Not quite a bug, more of maybe a suggestion. When I receive a notice that you like my comment, it looks like this (see attachment). I'm always confused if that second "Hawkee" is a link to you or not. What about changing the linked text to "your Comment" instead? I've noticed in other notifications, like if my thread is liked, the "thread" text is capitalized, which makes sense.
Just in case you haven't seen it yet, Zurb just released a "Foundation for Apps" framework. Its the same Zurb you know and love, but they've tweaked out even more to be more mobile app friendly and are using AngularJS on the backend to get things going. I'm working on rebuilding a project of mine now to use it. Their CLI tool seems a little buggy for the moment, but if you use the standard node/bower/bundler install route, you should be okay.
Suggestion for threads / header context: When I click on the "Explore/Threads" link, I can see the threads, but there is a "Create Page" button at the top right of the header. What about changing that to "Create Thread?" That way the context of the header follows your navigation. I didn't know to go to my profile page to start a new thread. I realize I'm still new to the site and getting used to it, so I don't want to break the natural flow if it is already there.
Oftentimes I am called into a project that is adding new features to an existing application. While a lot of updates seem easy on the surface (I’m just adding a basic page that saves the user’s e-mail address), the underlying architecture of the system can make this rather complex. The shocking thing is that a lot of times the complexity isn’t immediatley discoverable. To help identify and estimate..
AngularJS is a new and popular Javascript framework. They make the bold claim on their website that “AngularJS is what HTML would have been, had it been designed for building web-apps.” I’ve been wanting to get my feet wet with AngularJS, especially with some upcoming projects that might use it. Fortunately I stumbled across “AngularJS: Up and Running” by Brad Green and Shyam Seshadri (as..