c'est un modèle, vous pourrez partager vos commentaires, vos exemples, captures d'écrans, etc. en équipe restreinte.

"HTML/JS/CSS removal techniques and implications", Vincent Valentin (@htmlvv)

A wonderful pen by Vincent Valentin

"TLS 1.3 Performance Analysis – Full Handshake", @wolfSSL

[…] there is one less round trip until Application Data can be sent in TLS 1.3 as compared to TLS 1.2. This significantly improves performance especially on high latency networks.

"TLS v1.3 performance compared to TLS v1.2", @chendo

However, I noticed that our max TLS version was 1.2 rather than the newer and faster 1.3, as 1.3 removes an extra RTT for a faster handshake. Turns out the version of nginx-ingress we were using was still using 1.2 only as default. A quick ConfigMap change later, and we were on 1.3.

"«Femme» n’est pas le principal sujet du féminisme", Juliet Drouar
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Nous pourrions par exemple proposer pour les personnes concernées par le sexisme, donc par la domination des hommes cis hétéro, d’employer le terme de : personnes sexisé.e.s.

La discrimination ne nait pas de qui vous êtes mais du regard discriminatoire.