COMING SOON!* My book about open source software.
βI've written this book as a new entry in the compendium of open source thought. I don't fancy myself a thought-leader and for that we are all fortunate. But it is informed by years of success and failure working with open source software. The advice is honest; the vision bold; the mandate modest.β
π£ I cannot wait to share more as it comes togetherβ keep up with progress as I make it by subscribing to a tiny newsletter here.
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Curious to know where we are in the process?
- β Proposal Written
- β Pitch Accepted
- β Draft Complete
- β Editing Round 1
- β Editing Round 2
- β Editing Round 3
- π ABA ceases publishing new works
- πΊοΈ Charting a new course
- β Manuscript formatting
- β Book producer found
- β Website ready!
- β Proofreading
- β Forward Written
Brian lives in Chanhassen, Minnesota but hails from Manitowoc, where it was always cooler by the lake and is now a fantastic ice-breaker at parties. He has four boys that keep him bald. He does a little of everything. Sometimes thatβs called being a unicorn π¦, duck π¦, or a jack-of-all-trades π§°, but he likes to land on the Seussical-formβSneelock of the Circus πͺ!
With a career spanning many roles, from developer, UX team of one, product manager, analyst, and freelancer, Brian brings an experienced and broad approach to many disciplines. Him and his wife Meganβs small business keeps them exhausted and grounded in customer delivery, innovation, and warrantee-voiding laser maintenance. Heβs been published in Smashing Magazine, CSS-Tricks, and led workshops at Web Design Day and the Node.js Collaborator Summit. Open source software threads into many aspects of his life, and has opened doors heβd never thought imaginable. It can do that for you too.
When not writing or working within open source software, Brian lives out programming tropes of drinking coffee and woodworking. He enjoys soccer, playing games with his sons, especially X-Wing or Chess, and never turns down a milkshake. Him and Megan spend as much time outside as they can muster, often playing with their kids, deepening the pickleball rivalry on their makeshift court, chasing clouds, or digging up the yard.
Be sure to check out some of my favorite things from now and then:
Thing | Why | Tech Stack |
---|---|---|
nodejs.org | Helping maintain one of the most consequential websites in our ecosystem. Learning lots. Helping others do the same. My proudest moments are the new contributors, the Grace Hopper attendees, and the redesign. | NextJS |
makeapullre.quest | A shelved community resource dedicated to improving the quality of writing & ease of assessing code changes. Sorta on hiatus. Great URL. | next-i18n-starter |
next-i18n-starter | I wrote this because I found it hard to compose all the demos and docs together into what resembled a fully functioning content-centric website. | NextJS |
Sweet Love Adornments | Megan's pretty killer etsy shop and website - since replaced by Shopify | NextJS, Netlify CMS |
Walls | A digital place to preserve the β€οΈ Megan put into our homes. | 11ty, Pantograph |
Pattern Lab | The open source project I was the lead maintainer of for many years. | Node, lerna, auto |
compassrose.js | My first real open source effort. I've recently hosted it on netlify and left the code unaltered as possible, a sort of time capsule. | jQuery |
DoneDaily | One of my first public web apps. I've recently hosted it on netlify and left the code unaltered as possible, a sort of time capsule. | Grunt, sass, Respond, yepnope, jQuery, knockout |
Simple Shift Scheduler | One of my first public web apps. Built for my father-in-law's business. I've recently hosted it on netlify and left the code unaltereed as possible, a sort of time capsule | jQuery, AngularJS, Bootstrap |