Remarkable Things

15 Essential Checks Before Launching Your Website – Reblog

July6

By Lee Munroe, April 7th, 2009 – Original posting – http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/04/07/15-essential-checks-before-launching-your-website/

Your website is designed, the CMS works, content has been added and the client is happy. It’s time to take the website live. Or is it? When launching a website, you can often forget a number of things in your eagerness to make it live, so it’s useful to have a checklist to look through as you make your final touches and before you announce your website to the world.

This article reviews some important and necessary checks that web-sites should be checked against before the official launch — little details are often forgotten or ignored, but – if done in time – may sum up to an overall greater user experience and avoid unnecessary costs after the official site release.

Original posting – http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/04/07/15-essential-checks-before-launching-your-website/

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50 Brilliant Design Articles of 2008 in 23 Categories + 40 Reader Submitted Posts -Reblog

May12

Original Article = http://www.thedesigncubicle.com/2008/12/50-brilliant-design-post-of-2008-in-23-categories-40-reader-submitted-posts/

Published on Monday, December 29 2008

2008 has not only been an exciting year here at TDC, but around the rest of the design community as well. I have learned so much from reading blogs (more than I had ever imagined), and as a special thanks I present you 50 insightful graphic & web design related post of 2008 organized into 23 well organized categories.

I also asked my readers and friends on Twitter if they would be interested in submitting their favorite or most popular design post from their blog in 2008. Here’s what the 2008 design community had to offer:

Graphic Design Round Up

Advertising/Advertisements

192 Creative, Smart and Clever Advertisements

39 Masterpieces of Creative Advertisements

Blog Design Inspiration

50 Beautiful Blog Designs

Blogging Resources

Guide to Blogging for Freelance Designers

40 Promotional Sites to Submit Your Design Related Posts

Brochure Design Inspiration

Best of Brochure Design – pt. 2

Business Card Design Inspiration

One Stop for the Best 101+ Business Card Inspiration

Best of Business Stationary, Letterhead & Business Cards

CSS/Web-related & Tutorials

Top 10 Tutorials for Converting PSDs to HTML/CSS

10 Resources for When You Need Help with CSS

50 Extremely Useful and Powerful CSS Tools

31 Incredible Resources And Inspirations For Designers Like You To Discover The Best Of The Web In November

Colour Related

A Guide to Choosing Colors for your Brand

Design Resources

40+ Useful Cheat Sheets for Designers

101 Design Resource Sites

Flash related

35 Amazing Free Adobe Flash Tutorials to Start Building Full Flash Websites

Font/Type related

45 Beautiful Free Fonts for Modern Design Trends

Freelance Resources

101+ Essential Freelance Resources

270+ Tools for Running a Business Online

Grid/Layout related

40 Creative Design Layouts: Getting Out of the Box

32 Inspirational Examples of Amazing Layout and Typography

Icons & Twitter Tools

60 Free Vector Icon Packs for Design Professionals

47 Awesome Twitter Tools You Should Be Using

181 Free Twitter Buttons, Badges, Widget and Counters to Help You Find Followers

75 Best Free Graphics Design Icon Sets

Inspirational Collections

101 Awesome Portfolio Sites

34 Places to Get Design Inspiration Online & Off

60 More Places to Get Design Inspiration

Logo related

20 Inspirational Resources for Logos and Logotypes – Get Creative!

280+ Best of Best Inspirational Logos

50 Amazing Logos

Paperwork/Documentation

Write a Design Brief

Legal Resources for Freelancers

Patterns Resources

50 Free Photoshop Pattern Sets

450+ Abobe Illustrator Patterns

Typography Inspiration

30 Inspiring Type Treatments

27 Beautiful, Typography-based Web Designs

Typography Resources

10 Common Typography Mistakes (by yours truly!) ;)

Tutorials

30+ Adobe Illustrator Tutorials : Mastering Your Tools and Options

50+ Excellent Body Enhancement Photoshop Tutorials

Websites Inspirational

44 Creative Designs for Inspiration

21 Simple But Impressive Corporate Web Designs Of Top Brands

100 Websites With Outstanding Artistic Design

20 elegant & clean websites

50 Excellent Designer Portfolio Sites

Web Design Tools/Resources

69 Tools to Monitor, Measure, and Track Your Website

Wordpress Themes

50 Free & Premium WordPress Themes you shouldn’t miss

60 Best Free Wordpress Theme Gallery

30 Free High Quality Wordpress Themes

40 Blogger Submitted Favorite/Popular Posts of 2008

Blogger Submitted Design Articles

Below is 40 design-related articles submitted by bloggers from their blog in 2008. Some great resources you may have missed:

Web Designing is like Cooking!

How To Use Wordpress As A Truly Customized CMS

15 Key Elements All Top Web Sites Should Have

Questions and Answers of SEO

A SEO Christmas

10 Features Ubuntu should implement

25 Web Apps yet to be Discovered

Amazon Leaks Adobe CS4 Packaging, Features

Design Inspiration: Typography Posters

20 of the Best Amazing Photoshop Tutorials

Value Your Design

8 Ways We Fail at Failing

More Typographical Tattoos: Punctuation!

20 Free & Open Source Image Galleries for Web Designers

How To: Using Highlights in Web Design

How Important is Valid HTML in Web Standards?

Social Networks Show Users Are Not Designers. And That’s Okay.

Horribly Photoshoped Squirrels

Common Mistakes that New Web Designers Make

We’re Not On Board

Reading RSS with PHP

How I kicked whites out of the Forum of Black Journalists without saying a word! (not what you think!)

7 Logo Design Galleries You Should Bookmark

Below the Fold: Why Scrolling Isn’t A Bad Thing

waitingtohearback

Before Photoshop There Was AcidDraw

Design with Swirls and Flourishes

25 Ways to Spice Up Blog Post Photos

Cuteness attack: When design gets cuter than puppies

Amazing Web Design Tutorials

Irresistible Websites Part Three: Textures

Saul Bass and Clarity of Purpose

35 Stunning Black and White Logos

On-line Copyright Infringement: 4 Ways to Remove Stolen Work

Preparing for the Interview

How to get a Design Job using Tinned Meat!

Trend Review: Price Tags (Part 1)

30 Tutorials that will teach you Illustrator

How to Publish Featured Videos in Wordpress

Wicked Pissa Graphic Designer For Hire!

Original Article = http://www.thedesigncubicle.com/2008/12/50-brilliant-design-post-of-2008-in-23-categories-40-reader-submitted-posts/

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The Importance of Branding Your New Business -Reblog

May12

Article found at New York Times – http://www.nytimes.com/allbusiness/AB4019474_primary.html

March 18, 2009
The Importance of Branding Your New Business
By AllBusiness.com

Early branding of a small or emerging company is key to business success. It is the quickest way for your company to express what it is and what it can offer. Inaccurate branding of a new business can make it difficult for people to grasp why the business exists in the first place.

For startups and small businesses, branding can often take a backseat to other considerations, such as funding and product development. This is a mistake, as a company’s brand can be key to its success. Dollar for dollar, it is as important and vital as any other early steps.

One software management company, temporarily named TallyUp, decided to invest in a branding overhaul. Its flagship product, a software suite that tracks and runs bonus incentive plans, needed a clear identity and platform to appeal to its target audience — primarily financial executives. The name TallyUp, while somewhat descriptive, didn’t capture the level of sophistication needed to attract the appropriate clientele. TallyUp hired a branding consultant, who recommended the name Callidus (Latin for “expert and skillful”) to effectively communicate its positioning in an instant. The new name communicated a similar concept but on a completely different level. Callidus positions the software product correctly.

A brand is a company’s face to the world. It is the company’s name, how that name is visually expressed through a logo, and how that name and logo are extended throughout an organization’s communications. A brand is also how the company is perceived by its customers — the associations and inherent value they place on your business.

A brand is a kind of promise. It is a set of fundamental principles as understood by anyone who comes into contact with a company. A brand is an organization’s reason for being and how that reason is expressed through its various communications media to its key audiences, including customers, shareholders, employees and analysts. A brand can also describe these same attributes for a company’s products, services, and initiatives.
Apple’s brand is a great example. The Apple logo is clean, elegant, and easily implemented. At a certain point in time the company began to use the apple logo monochromatically (as opposed to the rainbow stripes), signaling a new era for Apple. Smart branding allowed the company to clearly communicate a change in direction while continuing to build its reputation. Think about how you’ve seen the brand in advertising, trade shows, packaging, and product design. It’s distinctive and it all adds up to a particular promise: quality of design and ease of use.
Checklist: Branding Right
By AllBusiness.com

Branding means that you have created a consciousness, an image, an awareness of your business. Here are five ways to start achieving that:

— Think analytically. A brand should provide something that warrants attention on a consistent basis, something your audience wants and is not getting from your competitors.
— Maintain your brand. One rule of thumb is that when you start to become tired of your logo, tagline, and branding efforts, that’s most likely when they are sinking in with customers.
— Don’t try to appeal to everyone. Typically, the best you can do is to focus on the niche market for your product.
— Know who you really are. Know your strengths and weaknesses through honest analysis of what you do best.
— Fully commit to branding. Treat all functions of the company, from product development to sales, as integral aspects of your brand.

Copyright 2009 AllBusiness.com Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Article found at New York Times – http://www.nytimes.com/allbusiness/AB4019474_primary.html

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Technology #’s are crazy! “Did you know?”

May12

Fantastic video on the progression of information technology, researched by Karl Fisch, Scott McLeod, and Jeff Brenman, remixed By the way, I did not create this video! Search on the names above if…
By the way, I did not create this video! Search on the names above if you want more info – they are responsible.

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8 Characteristics Of Successful User Interfaces -Reblog

April20

interface

by Dmitry
Read full article at – http://www.usabilitypost.com/2009/04/15/8-characteristics-of-successful-user-interfaces/

There is a lot of information out there about various interface design techniques and patterns you can use when crafting your user interfaces and websites, solutions to common problems and general usability recommendations. Following guidelines from experts will likely lead you towards creating a good user interface — but what exactly is a good interface? What are the characteristics of an effective user interface?

Here are 8 things I consider a good user interface needs to be:

1. Clear
2. Concise
3. Familiar
4. Responsive
5. Consistent
6. Attractive
7. Efficient
8. Forgiving

Lets take a closer look at each.

1. Clear
Clarity is the most important element of user interface design. Indeed, the whole purpose of user interface design is to enable people to interact with your system by communicating meaning and function. If people can’t figure out how your application works or where to go on your website they’ll get confused and frustrated.

What does that do? Hover over buttons in WordPress and a tooltip will pop up explaining their functions.

2. Concise
Clarity in a user interface is great, however, you should be careful not to fall into the trap of over-clarifying. It is easy to add definitions and explanations, but every time you do that you add mass. Your interface grows. Add too many explanations and your users will have to spend too much time reading through them.

Keep things clear but also keep things concise. When you can explain a feature in one sentence instead of three, do it. When you can label an item with one word instead of two, do it. Save the valuable time of your users by keeping things concise. Keeping things clear and concise at the same time isn’t easy and takes time and effort to achieve, but the rewards are great.

The volume controls in OS X use little icons to show each side of the scale from low to high.

3. Familiar
Many designers strive to make their interfaces ‘intuitive’. But what does intuitive really mean? It means something that can be naturally and instinctively understood and comprehended. But how can you make something intuitive? You do it by making it ‘familiar’.

Familiar is just that: something which appears like something else you’ve encountered before. When you’re familiar with something, you know how it behaves — you know what to expect. Identify things that are familiar to your users and integrate them into your user interface.

GoPlan’s tabbed interface. Tabs are familiar because they mimic tabs on folders. You figure out that clicking on a tab will navigate you to that section and that the rest of the tabs will remain there for further navigation.

4. Responsive
Responsive means a couple of things. First of all, responsive means fast. The interface, if not the software behind it, should work fast. Waiting for things to load and using laggy and slow interfaces is frustrating. Seeing things load quickly, or at the very least, an interface that loads quickly (even if the content is yet to catch up) improves the user experience.

Responsive also means the interface provides some form of feedback. The interface should talk back to the user to inform them about what’s happening. Have you pressed that button successfully? How would you know? The button should display a ‘pressed’ state to give that feedback. Perhaps the button text could change to “Loading…” and it’s state disabled. Is the software stuck or is the content loading? Play a spinning wheel or show a progress bar to keep the user in the loop.

Instead of gradually loading the page, Gmail shows a progress bar when you first go to your inbox. This allows for the whole page to be shown instantly once everything is ready.

5. Consistent
Now, I’ve talked before about the importance of context and how it should guide your design decisions. I think that adapting to any given context is smart, however, there is still a level of consistency that an interface should maintain throughout.

Consistent interfaces allow users to develop usage patterns — they’ll learn what the different buttons, tabs, icons and other interface elements look like and will recognize them and realize what they do in different contexts. They’ll also learn how certain things work, and will be able to work out how to operate new features quicker, extrapolating from those previous experiences.

The Microsoft Office user interface is consistent for a reason.

6. Attractive
This one may be a little controversial but I believe a good interface should be attractive. Attractive in a sense that it makes the use of that interface enjoyable. Yes, you can make your UI simple, easy to use, efficient and responsive, and it will do its job well — but if you can go that extra step further and make it attractive, then you will make the experience of using that interface truly satisfying. When your software is pleasant to use, your customers or staff will not simply be using it — they’ll look forward to using it.

There are of course many different types of software and websites, all produced for different markets and audiences. What looks ‘good’ for any one particular audience will vary. This means that you should fashion the look and feel of your interface for your audience. Also, aesthetics should be used in moderation and to reinforce function. Adding a level of polish to the interface is different to loading it with superfluous eye-candy.

Google are known for their minimalist interfaces that focus on function over form, yet they clearly spent time polishing off the Chrome user interface elements like buttons and icons to make them look just right as evident by the subtle gradients and pixel thin highlights.

7. Efficient
A user interface is the vehicle that takes you places. Those places are the different functions of the software application or website. A good interface should allow you to perform those functions faster and with less effort. Now, ‘efficient’ sounds like a fairly vague attribute — if you combine all of the other things on this list, surely the interface will end up being efficient? Almost, but not quite.

What you really really need to do to make an interface efficient is to figure out what exactly the user is trying to achieve, and then let them do exactly that without any fuss. You have to identify how your application should ‘work’ — what functions does it need to have, what are the goals you’re trying to achieve? Implement an interface that lets people easily accomplish what they want instead of simply implementing access to a list of features.

Apple has identified three key things people want to do with photos on their iPhone, and provides buttons to accomplish each of them in the photo controls.

8. Forgiving
Nobody is perfect, and people are bound to make mistakes when using your software or website. How well you can handle those mistakes will be an important indicator of your software’s quality. Don’t punish the user — build a forgiving interface to remedy issues that come up.

A forgiving interface is one that can save your users from costly mistakes. For example, if someone deletes an important piece of information, can they easily retrieve it or undo this action? When someone navigates to a broken or nonexistent page on your website, what do they see? Are they greeted with a cryptic error or do they get a helpful list of alternative destinations?

Trashed the wrong email by mistake? Gmail lets you quickly undo your last action.
To conclude…

Working on achieving some of these characteristics may actually clash with working on others. For example, by trying make an interface clear, you may be adding too many descriptions and explanations, that end up making the whole thing big and bulky. Cutting stuff out in an effort to make things concise may have the opposite effect of making things ambiguous. Achieving a perfect balance takes skill and time, and each solution will depend on a case by case basis.

What do you think? Do you disagree with any of these characteristics or have any more to add? I’d love to read your comments.

Read full article and leave feedback at – http://www.usabilitypost.com/2009/04/15/8-characteristics-of-successful-user-interfaces/

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22 Firefox Extensions to Turn Gmail into a Powerhouse of Productivity and Manageability -Reblog

April20

gmail_logo

Read full article – http://speckyboy.com/2009/04/13/22-firefox-extensions-to-turn-gmail-into-a-powerhouse-of-productivity-and-manageability/

Gmail is perhaps the greatest web app ever developed, it is very popular (over 100 million users), has a generous 2GB of free storage (a small percentage of users will ever use more than this), and very, very user friendly. It is certainly powerful, but is it powerful enough? With Firefox Addons you can take your inbox even further…

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The 7 Ways to Approach Twitter

April20

twitter-bird-wallpaper

April 20th, 2009 | by Lon S. Cohen
Read Full Article

Lon S. Cohen is a writer and Director of Communications at @ALSofGNY. He is @obilon on Twitter (Twitter reviews).

There are plenty of strategies for approaching Twitter. It’s getting more complex each day, but in the end it can be boiled down to a few simple approaches.

From Twittering on behalf of yourself to Twittering for a company, playing the part of a classic character to being a robot, here are seven ways users approach Twitter.

Introduce yourself and tell us about your Twitter approach in the comments.

Read Full Article

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Prezi Is The Coolest Online Presentation Tool I’ve Ever Seen -Reblog

April20

by Robin Wauters on April 20, 2009
Read full article – http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/04/20/prezi-is-the-coolest-online-presentation-tool-ive-ever-seen/

At last week’s The Next Web Conference, I was part of the 4-headed jury that evaluated all presenting startups and ultimately decided My Name Is E should be awarded the top prize. It was an extremely close call, since we ended up having to decide between the young Dutch company and a startup that built a simply amazing web application you’re really going to want to check out. The tool I’m referring to is called Prezi, and it allows you to create amazing presentations on the web.

If you think you’ve heard that too many times, don’t stop reading just yet, because this one is just plain awesome. It’s an entirely Flash-based app that lets you break away from the slide-by-slide approach of most presentations. Instead, it allows you to create non-linear presentations where you can zoom in and out of a visual map containing words, links, images, videos, etc. This is similar to pptPlex, a Microsoft Office Labs project that aims to bring that type of functionality to PowerPoint.

It’s really no use explaining how presentations come out without seeing it for yourself, so it pains me that there’s currently no way to embed the examples that are showcased on the Prezi website. Instead, you will need to jump to examples in another tab or window, but please do it: good examples are ‘AIESEC’ and ‘Technical Investigation ICYA’.

It takes a while to get used to the way Prezi lets you create presentations, although the interface is fairly intuitive once you’ve grown accustomed to using the ‘Zebra’. There are a number of tutorial videos to assist you in creating your first Prezi presentations.

To get started, you can use the free version which brands every presentation with a Prezi logo, offers 100 MB of file storage, comes with an offline player but without the ability to make presentations private. For €39 a year, you get all that but 5x the amount of storage space and the option not to have your presentations made public. A third ‘Pro’ version costs you €119 per year but features a cool desktop application you can use to create and edit Prezi presentations offline. Besides offering paid versions of the software, Prezi also has other revenue streams, like selling DVDs and offering branding services.

Try it out and let us know how your presentations come out!
Read full article – http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/04/20/prezi-is-the-coolest-online-presentation-tool-ive-ever-seen/

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