Nifty Corners Cube

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Rounded corners the javascript way
Nifty Corners Cube

StackOverflow.com

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Random snippets of all sorts of code, mixed with a selection of help and advice.

How to prioritize technical debt vs feature development in Agile sprint planning?

27 April 2026 @ 10:21 am

We follow a standard Agile sprint cycle (2-week sprints) using a backlog that includes both feature requests and technical debt tasks. A recurring challenge is deciding how much capacity to allocate to technical debt versus new feature development during sprint planning. If we focus too much on features, technical debt accumulates and slows future development. If we prioritize technical debt heavily, feature delivery gets delayed. Currently: We use a single backlog for both features and technical debt Prioritization is mainly driven by business requirements There is no fixed rule for allocating effort between the two Our question is: What specific, repeatable method can be used during sprint planning to allocate capacity between technical debt and feature work? Particularly interested in methods used during sprint planning & how teams decide when technical debt

Where can I find documentation, benchmarks, and implementation details for the Async HBase Client?

27 April 2026 @ 10:21 am

I am currently exploring the Async HBase Client (official version) and trying to understand its capabilities, performance benefits, and internal architecture. However, I am having trouble finding comprehensive resources. Could anyone point me in the right direction regarding the following points? 1. Documentation: Is there any official documentation, user guide, or API reference specifically focused on how to properly use the Async HBase client? 2. Benchmarks: Are there any known benchmarks that demonstrate the performance improvements (e.g., throughput, latency) of the Async client compared to the traditional synchronous client? 3. Implementation Details: Is there any design document, architectural overview, or blog post that explains the underlying implementation and how the asynchronous operations are handled under the hood? Any links to official docs, JIRA tickets, mailing list

How to adapt 'import random'?

27 April 2026 @ 10:15 am

I want to code something like a small game. Firstly I coded it by using Python and now I want to convert to C++. But on my Python code I use import random and randint, etc. What's the C++ version of that?

Github action deletes entire server

27 April 2026 @ 10:13 am

I have a GitHub action which deploys a vue project on a shared host. But this script wipes out the entire server including mails, ssh keys, other project just absolutely everything that is on this server. I don't understand how that is possible? !!!! Do not use this code !!! name: Deploy to Staging to server on: push: branches: - STAGING # Trigger the deployment on push to the 'staging' branch concurrency: group: deploy-staging cancel-in-progress: false jobs: build: runs-on: ubuntu-latest steps: # Step 1: Checkout the repository - name: Checkout code uses: actions/checkout@v4 # Step 2: Set up Node.js environment - name: Setup Node.js uses: actions/setup-node@v4 with: node-version: '22' cache: 'npm' # Step 3: Install dependencies - name: Install dependencies run: npm ci # Step 4: Build the Vue app - name: Build Vue app

Call different bpf helpers depending on kernel version?

27 April 2026 @ 10:12 am

I need to get the current system time in my BTF probe. How can I call bpf_ktime_get_boot_ns() on kernels 5.8 and newer, and bpf_ktime_get_ns() on older kernels where bpf_ktime_get_boot_ns is not yet available ? If possible I'd like to avoid building sets of probes for multiple kernel versions, since there are other similar helpers not available in all kernels, like bpf_probe_read_kernel_str(). I need to get the time from multiple probes, so maybe defining different functions that wrap the bpf_ktime... helpers might work but it doesn't look trivial to implement. And disassembling the bpf bytecode and patching the call opcodes also doesn't look very appealing.

How to correctly specify models for mediation analysis with cmest in CMAverse (R packages)?

27 April 2026 @ 10:12 am

I am currently performing a mediation analysis using the cmest function from the CMAverse package on R. I noticed that the results differ depending on the estimation and inference options used (see figure below), especially for the PNIE. With estimation = "paramfunc" and inference = "delta", the confidence intervals are symmetric, as shown in the forest plots. However, with estimation = "imputation", inference = "bootstrap", and boot.ci.type = "bca", the confidence intervals become asymmetric, the estimates are no longer centered in the forest plot, and the statistical significance changes (PNIE become significant). Could someone help clarify: The main differences between these approaches and why am I getting different results? Whether asymmetric confidence intervals in this context are

Cantera module not found

27 April 2026 @ 10:06 am

I have been successfully using Cantera 3.2 in Spyder.  I closed Spyder and when I re-opened it, Cantera wasn't found.  I tired reinstalling Cantera using pip at the cmd prompt, but Pyhon still doesn't find the module that it was finding yesterday...

Feedback on development

27 April 2026 @ 10:06 am

this is my first time publishing on Stack Overflow, so I don't know if this is allowed, but the context is that I am developing a website for my final year of college and as part of the criteria I am required to gather feedback. So, if anyone can spare a few minutes to go through the site and answer the questions, it would be greatly appreciated Link to site - https://greenfield-local-hub.xo.je/index.php Link to GitHub repo - https://github.com/Artsexam07/Master-codebase Link to survey - https://forms.office.com/e/Z53ddbzwT3 Thank you

Regarding's MONAI WarmupCosineSchedule with AdamW, should scheduler.step() be called per batch, and does optimizer lr define the peak lr?

27 April 2026 @ 10:05 am

I am training a PyTorch segmentation model and using: torch.optim.AdamW monai.optimizers.WarmupCosineSchedule My optimizer: optimizer = torch.optim.AdamW( model.parameters(), lr=1e-4, weight_decay=1e-5, betas=(0.9, 0.999), eps=1e-8, ) My scheduler: from monai.optimizers import WarmupCosineSchedule scheduler = WarmupCosineSchedule( optimizer=optimizer, warmup_steps=1000, t_total=10000, end_lr=0.0, cycles=0.5, warmup_multiplier=0.01, ) My training loop: for batch in train_loader: optimizer.zero_grad() outputs = model(images) loss = criterion(outputs, labels) loss.backward() optimizer.step() scheduler.step() My first quesiton is as follows: Since this scheduler is step-based (similar to HuggingFace warmup cosine schedules), is it correct to call:

How to make developers accountable?

27 April 2026 @ 10:00 am

I’m looking for practical ways to make developers more accountable for the code they write and the decisions they make within a team or organization. In many projects, issues like missed deadlines, poor code quality, lack of documentation, or unaddressed bugs often don’t have clear ownership. This can lead to frustration, technical debt, and difficulty maintaining systems over time. What strategies, tools, or processes have you found effective in improving accountability among developers? For example: Are there specific workflows (code reviews, pull request policies, CI/CD practices) that help? How do you ensure ownership of features or bugs without creating a blame culture? What role do documentation, testing, or issue tracking systems play? Are there any team structures or management approaches that work particularly well? I’m especially interested in approaches that balance a

960.gs

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CSS Grid System layout guide
960.gs

IconPot .com

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Totally free icons

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Interface elements for jQuery
Interface.eyecon.ro

ThemeForest.net

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WordPress Themes, HTML Templates.

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color / colour themes by design

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Web Analytics::Free Resources from Immeria
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WebAIM.org

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Web Accessibility In Mind

Ask AIMee: An accessible accessibility-focused AI chatbot

31 March 2026 @ 4:49 pm

We’re happy to introduce AIMee – an easy-to-use, AI-powered conversational chatbot focused on accessibility. AIMee has been designed to be highly accessible to users with disabilities. Ask her accessibility questions to get quick answers and guidance. The name “AIMee” plays off of the “AIM” (Accessibility In Mind) from “WebAIM” and also “AI”. Here are some […]

A New Path for Digital Accessibility?

27 February 2026 @ 7:02 pm

Please note This post will explore how an adaptive, intelligent system could empower users with disabilities to optimize their experience in digital environments. Even were such a system available tomorrow, developers of digital content, services, and products would still be responsible for providing equal access to ALL users. Consider a few of the many exciting […]

2026 Predictions: The Next Big Shifts in Web Accessibility

22 December 2025 @ 11:22 pm

I’ve lived long enough, and worked in accessibility long enough, to have honed a healthy skepticism when I hear about the Next Big Thing. I’ve seen lush website launches that look great, until I activate a screen reader. Yet, in spite of it all, accessibility does evolve, but quietly rather than dramatically. As I gaze […]

Word and PowerPoint Alt Text Roundup

31 October 2025 @ 7:14 pm

Introduction In Microsoft Word and PowerPoint, there are many types of non-text content that can be given alternative text. We tested the alternative text of everything that we could think of in Word and PowerPoint and then converted these files to PDFs using Adobe’s Acrobat PDFMaker (the Acrobat Tab on Windows), Adobe’s Create PDF cloud […]

Accessibility by Design: Preparing K–12 Schools for What’s Next

30 July 2025 @ 5:51 pm

Delivering web and digital accessibility in any environment requires strategic planning and cross-organizational commitment. While the goal (ensuring that websites and digital platforms do not present barriers to individuals with disabilities) and the standards (the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines) remain constant, implementation must be tailored to each organization’s needs and context.   For K–12 educational agencies, […]

Up and Coming ARIA 

30 May 2025 @ 6:19 pm

If you work in web accessibility, you’ve probably spent a lot of time explaining and implementing the ARIA roles and attributes that have been around for years—things like aria-label, aria-labelledby, and role="dialog". But the ARIA landscape isn’t static. In fact, recent ARIA specifications (especially ARIA 1.3) include a number of emerging and lesser-known features that […]

Global Digital Accessibility Salary Survey Results

27 February 2025 @ 8:45 pm

In December 2024 WebAIM conducted a survey to collect salary and job-related data from professionals whose job responsibilities primarily focus on making technology and digital products accessible and usable to people with disabilities. 656 responses were collected. The full survey results are now available. This survey was conducted in conjunction with the GAAD Foundation. The GAAD […]

Join the Discussion—From Your Inbox

31 January 2025 @ 9:01 pm

Which WebAIM resource had its 25th birthday on November 1, 2024? The answer is our Web Accessibility Email Discussion List! From the halcyon days when Hotmail had over 35 million users, to our modern era where Gmail has 2.5 billion users, the amount of emails in most inboxes has gone from a trickle to a […]

Using Severity Ratings to Prioritize Web Accessibility Remediation

22 November 2024 @ 6:30 pm

So, you’ve found your website’s accessibility issues using WAVE or other testing tools, and by completing manual testing using a keyboard, a screen reader, and zooming the browser window. Now what? When it comes to prioritizing web accessibility fixes, ranking the severity of each issue is an effective way to prioritize and make impactful improvements. […]

25 Accessibility Tips to Celebrate 25 Years

31 October 2024 @ 4:38 pm

As WebAIM celebrates our 25 year anniversary this month, we’ve shared 25 accessibility tips on our LinkedIn and Twitter/X social media channels. All 25 quick tips are compiled below. Tip #1: When to Use Links and Buttons Links are about navigation. Buttons are about function. To eliminate confusion for screen reader users, use a <button> […]

CatsWhoCode.com

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Titbits for web designers and alike

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