SPEAKERS


Chloe Noh

Chloe Noh

DIY Data Visualization in JavaScript while Stanning BTS

Here is a story of how I did my due diligence as an ARMY through data visualization. As long as you have an idea about what you want to show, you can use JavaScript to collect and visualize data! I will share with you the process of data visualization, from selecting the main subjects and key indices for storytelling, to choosing the right type of visualization charts. It's easy to create one chart, but how could you tell it's a good chart? I'll share some tips to answer this question as well. I'm thrilled to share what I learned with you, because learning and growing is way more fun together than alone!

Woojin Jeon

Woojin Jeon

In Search of the Lost UI: A Tale of Design System Development

When we code, we value efficiency. We try to reuse the code, keep it concise, and be as clear as possible so our teammates have little trouble understanding it. But as the system grows and new teammates join, our codes begin to evolve in a different way than intended. The same UI components end up having different functions, or the same functions end up having different UIs, or we end up with redundant implementations of UI components and functions. In this talk, I will share my experience of unifying such fragmented UI/UX components by building a design system for Kakao Integrated Search.

Milecia McGregor

Milecia McGregor

Making VR More Interesting With JavaScript and Machine Learning

If you are familiar with JavaScript, you can start making VR applications right now. Once you have your VR app ready to go, you can go a step further and add Brain.js to start getting insights about how users interact with your app and make real-time updates to the UI. In this talk, attendees will learn how to start making VR apps, how to integrate Brain.js into a VR project, and how to use this information to make apps more accessible and interesting for users. We will cover some background material on machine learning and VR, then bring everything together in a live demo. By the end of the talk, the audience will know how to put all of these things together in a real, production-like app.

Eunjae Lee

Eunjae Lee

Let's Deploy an Open Source Library

Deploying an open source library can be scary. You anxiously stare at the screen hoping that it'll be a success, that you didn't make any mistakes. There are many tools that can ease your worries, but perhaps can't eliminate them. So I present to you a new process for deploying open source libraries. This process dramatically reduces the likelihood of making mistakes, and most of the process will happen asynchronously, allowing you to review with your teammates before deployment. I will also introduce Ship.js, a tool created for this purpose. With this newly defined process, let's continuously deploy our open source libraries without fear!

Anuradha Kumari

Anuradha Kumari

Inaccessible websites? - it's you, not JavaScript

Accessibility is an inherent aspect of the web. And yet it is often neglected and considered as an afterthought. There are certain misconceptions lingering around it and it might appear burdensome or confusing as a result. As we will explore the accessibility in this session, we will discover the ways in which JavaScript code can make or break the website accessibility. The objective of the talk is to enable the audience to apply the concepts learned within their projects/frameworks allowing everyone to write accessible and interactive interfaces/websites.

Ben Dechrai

Ben Dechrai

Say Goodbye to Passwords and Hello to WebAuthn

Dozens of times a day, we identify ourselves online. But as the nearly 10 billion leaked accounts documented by ';--have i been pwned? attest, this process has a fatal weakness–passwords. The Web Authentication API (or WebAuthn) is a standard from the W3C and FIDO that "allows servers to register and authenticate users using public key cryptography instead of a password". WebAuthn is part of a set of standards that enable passwordless authentication between servers, browsers, and authenticators. It's supported in all modern browsers. This talk will outline how the technologies work, and how you can take advantage of them today to create a far more secure experience for your users.

Justin Yoo

Justin Yoo

Lessons Learnt in a Hard Way: Turning on an Air-Con 10 Mins before Arriving at Home

Imagine one hot and humid day in summer. Would you expect your air-con at home has already been cooling down the air so that you feel refreshed on arrival? It would be perfect if I can turn on the air-con just 10 minutes before home! Are you to die for it? What if I can connect my air-con with Raspberry PI that runs a serverless application, which is triggered by a public cloud application? It sounds so sweet! But... life is not that easy. I'd like to share my hard learning experiences while setting up this home automation system, using Raspberry PI, Azure Functions, Power Automate and Power Apps.

Jaewon Seo

Jaewon Seo

Code Factorization: How to Organize Boilerplate Code

Boilerplate code (repeatedly used pieces of code) is often the main culprit of unnecessary complexity and cognitive overload in programming. That's why many books and experienced programmers tell us to avoid it, and we try our best by employing all kinds of methods, like inheritance and abstraction. Despite this constant effort, we often still encounter boilerplate code. Sometimes, we run into 'boss' boilerplate code, which we just don't know how to deal with. This talk is for those of you who's tired of this endless battle. I will talk about ‘code factorization’, a technique that will help you gain an edge in the war against boilerplate codes. After this talk, you will be able to declare with confidence: veni, vidi, vici.

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Inhwa Yeom & Seonghyeon Kim

p5 for 50+: How to Include Older Adults to Coding Education?

“p5 for 50+” is a 2020 Processing Foundation Fellowship project. It aims to improve the digital literacy and rights of middle-aged and older adults in South Korea — with p5.js! Addressing some age-specific needs in coding education, we prototyped a low-barrier web app for learning p5.js. In this presentation, we will mainly discuss design implications for accessible education of coding.

Jai Santhosh

Jai Santhosh

Developing in a Large Monorepo

At Microsoft, I work on a very large TypeScript-based git repository where over 300 developers build and write code for high-value frontend components which are used across all Microsoft365 products. It contains about 150 npm packages, containing over a million lines of TypeScript code. Co-locating these components encourages collaboration and sharing code across teams much easier. In this talk, we’ll focus on the tooling used and code organization to make the development easier, faster and more reliable, with a major focus on the largest pain point of package management and orchestrating common tasks across the packages.