That's not all the code but I won't bore you with the details. Essentially if you take the DIV you wanna observe for resize events, add an <object> to that DIV that acts as a whole 'nother Document, you can attach a "resize" event to that Document and observe it like you'd observe your main Document.
SO let's call this a shitty solution intuitively, shall we? But what's the worst that can happen, if I inject a second Document into a page? What should I be worried about?
So, I'm working on quite a large project. We're a few months away from launch, so we did a pre-mortem of all the things that could go wrong. Just got the meeting notes, casual 94 things. None of them unreasonable.
I'm working on a personal project (that will never see the light of day) that's like a youtube/hulu service that's based on complex subscription models instead of ads. The user can subscribe/pay a specific channel or network of channels instead of a single subscription to the site, like the new youtube red
I'm just trying to create a platform for content creators to make money without blasting bullshit cancerous ads at users. Like I said, I'll probably never finish this, but my model would be something like, "creator pays me for space/bandwidth (plan based) -> user subscribes to creator (fee decided by creator)".
I think I want something like, creator also has free content, but you need to subscribe for the premium content, and also videos older than x days
like hulu
The idea isn't for me to make a lot of money; it's to provide a more professional platform for content creators that pump out content regularily.
If I ever do finish it, it will either be a huge flop that everyone thinks is garbage, or a big hit
but I'm lazy
but I've already learned a lot, working on the back end for this.
Native advertising is the way to go. I love native ads on youtube, because the channel authors make it their own, and typically only endorse products they actually believe in and are relevant to the content of their channel
web sockets are better, but long polling might be needed for olld browsers. fortunately a common feature of websocket helper libriares (like socket.io) is a long polling fallback
someone asked the same question in stack overflow some years ago, and one reply was "I made some test and in around 6000 connections it starts to fail" something like that