Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Helpful resources on interface design patterns from Smashing Mag

Those rather helpful guys at
Smashing Magazine
have posted 40 useful resources for interface design patterns. I have some of these bookmarked and others where new.

They also just posted 10 design patterns to be paying attention to, talking about some of the recent patterns that are emerging and re-emerging in the websites that we know and love.

Good stuff to snack on and chew.

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You're still counting clicks, huh?

UX Booth has a great article on Counting Clicks. The every famous "3 Click Rule", which is something like everyone should get to where they want to go in 3 clicks, is one of those "rules" that we aren't fans of.

Not because we don't like the challenge of making everything on your website available within 3 clicks. There might be times where it is applicable. As a general rule it places unnessary contrains on the architecture that might not really be a benefit to the user.

For example large navigation systems are not helpful for people to make decisions with. In that scenario people might want 4 clicks with smaller navigation items.

The truth is that hard, fast, and specific rules like this don't apply to everything. Just like saying that a glass of wine a day is good for you doesn't apply to everyone.

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Monday, June 22, 2009

Ordering online from Domino's


I just ordered a pizza from Domino's and here it tells me exactly what the status of my pizza is in real time.

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Thursday, June 4, 2009

The web without words

Explore the Web Without Words - a visual playground. Every week Paul Armstrong takes a popular and known website and reconstruct it by removing all words and images, replacing them with blocks (what is typical in the "concepting" and "wireframeing" phase of a architecture/ design process).

Can you guess which websites these are:

Website A
Website B

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Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Graduating from usability into delightability

This is exactly what Clearleft's design lead talks about... mixing unexpected delights and unconventional designs, as the arcane art of smoke and mirrors to spread wonder and create buzz.

This is exactly why we have graduated from usability to delightability.




What's this?

If you said an arrow pointing to the right symbolizing movement and forward progression, you are right.

But if you said the Fed Ex logo, you're also right.

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Browser ball, possibly more cool than you think

This is an experiment that I stumbled on. It breaks out preconceived barriers of the browser window.



Check out browser ball

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Parallax scrolling and Jquery... salivating aren't we?




We've been talking in the office about producing environments as part of the user experience. People explore websites to reach their goal just like we explored worlds in video games to reach the end boss. We're realizing that people don't want to be online doing work, they want to be online having fun.

So lets start by making work fun.



Check out Jparallax, a clever parallax effects in Jquery.

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Monday, April 27, 2009

Brand Aid Author Praises Johnson & Johnson for Uniting Branding and Technology

ConsultingMag.com just did an interview with Allen Adamson, managing director of Landor Associates and author of Brand Aid.

His main theme focuses around uniting brand experts and technology experts. I whole heartedly agree and I'm looking forward to reading the book.

In his interview with consultingmag.com, he praises Johnson & Johnson and their baby care division:

Most marketers are finally getting up to speed. I think Johnson & Johnson is doing some of it very well, particularly for their baby division. They have known for years that moms talking to each other are a key vehicle to getting their brand message into that marketplace. They have the [YouTube] baby channel, and they really created a whole platform for new moms to talk to each other.

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Sunday, April 19, 2009

Typeface Inspired by Comic Books Has Become a Font of Ill Will

Vincent Connare designed the ubiquitous, bubbly Comic Sans typeface, but he sympathizes with the world-wide movement to ban it.

Mr. Connare has looked on, alternately amused and mortified, as Comic Sans has spread from a software project at Microsoft Corp. 15 years ago to grade-school fliers and holiday newsletters, Disney ads and Beanie Baby tags, business emails, street signs, Bibles, porn sites, gravestones and hospital posters about bowel cancer.

The font, a casual script designed to look like comic-book lettering, is the bane of graphic designers, other aesthetes and Internet geeks. It is a punch line: "Comic Sans walks into a bar, bartender says, 'We don't serve your type.'" On social-messaging site Twitter, complaints about the font pop up every minute or two. An online comic strip shows a gang kicking and swearing at Mr. Connare.

The jolly typeface has spawned the Ban Comic Sans movement, nearly a decade old but stronger now than ever, thanks to the Web. The mission: "to eradicate this font" and the "evil of typographical ignorance."

"If you love it, you don't know much about typography," Mr. Connare says. But, he adds, "if you hate it, you really don't know much about typography, either, and you should get another hobby."

Typefaces convey meaning, typographers say. Helvetica is an industry standard, plain and reliable. Times New Roman is classic. Depending on your point of view, Comic Sans is fun, breezy, silly or vulgar and lazy. It can be "analogous to showing up for a black-tie event in a clown costume," warns the Ban Comic Sans movement's manifesto. The font's original name was Comic Book, but Mr. Connare thought that didn't sound like a font name. He used Sans (short for sans-serif) because most of the lettering, except for the uppercase I, doesn't have serifs, the small features at the end of strokes.

Mr. Connare, 48 years old, now works at Dalton Maag, a typography studio in London, and finds his favorite creation -- a sophisticated typeface called Magpie -- eclipsed by Comic Sans. He cringes at the most improbable manifestations of his Frankenstein's monster font and rarely uses it himself, but he says he tries to be polite when he meets people excited to be in the presence of the creator. Googling himself, he once found a Black Sabbath band fan site that used Comic Sans. The site's creators even credited him. "You can't regulate bad taste," he says.

Still, he is tickled by -- and trades on -- his reputation. A picture signed by Mickey Mouse that was sent to Mr. Connare to thank him after Disney used the font in ads hangs in his house. His wife, Sue Rider, introduces him at parties as the father of Comic Sans. A friend of his claims to know someone who broke up with her boyfriend in a letter written in Comic Sans to soften the blow. But there certainly hasn't been much money in it for Mr. Connare since Microsoft owns the font.

Of course, there would be no movement to ban Comic Sans if it weren't so popular. "We've been using that font for years," says Peter Phyo, a manager at O'Neals' restaurant across the street from Lincoln Center in Manhattan. "That is just the procedure. I wouldn't know the exact reasoning. It also looks nice on the menu." Mr. Phyo says he hasn't had any complaints.

The proliferation of Comic Sans is something of a fluke. In 1994, Mr. Connare was working on a team at Microsoft creating software that consumers eventually would use on home PCs. His designer's sensibilities were shocked, he says, when, one afternoon, he opened a test version of a program called Microsoft Bob for children and new computer users. The welcome screen showed a cartoon dog named Rover speaking in a text bubble. The message appeared in the ever-so-sedate Times New Roman font.

Mr. Connare says he pulled out the two comic books he had in his office, "The Dark Knight Returns" and "Watchmen," and got to work, inspired by the lettering and using his mouse to draw on a computer screen. Within a week, he had designed his legacy.

A product manager recognized the font's appeal and included it as a standard typeface in the operating system for Microsoft Windows. As home computers became widespread, Comic Sans took on a goofy life of its own.

Out to crush that goofy life is Ban Comic Sans, whose weapons include disapproving stickers, to be slapped on inappropriate uses of the font wherever they are found.

Ban Comic Sans was conceived in the fall of 1999, when Holly Sliger was a senior at the Herron School of Art and Design in Indianapolis, studying typography and graphic design. Designing a museum gallery guide for a children's hands-on artifact exhibit, Ms. Sliger says she was horrified when her bosses told her to use Comic Sans. She told them it was a cliché, and printed out a list of other typefaces she thought better suited the project. They insisted on Comic Sans.

"It was like hell for me," she says. "It was everywhere, like an epidemic."

In the midst of the project, she met her future husband, Dave Combs, at synagogue one Saturday. He was a recent college graduate working as a graphic designer, and she knew he would sympathize. "This is horrible," he remembers saying. She says, "That's when I knew he's the guy I would marry." The couple did wed a year later and continued to gripe about the font.

ing for his master's degree in type design at the University of Reading in Berkshire, England. He got an email from Mr. Combs asking for permission to use his photo for stickers, T-shirts and coffee mugs to promote "typography awareness" for the movement to ban Comic Sans that he and his wife had founded. Busy and distracted, Mr. Connare said OK.

"It sounded a bit silly," he says. He didn't think it would amount to much.

But the Combses had global ambitions. A map hangs in their daughter's bedroom, marked with little red flags to show the dozens of locations around the world from which people have requested their stickers. "They're like parking tickets," Mr. Combs says. As the movement grew, Mr. Connare's image became the logo for Comic Sans bashing.

Mr. Connare eventually, in February 2004, asked the Combses to stop using his picture, and they did.

Today, Mr. Connare sometimes speaks at Internet conferences, using 41-page PowerPoint presentations written in you-know-what. He talks with the Combses about creating an "I Love/I Hate Comic Sans" picture book together.

The font has become so popular that it's approaching retro chic. Design shop Veer is selling a T-shirt with a picture of human heart on it made entirely of tiny Comic Sans characters. Veer's text: "Love it, love to hate it, or hate that you love it."

Source Link: Wall Street Journal

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Monday, March 30, 2009

Did you Know Video

For all you data junkies like myself, this is a great fix.

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Friday, March 27, 2009

Windowshop.com, go window shopping at Amazon

windowshop.com let's you see Amazon.com's best selling products in a virtual window type interface. I know it's in flash, so I shouldn't be surprised by what they've setup, but it's still impressive at first look. Take a look, it might be a small peek into the future of shopping :)


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Wednesday, March 18, 2009

16 Best-Loved Font Bits In Web Design

Great article about web fonts, found a new respect for them :) I'll summarize here:

The first 6 bits of fonts on this list are considered “web-safe” - they’re supported by all major browsers on any platform. The fonts in the following 2 bits come pre-installed on most but not all systems. The fonts in the last 8 bits are mainly used for decorative purposes, and implemented on the Web as sIFR or saved as images.

1. Helvetica, Helvetica Neue, Arial
2.
Verdana
3.
Georgia
4. Trebuchet MS
5. Century Gothic
6. Lucida Sans Unicode, Lucida Grande
7. Palatino
8. Garamond, Baskerville, Caslon
9. Univers Condensed, Linotype Univers
10. Myriad Pro
11. Rockwell
12. Warnock Pro
13. FF DIN
14. Gotham
15. Frutiger
16. Dax Regular


Read whole article here

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Thursday, March 12, 2009

This is what we're going to get RJay for his birthday

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Pleasant things work better

In this talk from 2003, design critic Don Norman turns his incisive eye toward beauty, fun, pleasure and emotion, as he looks at design that makes people happy. He names the three emotional cues that a well-designed product must hit to succeed.

This is exactly why we want to make our websites fun, delightful, and pleasurable.




Don, says the three ways that good designs make us happy

Visceral Level - deep in inward subconscious feelings

Behavioral - the feeling of control

Reflective - the voice in your head that lets you know how to feel

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Monday, March 2, 2009

Whoa, Skittles.com is aactually a Twitter Search

So we're not the only one trying to let other people update our homepage (ok, that's coming soon).

Check out Skittles.com, if you can get past the annoying age verification or the floating ad banner like navigation. It is an interesting experience.

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Visions of 2019 Future by Microsoft

You gotta love the visions of the future. This is a very inspirational video by Microsoft. I'll be 41, Miya will be 19, and Lucas will be 10!

<a href="http://video.msn.com/?mkt=en-GB&playlist=videoByUuids:uuids:a517b260-bb6b-48b9-87ac-8e2743a28ec5&showPlaylist=true&from=shared" target="_new" title="Future Vision Montage">Video: Future Vision Montage</a>


This video was unveiled at Wharton Business Technology Conference on Febuary 29th. Microsoft’s Business Division president Stephen Elop unveiled the latest production from Microsoft Office Labs called “2019″, starring stock photo men, women and children playing with the next-generation of communication, collaboration and production technologies.

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Sunday, March 1, 2009

Yellow Sticky Notes

After realizing that yellow sticky note "to do" lists were consuming his life, animation filmmaker Jeff Chiba Stearns decided to visually self-reflect on his filmmaking journey by animating on the same sticky notes that caused him to ignore major world events for the last nine years. Animation meditation is blended with image, text, and an original musical score by Genevieve Vincent through the creation of a classically animated experimental film that was drawn straight ahead with only a black ink pen on over 2300 yellow sticky notes.

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Friday, February 6, 2009

Whiteboarding online tool



Web-based meeting playground for white boarding over images and websites. check it out here

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Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Commuter Bicycle Design Blog

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Web Statistic Charts

Here are some charts taken from data from W3Schools.com, the charts tell an interesting story of trends of the past and a look into whats to come. The data has been collected from W3Schools' log-files over a period of five years. You can find this data on the W3School website.

Click on the chart to see larger.

Browser Statistics



Monitor Display Resolution

Operating Systems

Monitor Color Depth


Download the Excel Document I used to create these charts.
W3School_Stats.xlsx

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Monday, January 12, 2009

ELS American Eduation Center (ELS-AEC.com) is Live!


Today we officially launched ELS American Education Centers Website (ELS-AEC.com).

The ELS American Education Centers support international students in pursuing their higher education studies in the USA. We programmed page transitions onto the site so pages don't have to reload and site visitors are wooed by transitions of content adding to the site's memorability and experience. Portions of the website are also being fed by the AEC blog making the frequently updated portions of the site a breeze.

Big congratulations to the project team.

Michael Alfaro – Account Manager
Christine Robinson – Project Manager
Barry Jabloner – Developer
Pinaki Kathiari – Web Designer

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Sunday, January 11, 2009

Firefox Web Developer tools

Here's some tools we use in house for development:

ScreenGrab: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/1146
Screengrab saves entire webpages as images.
It will save what you can see in the window, the entire page, just a selection, a particular frame... basically it saves webpages as images.
The following little keywords are at the request of those who can't remember the name ScreenGrab! and want searches to work. It takes screen shots, screenshots - that is, shots, of web pages.

MeasureIt: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/539
Draw out a ruler to get the pixel width and height of any elements on a webpage.

Inline Code Finder for Firebug: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/9641
Inline Code Finder is an add-on to Firebug, to be able to find HTML elements with any of the below issues:
* Inline JavaScript events
* Inline style
* javascript: links
Detailed description can be found at http://www.robertnyman.com/inline-code-finder/

YSlow: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/5369
YSlow analyzes web pages and tells you why they're slow based on Yahoo's rules for high performance web sites.

Pixel Perfect: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/7943
Pixel Perfect is a Firefox/Firebug extension that allows web developers and designers to easily overlay a web composition over top of the developed HTML.
* Requires Firebug

ColorZilla 2.0: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/271
With ColorZilla you can get a color reading from any point in your browser, quickly adjust this color and paste it into another program. You can Zoom the page you are viewing and measure distances between any two points on the page. The built-in palette browser allows choosing colors from pre-defined color sets and saving the most used colors in custom palettes. DOM spying features allow getting various information about DOM elements quickly and easily. And there's more...

IE Tab: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/1419
This is a great tool for web developers, since you can easily see how your web page displayed in IE with just one click and then switch back to Firefox.

PageDiff 1.3.0: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/4274
Pagediff is a simple page compare application. It helps web developers and designers to see HTML-code(text) differences between web pages.
It doesn't take original page source. It takes browser generated DOM compliant view source. It omits Doctype declaration and HTML tags.
After installation, to use this, one has to
1. Right click on a page & select 'Start DIFF' (this action saves the current page to memory),
2. Go to the page which one wants to compare (with the saved one) and
3. Right click on the page & select 'Show DIFF'.


Html Validator: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/249
HTML Validator is a Mozilla extension that adds HTML validation inside Firefox and Mozilla. The number of errors of a HTML page is seen on the form of an icon in the status bar when browsing.
The extension can validate the HTML sent by the server or the HTML in the memory (after Ajax execution).
The details of the errors are seen when looking the HTML source of the page.
The extension is based on Tidy and OpenSP (SGML Parser). Both algorithms were originally developed by the Web Consortium W3C. And now extended and improved by a lot of persons. Both algorithms are embedded inside Mozilla/Firefox and makes the validation locally on your machine, without sending HTML to a third party server.
Each algorithm has advantages and inconvenients. The program will give you the choice at startup. But mostly,
- The SGML parser is the same program than the one running behind validator.w3.org.
- Tidy has accessibility check for the 3 levels defined in WAI

Console²: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/1815
As of Firefox 1.5, the JavaScript Console is used not only for JavaScript errors, but for CSS errors as well. This extension takes this into account by providing a simple possibility to display errors by type.
Console² let's you display errors filtered by type (Errors, Warnings, Messages), language (JavaScript, CSS, XML) and context (Chrome, Content). Furthermore it provides a simple search box (as seen in the History and Bookmarks sidebars), hiding of duplicates, sidebar optimizations, a customizable toolbar and some more accessibility improvements.

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Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Check out Papervision

While surfing the web this morning I came across the Papervision website its truely a unique experience. Very interesting to see the types of content that we'll be able to serve up over the Internet very soon.

Papervision3D.org


For more information check out:
the Papervision blog

Papervision is open source 3D flash components.

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Exploring media in interactive 3D spaces

We do love discovering media in its many shapes and forms. There are several websites that are enabling some very cool ways to explore media.

Here are 3:

CoolIris


A FireFox plugin (and iPhone app) that lets you discover images, videos and more. This is my fav by the way.





3D Spiral
Flash gallery component that displays images on an interactive 3D rotating spiral using the Papervision3D engine.







TagGalaxy
Is an ok implementation (needs some work) but the concept is pretty cool. It uses Papervision3D to explore Flickr photos through a solar system-like interface.

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Will the real IA please stand up

I came across a very interesting and entertaining presentation from Gail Lejia, UX expert. Learn about Information Architecture through some entertainment.



There has been a lot of discussion over the years about what exactly information architecture is. These "Defining The Damned Thing (DTDT)" conversations have been primarily around the What, rather than the Who. But who are these people? Where do they come from? And why?

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Intranets are the latest rage

So whats the difference between talking with our customers and talking with our employees and collegues. Nothing really. Well, there shouldn't be, we are all humans. This is something talked about in the Clue Train Manifesto.

I digress, the point of this post is that there is a shift in the way we've been thinking about Intranet sites. Teams need to collaborate, communicate, and connect in ways that were never really needed. This year along we've seen a drastic increase in Intranet sites. From sites that organize information, to sites that allow community discusions, to sites that are highly interactive and motivational.

We're not the only ones who see this. Jakob Neilson talks about it in his latest alertbox titled, 10 Best Intranets of 2009.

Intranets are getting more strategic, with increased collaboration support. Team size is growing by 12% per year, and platforms are becoming integrated, with a strong showing for SharePoint. Improving usability increased use by 106% on average.

The winners of the award for 10 best-designed intranets for 2009 are:

  • Altran, a large engineering and innovation consultancy (France)
  • Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), a developer of computer and graphics processors (USA)
  • BASF SE, the world's leading chemical manufacturing company (Germany)
  • COWI Group A/S, a consulting group focusing on engineering, environmental science, and economics (Denmark)
  • Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu (DTT), a global professional services network providing audit, tax, consulting, and financial advisory services (a Global member organization)
  • Environmental Resource Management (ERM), one of the world's leading providers of environmental consulting services (Global)
  • HSBC Bank Brazil (Brazil)
  • Kaupthing Bank (Iceland)
  • L.L.Bean, a vendor of apparel and outdoor equipment (USA)
  • McKesson Corporation, a large provider of pharmaceuticals, medical supplies, and health care information technologies (USA)
Read the full article

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Monday, January 5, 2009

2008 The Future of Web Design Presentation

Our boy Ryan Carson and the new Future of Web Design website has all the presentations online.

My favs were:

Nick La
Hillman Curtis
Nicholas Felton

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Anchor Links with Fitt's Law in Mind

In a blog post, 10 Useful Techniques to Improve Your Interface, Smashing Magazine talks about using padding on anchor links to increase the size of the clickable area. The idea is that a link or button will get more clicks the closer it is to the mouse arrow and the bigger it is.



The code looks like this:

a {

display
: block;
padding
: 6px;

}


See this and other useful techniques at Smashing Magazine

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Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Don't Make Me Think: the relationship between Humans & Computers

I saw this as an ironic tell-tale twist on Steve Krug's usability book
"Don't Make Me Think"

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Great looking site with good jQuery use

Clean up your websites

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Sunday, December 28, 2008

Interaction Designer Paul Neave

I just ran acros Paul Neave's website. Some amazing, multi-dimensional, multi-sensory interaction design.

The work is so brilliant I felt the need to replicate and annotate his main navigation.

http://www.neave.com/ - main site
http://www.flashearth.com/ - play with satellite imagery
http://www.neave.com/planetarium/ - play with the night sky
http://www.neave.com/games/ - play 80's arcade games
http://www.neave.com/imagination/ - ok, this is trippy
http://www.neave.com/fractal/ - reminds my how fractals are math
http://www.neave.com/television/ - click through channels
http://www.neave.com/strobe/ - play with your eyes
http://www.neave.com/anaglyph/ - sketch in 3D
http://www.neave.com/bounce/ - balls that bounce to your mic
http://www.neave.com/light/ - light orbs
http://www.neave.com/webcam/ - see yourself in a few different lights

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Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Fantastic Wedding Photographers

Our Labor Of Love does excellent wedding photography.



I can see how their clever design eye, use of designer tools, and fantastic company focus makes their customers fall in love with them.

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Wednesday, December 3, 2008

A preview of Office SharePoint Server site templates

Here is a page from Microsoft.com that describes the out of the box SharePoint site templates.

Here is a page which describes certain specific elements of a SharePoint template.

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Friday, November 21, 2008

UX and Design


Brandon Schauer, on Sketchboarding - an interesting design method he presented at CanUX in Banff, Alberta, Canada.

Check out video:

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Thursday, November 13, 2008

Photoshop Disasters

You see "Photoshopped" images all the time - some people make flawless touch-ups while others... well... lets just say you should avoid hiring some of these designers...

Visit PhotoshopDisasters for a good laugh or to just feel secure about your own skills.

For example: this photo was actually published on the Sports Illustrated website...

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Wednesday, November 5, 2008

LocalWisdom.com Coming Soon Launched

I am so happy to say that the LocalWisdom.com version 4 is almost there.

The COMING SOON SITE has launched today. Check it out.

Thank you to the team:
Barry Jabloner
Shawn Venkat
Michael Alfaro
and yours truly

The full site is going to be taking things to the next level.

For all you iPhone/iPode cats, here are the slides for the coming soon site made to fit your iPhone or iPod video.

Download the movie LWSiteSlides.mov

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Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Why Designers Fail


Excellent survey and conclusions on the reasons designers miss the mark on a project by one of my favorite speakers/writers/bloggers, Scott Berkun. Check it out.

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Monday, October 20, 2008

Design a homepage! LocalWisdom.com 4.0 is almost here

We're making some major traction on the new LocalWisdom.com website. This is going to be exciting!


As you all recall the homepage of the new website will be editable by all employees. We will be able to upload pics and post to the homepage from our cell phones or from the LW blog.

Download the template psd and design away!
(23MB - right click to download)

With the template you'll be able to really create curated and well designed imagery for the homepage. You really only need to know Photoshop basics to work with this.

Download the template demo (19MB - right click to download)... there's no excuse, I smell a contest coming around.

Call me if you have any questions. Email me questions and/or designs: pkathiari@localwisdom.com

;p

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Friday, October 3, 2008

The Logos of Social Websites

Here is a link to a bunch of logos from the design trend they call "Web 2.0". Enjoy.

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Sunday, September 21, 2008

Javascript in Modern Web Design

Web designer wall has a new post that catalogues some I'd the most
used javascript functions to extend designs and inscrease user
experience.

http://www.webdesignerwall.com/general/javascript-in-modern-web-design/

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Friday, September 19, 2008

LW logo in chalk (good)

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Tap is the New Click


Good primer on designing interfaces for touchscreen applications, Click here. (download alert: 8.5mb PDF)

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Logo in chalk (bad)

Was out in the driveway and did the logo. I realized that I broke the
brand guideline... So I slapped myself on the wrist.

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Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Behold the new Local Wisdom Brand!


For 10 years we've lasted with the current logo. Created originally in 1998, the logo has been our mark stating that wisdom is key.

Today, we've refocused our company and brand. Its all about the website! (and yea, we do other things as well)

Download the new brand guidelines and pop some comments with your thoughts.

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Thursday, September 4, 2008

What's on my drawing table now

More fish coming to life waiting to swim in murky water.

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Tuesday, September 2, 2008

Beautiful carving... seen in Liberty Corner, NJ


I don't usually frequent graveyards, but this headstone struck me as particularly elegant. Dated 1849.

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Thursday, August 28, 2008

Red: The Power Color


Need to convey Power?
Studies show RED is the way to go.


Find out why.

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Scrolling all the waaaay....

There is another design trend that I am seeing for websites where the whole website is on one page and the links scroll the page to the location of the content.

Nick La has a list of single page sites, check it out.

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Wednesday, August 27, 2008

ZuiPrezi an amazing presentation tool

I just got access to be a beta tester of ZuiPrezi. This is an amazing presentation making tool that takes presentations and interfaces to the next level.

Try it, you'll like it.... ZuiPrezi

Log in with my account informaiton and leave feedback in the comments. I'll get our feedback to ZuiPrezi.

username: pkathiari
password: localwisdom2008

;p

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How much did you make when you were 17?

Entrepreneurial showoff - 17 year old Ashley Qualls, created whateverlife.com with $8 that she borrowed from her mother. Her business designs and gives away personalized background designs for MySpace pages and grosses more than $1 million a year in advertising revenue alone.

WOW! Sure humbles you, doesn't it!

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Moodstream @ getty



http://moodstream.gettyimages.com/

A tool from getty that streams images & video from their collection according to emotions such as humor, sad, warm, lively, stabile, excited, etc

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Monday, August 25, 2008

Design

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Design

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I hear wooden textures are in

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Friday, August 22, 2008

Inexpensive Usability Testing Service





Haven't tried it but looks like it could be a useful and inexpensive way to get some unbiased usability testing and feedback on a project.

HOW IT WORKS

You sign up for user testing, specifying the demographic profile of your target audience and how many user testers you want (one user costs $19, five users cost $95). You watch and listen to them use your site. Each user's session - mouse movements, clicks, keystrokes, and spoken comments - is saved as a Flash video for you to watch. You read their review. What they liked. What they didn’t like. What would have caused them to leave your site.

Click logo to check it out.

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Iweg.com is live!

Last night we launched iweg.com!

The International Work Experience Group (IWEG), is a service provided by ELS, a Berlitz company.

Iweg.com is a simple site that supplements the sales initiatives of this new service. The service helps American employers to hire qualified International students for seasonal or annual internships.

Congratulations to the iweg team:

Michael Alfaro – Account Manager
Christine Robinson – Project Manager
Barry Jabloner – Developer
Pinaki Kathiari – Information Architecture & Design

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Another Successful LW website Launch


And I think Shaquille O'Neal will be coming to the Launch party to celebrate with all the LW staff!

Please visit the site so we can prove that it's making a difference on day 1 :)


Thanks to the whole team for all the work put into it, special shoutouts to Christine (keeping me in check and putting up with me when I'm mean), Pak (for making the PNG's a huge issue) and Barry for final round cleanup!

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Wednesday, August 20, 2008

Need to do an iPhone Mockup?


Download the .psd file here (5mb)

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A little piece of LW.com


I like Timmy's previous post and wanted to share my own "cognitive modeling method."

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10 Futuristic User Interfaces

Monday, August 18, 2008

A Tribute to Opening Credits

Movies serve to be a great source of inspiration. I've been meaning to get together a list of opening credits that exemplify great animation and story.

Take a look and let me know if you'd like to participate.

Opening/Credits

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Design by Commitee = Designer Hell + Bad Results

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Saturday, August 16, 2008

Grids!

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Friday, August 15, 2008

Blueberry style

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Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Brilliant colors come from nature

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Sunday, August 10, 2008

Bows of rain

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Tuesday, July 29, 2008

True designers of our times

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Stephen Sagmeister is such a design badass

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Monday, July 28, 2008

We go thru sharpies like water


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Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Have you seen this man???


The Dov!!!


check out his newest project: http://twoguysonbeer.com/




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Monday, July 21, 2008

Texture


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Saturday, July 19, 2008

Web Designer Wall - Design Trends and Tutorials

http://www.webdesignerwall.com/


Nick La has some great web design resources.

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Wednesday, June 4, 2008

Let's put a effin' post up