Springest Development Blog
Our team shares how we make Springest.nl, Springest.co.uk, Springest.be and Springest.de. Code, interface, marketing, process and some fun every now and then.
We are always looking for great people, so check out our jobs (in Dutch).
Subscription
-
Recent Posts
Categories
- Analytics (3)
- Data (2)
- Events (5)
- Holacracy (2)
- Marketing (9)
- Process / Workflow (16)
- Productivity (2)
- Social (1)
- Usability / UX (9)
- Webdevelopment (26)
Our Projects on GitHub
About Springest
-
All posts in Events
Ruby Hack Night and Eurucamp, sponsored by Springest
One of the best things about the (web) software development industry is the open approach towards sharing knowledge. I can’t think of any other industry where best practices, new features and old tricks are shared so readily amongst one another. … Continue reading
Design for Conversion – what we can learn from other fields
Last friday I visited the Design for Conversion (DfC) conference in Cologne, with appearances of Eric Reiss, Andy Budd, Dan Lockton and Martin Kupp. DfC is all about the noble art of persuading your website’s visitors to perform a certain … Continue reading
10 Skills to Become a Frontend Developer worth Millions
Yesterday we had a very enjoyable Fronteers meeting at our offices. Fronteers is the Dutch association for frontend developers. Their monthly meetups consist of pizza, drinks and presentations about frontend related stuff. We had four 15 minute presentations, all related to … Continue reading
Fronteers meeting at Eduhub HQ
Every other month, the Dutch association for frontenders (yes, that exists!) has a meetup. It combines talks about frontend stuff with drinks, a good mix we think… The next one, 6 may from 18:30, is at our offices! We’ve tried … Continue reading
The art of user experience at the Tweakers.net Dev Summit
At the Developers Summit of Dutch tech site Tweakers.net British interaction designer Aral Balkan captured the gist of the evening with his slide on what UX is: it’s not one of the features one ticks off during the initial design … Continue reading