Hello everyone and thank you for being a subscriber for the 200th edition of responsive design weekly.
If this is your first week, welcome, but please note that this is not the typical weekly email; for this week I’m saying thank you to you for opening your inbox and being a huge part of my life every week. Lets look on a reflection of the past 200 editions and look at some of the ups and downs. Do not despair though, for those of you that are just here to keep on top of what’s going on I’ve got you covered with a few quick links up front.
By applying rems to the root of each module, and em's to everything else you're able to more tightly control the sizes and layout of things across a variety of viewports and arrangements.
Books are one of my side projects at the moment, or at least converting them to websites that work everywhere is anyway. Lara's Designing for Performance is one of the examples I use so I'm excited about her sharing her exact steps to publish it online.
Planned for release in 2017 this will be the ultimate grid framework that does away with foundation and bootstrap. The ultimate grid framework is coming, and it's called Grid Layout. (not actually a framework, but the spec)
I haven't posted a case study about the reasons for moving to RWD for a while because, well it's just how things are done now. That said I'm sure some of your still run into the question so here's some figures to throw in their face (disclaimer: don't throw anything in peoples faces)
RWD is all about the content, and now you can get your content alongside the other cool kids by doing in Agile style.
While we're on the topic of content... content works even BETTER when it's set against beautiful typography
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