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Posts Tagged ‘Design’

Design and Web Applications Pt. 4

Monday, June 30th, 2008

Web applications are the commodity to deal in on the internet these days but what makes them successful isn’t always their function, often times design plays a huge role and I’m taking a look at five apps that exemplify various aspects of great design.

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Design and Web Applications Pt. 3

Monday, June 30th, 2008

Web applications are a growing trend in cloud computing but what makes the most popular applications, popular? I believe the answer lies in good design.

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Design and Web Applications Pt. 1

Monday, June 30th, 2008

Web applications are all the rage these days as cloud computing becomes the standard way of doing things. Whether it’s Facebook apps, Web clients, Flash, Adobe Air Apps or anything else that’s becoming ubiquitous, a huge part of the development of these applications is design and what you an learn from the design of quality web applications is priceless. In this series of posts, I’ll spotlight five well known web applications and share the design aspects that I think make each unique.

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Snipplr: A Code Repository for Designers and Developers

Monday, June 30th, 2008

Snipplr.com is like del.icio.us for people who write a lot of code. Whether you develop for Ruby or Django, hack WordPress or MovableType, or if you just write XHTML, you probably keep a “Code Diary” full of useful tricks, hacks and hints that you’ve used in past projects. Snipplr exists to let you share that code with other developers just like yourself. It’s become indispensable to my work flow since I found it!

How To Fight Designer’s Block

Monday, June 30th, 2008

Although I love design and web development, there are some days when I hit something akin to the writer’s wall. There really are days when I would rather bang my head against the wall than try to conjure up something new an exciting for a new client. I wrote about some places that I find inspirational a few weeks back at Smashing but that’s just me getting wanderlust. So where can you get inspiration when you’re fresh out of ideas and kind of sick of being creative?

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Five Steps to a Free Font Foundry

Sunday, June 29th, 2008

Designers these days tend to rely on ‘the cloud’ as much as they rely on their desktop applications. This means they turn to Web Apps and Google whenever possible. It’s often cheaper, faster and more useful to work this way, especially for the little guys who may not have access to all the tools that more established designers have.

The type foundry used to be a high cost, highly skilled operation. Now neither is the case as a few web apps have made it incredibly easy to make your own fonts. Here’s a look a few of them:

The Five Sexiest Webhosts

Saturday, June 28th, 2008

I was recently mucking around with some new web hosts trying to find one that offered advanced features that most others don’t (specifically Subversion, Rails and Django support so if you have any leads please share). While I was doing this I began to notice that most web host companies employ godawful design schemas, usually purchased from sites like monstertemplates.com. So I made it my task to find a few web hosts that offer the best services, while still managing to look pretty gd good!

Study: Females Less Likely to Share Online

Wednesday, June 25th, 2008

The results of a recent study suggest that women are less likely to share their work online than men. Now before you cry ’sexist’, these were actual results of a study and the women involved actually expressed trepidation about embracing the collaborative aspects of web.

Men are overrepresented online when it comes to sharing creative work, according to a new report from Northwestern University. Researchers Eszter Hargittai and Gina Walejko found that men were much more likely to post their writings, photos, videos, and other creations on the Internet than women, despite the fact that they were equally likely to participate in such activities.

“This suggests that the Internet is not an equal playing field for men and women since those with more online abilities—whether perceived or actual—are more likely to contribute online content,” Hargittai said in a statement. “It appears that lack of perceived skill is holding women back from putting their creative content out there.”

Hargittai acknowledged that there may be additional factors at play that affected the (lack of) participation by women online. For example, women may have greater concerns over privacy than men—I know that my father attempted to instill in me a very deep-seated fear that anything I might post online could lead someone to break into my home and murder me in my sleep (so far, so good). Women may also be less confident in the quality of their work than men, although if this were the case, things may not be as balanced as they apparently are after controlling for perceived digital literacy.

Being a male designer and developer, I have no clue as to what could be behind this. My own girlfriend is extremely leery of the internet. The fact that she can’t control things, or even track who’s following what she’s doing freaks her out while I lifestream, tweet, and publish my way all over the gd web!

I know I’m opening a big can of worms here but this leads me to ask the obvious question, is this trait instinctual? Men, throughout history have been the primary hunter-gatherers while women have been the care takers. Obviously, not every man fits this mold, nor does every woman but it is the precedent traditionally. If you think of the web as the wild west, or some other unforaged territory, it would make since that women are more cautious and leery of being taken advantage of.

Read the actual study at Northwestern.

Subversion Workflow For Designers Pt. 5

Tuesday, June 24th, 2008

We’ve been learning how to install and begin using Subversion in a designer’s workflow. The method I’ve been describing, however, is what you’d use mainly for a locally hosted Subversion server. This is great if you’re running an in house network or if you’re using Subversion for yourself. When it comes to serving clients though, you’ll probably need to consider hosting a decentralized Subversion system. This means you’re going to need a web host that supports Subversion.

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Subversion Workflow For Designers Pt. 3

Tuesday, June 24th, 2008

Kathy is in love with Subversion, you will be too after this tutorial:

Using Subversion is very similar to uploading and downloading files using an FTP client. First you’ll need a Subversion server and a Subversion client. You can get the latest version of the Subversion server from Tigiris.org. As I write this, the latest version for Mac OSX is Universal Subversion 1.5.0. I’m a Mac guy so if you use Windows, sorry but keep Googling for a different tutorial.

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