Tag: feed-en-tech

Firefox have just ended this annoying popup.
Firefox 127 marks the support for the JavaScript Clipboard API‘s read and write methods. It may not look seem a lot for non-technical people, but well it is. That means, if you now upgrade to the latest version of Firefox, you will no longer be annoyed by apps requiring you to manually copy, cut, and…
Our guide to data models is here!
Last month, we explained on how we commonly design our REST API for our products. But apparently, some people still don’t understand what the “model-centric path approach” actually mean. Now, we admit that it might be technical to explain here. In short, we are talking about data models, aka. how we commonly organize different sets…
HAM v1.1: Supporting tables and technical diagrams!
The version 1.1.0 was quickly withdrawn due to issues loading with custom tables HAM, our homegrown static Jekyll wiki framework now just got an update. Just like our past versions, this one is heavily motivated by our internal projects that are using HAM. With this new version, you can now render diagrams with Mermaid. Mermaid…
Introducing HAM v1.0.4.
HAM is a simple Jekyll framework that allows you to build static wiki sites. And today, we are introducing a maintenance update with the following changes. First, the Bootstrap Icons dependency was updated from v1.11.1 to v1.11.3. There are no significant changes from the 100+ new icons introduced since v1.10. These icons are directly built…

Site Update: More glass-cards!
It has been a long time when we reintroduced glass-cards on our website. They are timeless, representing these four different eras of user interface design: We are first proud to introduce this as far as in 2019, before 2021, and late 2023, where we made it the foundation of our design system. And now, there’s…
Our guide to our unwritten REST API conventions.
An updated version of this may be available on our digital garden. Naming things is a difficult thing, according to many developers. But not for someone who graduated in an university that’s silently houses great REST API experts. I’m not joking. According to HackerRank in 2021, BINUS University entered the top charts for Asia-Pacific universities…

GitHub: My robots are 2.5x as productive as I am.
In January 2022, I decided to create a dedicated GitHub account for my automated bots, doing great things in the public with GitHub Actions. And as of today, my robots are 2.5x as productive than I am on GitHub according to the contribution graphs. Note that I still can’t remove all automated tasks for crediting…

Celebrating 10 years of not even finishing my personal website.
On April 23rd 2014, I marked my new milestone of creating a personal website using the technology people were intended to: raw HTML and CSS files. No CSS libraries and JS frameworks to use back then, and it’s my exodus from being limited to creating WordPress-based sites. But crafting a perfect personal websites took a…

So, here’s how to win Firefox over in 2024.
I have been a long-time user of Firefox since 2015, especially, when “Firefox Developer Edition” was announced (as a rebrand of Firefox Aurora pre-release channel). Sure, I have used the web browser at some time between 2013 and 2015, before switching to Chrome, then Opera, then (checks notes) Internet Explorer 11. And in 2021, I…
An imperative way to build a website!
(#_ )! This tutorial is definitely inspired by an interesting discussion in choosing a web tech stack in 2024. Of course, Imperative HTML is a more esoteric way of writing websites but still easy to learn for (#- )! Have you ever: HTML itself was primarily based on XML (up to HTML 4.x). And we really hate…




