I am also aware of some UI oriented frameworks like YUI, is this something that we should be looking for in a candidate, experience with this? Is a likely candidate going to be someone with a graphic design/artist degree or will it be someone more programming oriented? Is this actually a task for 2 separate people, one doing the graphics and another doing the user experience/css layout? It just seems very confusing to figure out what exactly we should be looking for so the interviews have been rather hit and miss so far. Thanks! asked Nov 17 '10 at 1:59 2 you need a Graphic Artist, a usability expert and a web developer. it is rare/unlikely that you will find one person who excels at all three the good news is that you'll only need the graphic artist and usability people short-term answered Nov 17 '10 at 2:09 Steven A. Lowe Steven A. Lowe 58. 1k 18 gold badges 127 silver badges 199 bronze badges I would look for a Javascript developer with experience in integrating with You need to explicitly require experience with CSS layouts, Javascript, frameworks such as jQuery, Prototype, etc.
The US Census Bureau's retail sales data blew away expectations, coming in at month over month of 9. 8% vs 6. 1% expected, which is 17% higher than Feb 2020 (the last pre-covid numbers) as outlined in this wsj article. u/OldGerhman 's pick, RECAF, which he first brought to our attention on March 19 (see also later discussion here) popped on news that it might be an even better find than originally speculated. As I commented on my March 22 post, I'd guesstimate it to be a 20-bagger on a 5 - 10 year timeframe (at least prior to the latest pop) if it continues to progress on track and avoid some of the geopolitical risk factors mentioned in some of the discussion. Elsewhere, u/sloppy_hoppy87 ( comment here) and u/hkteddy ( comment here) flagged some interesting stocks showing promise of high volatility going in to tomorrow (PLBY and DKNG, respectively. I'm really tempted to play some 0DTEs in both, but I have a meeting overlapping the last 2 market hours, which elevates the risk even further (and not in the technical and interesting sense where you intentionally try to take asymmetrically beneficial risk), so I'm undecided at this point.