A huge thank you goes to Andrew Trice for spending hours on polishing and editing a video of my last presentation. He uploaded it to Youtube and now you guys can watch it as well. I'm proud of this presentation so I hope it is helpful. As always, criticism is welcome. You can download the demos and slide deck here:
I'm currently looking for my next role in developer evangelism and advocacy. I have a long history of helping companies work with developers and love to write, create demos, and present at conferences. You can find my resume to learn more and drop me an email (raymondcamden@gmail.com) to reach out.
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Hi and thanks for talk. I have a question about <iframe> elements. We load some content in a ifram that include some JavaScripts code which send a request to a the server and receive the respond. if we monitor the network send and receive requests with something like chrome DevTools, can we see network activities of ifame content? Or just main page network activities can be seen?
Comment 2 by Raymond Camden
posted on 2/26/2013 at 12:21 AM
I don't know.... but... silly question. Why not just test it? If you already have this, just use the Chrome Dev Tools and look. :) It should take you 2 seconds to test, right?
Comment 3 by Ty Whalin
posted on 2/26/2013 at 7:38 PM
Joined you on Twitter, one closer to that 5000 mark.
Comment 4 by Raymond Camden
posted on 2/26/2013 at 7:52 PM
5002 and now. ;) Not sure what that gets me, but...
Comment 5 by Tushar Bhaware
posted on 2/27/2013 at 9:56 AM
nice presentation ... learn a quite a bit ... Thanks :)
Archived Comments
Hi and thanks for talk.
I have a question about <iframe> elements. We load some content in a ifram that include some JavaScripts code which send a request to a the server and receive the respond. if we monitor the network send and receive requests with something like chrome DevTools, can we see network activities of ifame content? Or just main page network activities can be seen?
I don't know.... but... silly question. Why not just test it? If you already have this, just use the Chrome Dev Tools and look. :) It should take you 2 seconds to test, right?
Joined you on Twitter, one closer to that 5000 mark.
5002 and now. ;) Not sure what that gets me, but...
nice presentation ... learn a quite a bit ... Thanks :)