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Judging the CT Student Innovation Exposition (E-Commerce)... Want to know what the next 10 years will look like? Ask a high school student. Their creativity isnt limited by their knowledge of what we currently call technological limitations. They have a vision of...

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The Value of Feeling Appreciated as an Employee in... Whether you’re a new employee or the vice president of the company, everyone wants to feel valued, even appreciated, in the workplace. Not only does it improve morale and make the workplace a more pleasant...

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The difference between classic and motion tweens in... Here it is: If you're used to doing things "the cs3 way" then you can continue to do so with the classic tween tool. It works the same way as you remember, using key frames as normal, but you cannot...

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PHP: If (equal to AND not equal) - eliminate form spam... Just learned a great function of PHP thats already made my forms a lot better. A while back I wrote an article about eliminating form spam without captchas by using css to hide a text input box for bots...

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Drop Downs, Fly Outs, and Accordion Site Navigation: This last week I was in a meeting discussing a client site. It was a typical business meeting that was going into overtime on a Friday afternoon, and then things turned for the worst... someone suggested...

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A List Apart 2008 – Web Designers Survey

Category : Social, Technology

I saw this morning that A List Apart is doing their second annual web designers survey. I took part last year and am glad to take part again this year. Web business in general are run pretty differently than most other industries and this project hopes to help to decode just what sort of an industry we have made. Maybe even shed some light on where we’re going.

Last year about 33,000 people took it and its definetly worth checing back in on once they publish the results. Do you’re part and spend 5 minutes to take the survey, its easy.

itookthesurvey


New Address: Sisson Ave – Across from the Wood N Tap

Category : Around The Office, Around West Hartford, Social

Hatters Workshop is moving into Hartford. We’re growing up and moving out of the house we started in. This is a big step, which hopefully won’t end in financial ruin (kidding!). I’m excited to have my own space that I can really do anything with. I still have to arrange the furniture, put on some closet doors, and change the lights from being all fluorescent lights.

I might have the only PC only design lab in Connecticut, which might put some people off, but I still say that it saves me a conversion step with almost all my clients. They don’t use mac, the world doesn’t use mac (in general) so why should all the design work be done on a platform that is unused by the rest of the world?

I should have an Amazing intern starting once the move is complete, and the work is still rolling in. I’ve got to write two proposals by the end of the day and the phone never stops ringing. Thank goodness I don’t advertise or I’d never see light.

Thank you all for reading this, and being a witness to history.

Praise for IKEA and a review of page turning flash software

Category : General Web Info, Social, Technology

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In the process of researching another article I stumbled on a very clean and functional page turning script being used by IKEA to show their mammoth catalog. Wow! A clean interface and new functionality? ZMags, the company that provides the script and backend content controls, did an amazing job with this.

It provides a whole list of new functionality in flash applications. You can search the zine’s content, zoom in on pages with a really interesting real-time transition, and see thumbnail previews of the previous, next, or any of the preview images on the bottom. It’s a super easy interface for large catalogs with lots of scanable content.

I called to enquire about pricing and found it to be pretty reasonable, given the amount of backend support and tracking that’s built into the application. I don’t think flash can do everything that analytics can just yet, but they boasted as if it was pretty close.

Other notable mentions for clean design include JFK Magazine: a euro GQ, which has a really interesting page flip script that’s second to none at showing high res images. The zoom and pan feature is not as intuitive as maybe I’d like, but extra functionality is for me a welcome problem to overcome.

Both of the above scripts are sold as license agreements; you don’t own the script and so you can’t develop off them or use them once your contract with whoever expires. The alternative is to buy the scripts and develop the functionality yourself. PageFlip Developed by 2advanced, a sick nasty studio in their own right, is an economical package (under $30) and has everything you need to get started working with the raw component objects in a .fla file. A working knowledge of action script is all you really need as there is a thick help file, lots of commented code, and tons of examples of it working to pull apart.

Group 88 Open House Wednesday April 2ed from 4-7pm.

Category : Social

Group 88 is CT’s first co-op for more details see their website.

I can only see this being a good thing for Hartford and the creatives involved. One of the biggest drawbacks working alone (self employed) is the isolation and your inability to bounce ideas off of other creative people. With a decent mix of people I think this could be huge for networking and, well as the name might suggest, cooperation.

Other benefits include professional meeting space, a steady address other than your home, and they have fresh coffee.

I’m interested in seeing how the social dynamics of the group work out. I want to join the group for networking and the above stated reasons. My only complaint would be the constricting hours of operation (9-6pm M-F don’t know about weekends). If I was working full tilt I’m not stopping just because you’re closing. Lock me in.

Maybe this is why I work from home.

Book Review: Don’t make me think 2ed Edition – Steve Krug

Category : What I Read

Last week I read Steven Krug’s book, Don’t Make Me Think – A Common Sense Approach to Web Usability. I learned that most people ask totally the wrong questions when designing a site. Further, without being able to test our solutions in any sort of a real world atmosphere it’s impossible to know what we’re doing is right. The largest reason for this being that there is no “normal” internet user just as there is no “standard” website.

People ask the wrong questions all the time regarding web design. The best example I can think of is given in the book when a group is meeting about a project. The project manager asks how they can save space in the header of the page. A designer suggests using pull downs and a developer, who has a secret personal bias against pull downs, counters saying that pull downs won’t work with their java. The marketing person counters by looking for data on the subject of pull downs. Everyone is silent. This is a stalemate. Anyone who enters this argument now without asking the right questions is going to lose for a few reasons:

1.       People are voicing their personal opinions, not facts, about the issue.

2.        The only things that matter are: if the clients for THIS project will be annoyed by pull downs, if the site benefits in usability or user comprehension, and if there really is a technical issue because of your java. The last is the least important because if this is a code issue most code can be “made to work” if the reasoning is good enough.

It’s about asking the right questions as opposed to having all the answers. To get the answers to some questions the best way to do this is to run a usability test. Steve does a great job explaining how to do this in his book for almost nothing in a single day. The information you reap from this process will astound you.

One thing most designers/developers need to forget is that there is no “standard” internet user. When designing anything you should consider your target audience and who those people will be instead of catering for the “average person”. The other day a prospective client of mine handed me her business card printed on a 3×5 index card. I was taken back. It was huge. Then I realized why: she worked at a retirement home and the people who she regularly gave her card to were older with poor vision. It all made sense. For this business the “average client” needed larger text to be able to read it comfortably. Even though it brakes the common convention of business cards to have a standard size it worked best for their clientele.

That’s it for this week’s blog. Now that I’m done with this book I’ll be finishing Wikinomics, and also diving into my Yahoo Ambassador training.

I recommend you read the book.
Don’t Make Me Think – Steve Krug
Available at amazon.com

Check back next week for a new article about breaking another web standard: Putting the navigation on the right for enhanced usability.