Microsoft Copilot AI Conversation
April: List four different bloggers that write about CSS and web development. Include a summary about the author and links to their blog and social media platforms.
Copilot: Sure! Here are four bloggers who write extensively about CSS and web development:
- Chris Coyier
- Blog: CSS Tricks
- Summary: Chris Coyier is the founder of CSS-Tricks, a popular blog that covers all aspects of web development, with a strong focus on CSS. He is also a co-founder of CodePen, a social development environment for front-end designers and developers.
- Social Media: Twitter, LinkedIn
- Harry Roberts
- Blog: CSS Wizardry
- Summary: Harry Roberts is a consultant web performance engineer from the UK. He writes about CSS architecture, performance, and scalability. His blog, CSS Wizardry, is a go-to resource for developers looking to improve their CSS skills.
- Social Media: Twitter, LinkedIn
- Ahmad Shadeed
- Blog: Ahmad Shadeed
- Summary: Ahmad Shadeed is an independent product designer and front-end developer from Palestine. He writes about CSS, design systems, and front-end development. His articles often delve into complex design problems and their solutions.
- Social Media: Twitter, LinkedIn
- Stephanie Eckles
- Blog: ModernCSS.dev
- Summary: Stephanie Eckles is a front-end focused software engineer at Microsoft and an Egghead instructor. Her blog, ModernCSS.dev, provides modern solutions to common CSS problems, with a focus on practical tips and techniques.
- Social Media: Twitter, LinkedIn
These bloggers offer a wealth of knowledge and insights into CSS and web development. Happy reading!
April: Can you provide links to those authors' social media platforms?
Absolutely! Here are the social media links for the bloggers I mentioned:
- Chris Coyier
- Harry Roberts
- Ahmad Shadeed
- Stephanie Eckles
Feel free to check out their profiles for more insights and updates on CSS and web development!
April: I'm unable to click those social media links. Can you provide clickable social media links to their pages?
Copilot: Sure! Here are the clickable social media links for the bloggers:
- Chris Coyier
- Harry Roberts
- Ahmad Shadeed
- Stephanie Eckles
You should be able to click on these links to visit their social media profiles. Enjoy exploring their content!
April: Please list the full URLs for the social media sites for these authors.
Copilot: Sure! Here are the full URLs for the social media profiles of the bloggers:
- Chris Coyier
- Twitter: https://twitter.com/chriscoyier
- LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/chriscoyier/
- Harry Roberts
- Twitter: https://twitter.com/csswizardry
- LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/csswizardry/
- Ahmad Shadeed
- Twitter: https://twitter.com/shadeed9
- LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ahmadshadeed/
- Stephanie Eckles
- Twitter: https://twitter.com/5t3ph
- LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/stephanie-eckles/
Feel free to visit their profiles for more insights and updates on CSS and web development!
This conversation was generated by AI.
Copilot, 1.25023.101.0, Microsoft, 04 April 2025, https://copilot.cloud.microsoft/
CSS Wizardry: HTML is Not a Programming Language
Summary
This blog post, HTML is Not a Coding Language, discusses exactly what the title name is: how HTML is not a programming language. The author is comparing HTML to other programming languages that manage banking software and launch rockets. The author loves HTML, but he acknowledges that he "can't hold a candle" to the software engineers that write the more complex programming code.
Value of Information
This blog post did not include a lot of specific information. The author did not mention the exact programming languages he was comparing HTML to unfortunately. However, the information that I can take from this post is that HTML is one of the less difficult coding languages to learn and it does not have the capability to do the full programming for the rockets.
Project Use
This blog post could be used for a future Research & Documentation project if I needed sources on the capabilites of coding languages. In a workplace, this could also be used as a source to provide if I was trying to explain what HTML can and can't do.