Sources

Creative Commons

http://eloquentjavascript.net
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/

Tutorial Sites

http://css-tricks.com/
http://www.html5rocks.com/en/
http://www.w3schools.com

Free Images & Icons

https://github.com/google/material-design-icons
http://publicdomainarchive.com/
http://picjumbo.com/
http://pixabay.com/
http://www.morguefile.com/

Free Images - Photographers

http://jaymantri.com/
http://www.gratisography.com/
http://picography.co/




The Internet is noisy. There are so many voices, voicing so many opinions  - just people - in addition to all of the organized news and educational publications. It's wonderful and democratic - everyone has a chance to speak.

However, it can be quite daunting when starting out as a web developer. There are several development languages to learn (HTML, CSS, JavaScript) and in the case of JavaScript, there are a great many libraries, each of which can have their own style and syntax.

The Lady Coder blog takes a minimal approach, attempting to filter out the signal from the noise. Each post should be able to answer the question, "What is the minimum needed to understand the technology being discussed?"

On this page, I want to list a set of free* sources for understanding Internet development, as well as some free* resources that I'll be making use of on the blog. The aim is not to make the list as long as possible, but rather to keep it as short as possible, as if to answer the question, "What is the smallest set of sources needed to understand Internet development?"

*There are a few different definitions of 'free', for example the Creative Commons License, by which resources may be used as long as the creator is attributed, as opposed to CC0 (public domain), where attribution is not required. A list of free licenses is available here.








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