Using scroll-driven animations, if I wanted to take these shapes, how could I start them in this position (the dark ones) and transition them to the end position (the lightened ones).
Ideally, the shapes are a part of the three columns, and the animation would be sending them to their "real" position.
This seems like it would be somewhat easy if it didn't have to be responsive.
Is this just a coincidence, or is something creepy happening? I pulled up an address in London to see where my Airbnb is later this summer, and then opened Songkick in Safari to see if any bands I like are playing.
On the sign in screen, it says “You’re only seconds away from tracking London.” I didn’t do anything related to London on Songkick’s site. To open Maps, I just tapped the address in my calendar.
My main goal for visiting London is to get to the British Museum before they have to give everything back.
I was actually there just last year, but it was just a day on each end of a trip to Edinburgh, so it was a bit of a whirlwind. There are so many options, so it’s hard to narrow down what we’re going to do there. I’m open to suggestions!
Here's an absolutely garbage interaction from macOS.
Do a three-finger swipe up on the trackpad to bring up Mission Control, where you can add or move a space.
When you start to get sort of close to the plus icon (like 110px), a thumbnail image of a desktop slides into place.
Why this sucks: You've done nothing but get close to something, but it's acting as if you interacted with it, or is indicating that you now can interact with it. Except you can. If you click, it goes away.
Do yourself a favor and avoid The New York Times review of The Acolyte if you think it's bullshit to include major spoilers without any sort of warning.
While correcting some geocoordinate lookups, I randomly discovered that if you travel 100º due West from from Granada, Spain (about 5,100 miles), you'll end up about 60 miles from Granada, Colorado, which is a place that exists. Neat?
@kudemadu Is there something unique about how it might be used — like saying "a German woman" vs. "a female German," or is it possibly just newer grammar from when I first learned it 30 years ago (from books that were easily 20 years old at the time)? Or is it more likely that my brain is just failing?
I won't be mad if Trump gets no prison time as long as the judge sentences him to at least one year of wearing an old timey striped prison uniform whenever he appears in public.