From the category archives:

Web Design

Logo Design Contest: Win $25,000.00

by Bill Cullifer on February 6, 2010

Who will design the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) Logo? It Could Be You.

Last week, the N.E.A. and Mr. Landesman, its chairman, announced that proposals are being sought for a new logo to represent the phrase “Art Works,” which Mr. Landesman has previously described as the agency’s “guiding mission.” In a statement Mr. Landesman said the logo, which will be used in print and online promotions, should represent the three meanings of the phrase: the creations of artists, the effect of art on audiences and the contribution of artists to the economy. Proposals for the design must be submitted by e-mail to the endowment by 5 p.m. Eastern time on Feb. 26. The author of the proposal selected will receive a government grant of about $25,000. Instructions and requirements for submissions are at arts.gov.

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Web Design Trends for 2010

by Bill Cullifer on February 4, 2010

 
icon for podpress  Web Design Trends for 2010: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

Web Design Trends for 2010 – A Web Designer and Blogger Perspective

Today’s podcast is an interview with Sneh Roy, Web designer and content developer regarding Web Design Trends for 2010.

Sneh writes for the Little Box Of Ideas, a design and inspiration blog with a strong focus on branding, illustrations, web design, social media and typography. In this seven minute interview for the Web Professional Minute, Sneh summarizes her perspectives and a dialogue that she had with a number of designers and followers of her blog.

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Everything You Know about Web Design is Wrong

by Bill Cullifer on January 12, 2010

 
icon for podpress  Everything You Know about Web Design is Wrong: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

Everything You Know about Web Design is Wrong Says Dan Willis User Experience Consultant

While researching Web design best practices over the holiday, I came across an interesting piece entitled “Everything You Know about Web Design is Wrong” by Dan Willis.

Dan Willis’ design career began in newspapers more than 20 years ago. After working as a print designer and magazine art director for Tribune Co., he designed his first Web site in 1995. He was washingtonpost.com’s first Director of User Experience and had the same title at PBS.org. Now a consultant for Sapient, his clients have included the American Museum of Natural History in New York City and the FBI.I’m on the phone with Dan Willis, User Experience consultant to Sapient. Has clients include American Museum of Natural History in New York City and the FBI. After working as a print designer and magazine art director for Tribune Co., he designed his first Web site in 1995. He was washingtonpost.com’s first Director of User Experience and had the same title at PBS.org.

Check out the eleven minute interview on today’s Web Professional Minute.

A full transcript will follow in twenty for hours.

Below is an excerpt of the article. To review the entire article download the entire PDF

Netscape’s introduction of a commercial Web browser in 1994 sparked evolutionary change at a phenomenal pace. Despite a couple of international economic collapses, that blistering rate of change has continued into this century, but tenets borrowed out of desperation from the rigid traditions of print design still prevent the Web’s presentation from keeping up with its development.

We still treat pages, grids, color usage, and the placement of elements as the primary tools of Web design. These print design traditions hinder our ability to appropriately present the 21st century Web as much as the conventions of live theater hobbled filmmakers a hundred years ago. Louis Augustin Le Prince invented a single lens motion picture camera in 1888, but it took almost 30 years for artists to master the emerging technologies of film and transcend the boundaries established by stage plays. Early masterpieces like Georges Melies’ Le Voyage dans la Lune (A Trip to the Moon) introduced stunning special effects and showed remarkable creativity, but also reflected an adherence to live theater’s static point of view and restrictive stage design. Because it was little more than 30 independent scenes of moving images strung together, the film failed to move the form forward in any meaningful way.

It wasn’t until 1915 when, despite its overt racism and its aggrandizement of the Ku Klux Klan, D.W. Griffith’s Birth of a Nation elevated film from a five-cent curiosity into what would eventually become the most influential art form of the 20th century. Griffith’s movie popularized expressive close-ups, dramatic lighting, flashbacks, and other techniques that are now part of the common language of film. Also, the financial success of Birth of a Nation helped convince the industry to take Griffith’s film “grammar” seriously. There’s beautiful work online today that reflects the best efforts of wildly talented designers.

The introduction and mastery of Flash as well as the industry’s embracing of standards-based design have resulted in elegant visual solutions, but like Melies’ film, these solutions haven’t elevated the form. Designers are churning out evermore- sophisticated work, but the work is more print-design-in-disguise than transcendent Web design. There are plenty of examples of the former, but recognizing the latter is going to be more difficult. It’s useful, therefore, to identify the key concepts that could help design finally transcend the boundaries of print.

Concept 1: In transcendent Web design, form will follow function Of course we’d like to say the same about print design, but if we’re really being honest about it, the tenet for Print-design-in-disguise: This Harry Potter site won the Web Marketing Association’s 2007 Web Awards Best of Show. It relies heavily on blocks of dense, beautiful, unreadable type and slow-loading Flash animation. It treats its three Web-native features like sections of a glossy print magazine, rather than as primary features of the site.print is more accurately “form follows function … as long as it’s really pretty.” And unfortunately that more forgiving interpretation has dominated the last decade of Web design.

In the 21st century, it’s essential that form follow function in order to cater to the utilitarian nature of the Web. Print communication blasts generic messages to clumsily defined masses of readers, but online experiences come down to a single user, the context they create, and the satisfaction of their individual goals. With older forms, user goals tend to be more general (“to be informed,” for example) and user expectations tend to be lower (“that TV show was kind of funny.”) Because of the blunt force nature of print and television products, measuring success comes down to raw numbers of readers or viewers and that has unfortunately carried over online where a similar approach to metrics is more distracting than meaningful.

Someone will always pay for ad banner impressions and online versions of print advertising, but eventually Web profits will depend primarily on satisfying enough of the most important goals of enough of a product’s most important users. How Web design looks doesn’t determine how well it works. Aesthetics are important, but they are a means to an end, just a tool one masters in order to design successful Web solutions. Transcendent business model: All Netflix.com screens seem to lead back to the movie queue and support the user’s primary goals while encouraging continued membership. Its application tailors interactions to the individual, here by sorting lists of other members’ favorite movies based
on past choices.

Check out the eleven minute interview on today’s Web Professional Minute.

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“Don’t Hire Your Nephew to Build Your Small Business Website” says the makers of Intuit

Intuit, the maker of Quicken is hitting the traditional airwaves and social media channels with ads depicting disgruntled small business owners regarding the build out of their websites. The YouTube ad featured below for example entitled, “Don’t Hire Your Nephew to Build Your Small Business Website” hits the point home.

At first glance, I thought to myself that I should cancel my subscription to Quicken in protest for picking on the Web design tribe that we here at the WOW represent. Then again, I’m not a customer of Quicken or any Intuit products that I know of so that won’t work out very well.

After giving this some thought, I think the ad does an effective job at communicating the reasons that small businesses should “hire a Web professional” in the first place. As a result, the ad campaign is kind of growing on me. That’s not to say that all nephews that create websites are bad mind you. I know a few personally and they do very nice work!

As the executive director for the Webprofessionals.org organization, I’ve been getting hundreds of calls over the years from disgruntled small business owners asking if WOW could intervene on their behalf to settle contract disputes. I suppose ads of this nature are inevitable. Ugh, so thanks I guess for that Intuit!?!

The walk away from this ad for Web professionals I suppose is to take it in stride. It comes with the territory. General contractors and those in the construction trade face similar issues every day and have for years. Makes a great case for ethical behavior, a Web professional code of conduct and best practices I’d say. Changing the public’s perception however is a whole another discussion.

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icon for podpress  Design for Learning: Interview with Steve Barth, Principle Consultant Reflected Knowledge: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

 
icon for podpress  Design for Learning: Interview with Steve Barth, Principle Consultant Reflected Knowledge: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

Today’s Web Professional Minute podcast topic is Design for Learning. To better understand this topic from an industry professional’s point of view, I interviewed Steve Barth, Principle Consultant Reflected Knowledge. I asked Steve to summarize what Design for learning all about and how can Web professionals benefit.

Check out the three minute interview on today’s Web Professional Minute.

A full transcript will follow in twenty for hours.

Today’s Web Professional Minute is brought to you by Nolo Press and their Legal Guide to Web & Software Development book with CD-rom.

More Details:

Protect your rights, and your hard work!
The laws covering website and software development are complex and confusing, but if you don’t untangle them, it could cost you thousands of dollars in attorneys’ fees and lawsuits.

Fortunately, Legal Guide to Web & Software Development decodes this complex area of the law, thoroughly and in reader-friendly English. It also provides contracts, agreements and legal forms on CD-ROM, with step-by-step instructions for filling them out, so you can protect your software and website without paying a lawyer’s ransom.

Use Legal Guide to Web & Software Development to learn:

what kind of legal protection you need
the strengths and limitations of each type of protection
how to avoid infringement
which provisions you need when drafting an agreement
how to obtain permission to use other people’s materials
You’ll find complete, step-by-step instructions to draft:

employment agreements
contractor and consultant agreements
development agreements
license agreements
The 5th edition of Legal Guide to Web & Software Development is completely updated to provide the latest case law and statutory revisions.
Protect your rights, and your hard work!
The laws covering website and software development are complex and confusing, but if you don’t untangle them, it could cost you thousands of dollars in attorneys’ fees and lawsuits.

Fortunately, Legal Guide to Web & Software Development decodes this complex area of the law, thoroughly and in reader-friendly English. It also provides contracts, agreements and legal forms on CD-ROM, with step-by-step instructions for filling them out, so you can protect your software and website without paying a lawyer’s ransom.

Use Legal Guide to Web & Software Development to learn:

what kind of legal protection you need
the strengths and limitations of each type of protection
how to avoid infringement
which provisions you need when drafting an agreement
how to obtain permission to use other people’s materials
You’ll find complete, step-by-step instructions to draft:

employment agreements
contractor and consultant agreements
development agreements
license agreements
The 5th edition of Legal Guide to Web & Software Development is completely updated to provide the latest case law and statutory revisions.

Protect your rights, and your hard work!
The laws covering website and software development are complex and confusing, but if you don’t untangle them, it could cost you thousands of dollars in attorneys’ fees and lawsuits.

Fortunately, Legal Guide to Web & Software Development decodes this complex area of the law, thoroughly and in reader-friendly English. It also provides contracts, agreements and legal forms on CD-ROM, with step-by-step instructions for filling them out, so you can protect your software and website without paying a lawyer’s ransom.

Use Legal Guide to Web & Software Development to learn:

what kind of legal protection you need
the strengths and limitations of each type of protection
how to avoid infringement
which provisions you need when drafting an agreement
how to obtain permission to use other people’s materials
You’ll find complete, step-by-step instructions to draft:

employment agreements
contractor and consultant agreements
development agreements
license agreements
The 5th edition of Legal Guide to Web & Software Development is completely updated to provide the latest case law and statutory revisions.
Protect your rights, and your hard work!
The laws covering website and software development are complex and confusing, but if you don’t untangle them, it could cost you thousands of dollars in attorneys’ fees and lawsuits.

Fortunately, Legal Guide to Web & Software Development decodes this complex area of the law, thoroughly and in reader-friendly English. It also provides contracts, agreements and legal forms on CD-ROM, with step-by-step instructions for filling them out, so you can protect your software and website without paying a lawyer’s ransom.

Use Legal Guide to Web & Software Development to learn:

what kind of legal protection you need
the strengths and limitations of each type of protection
how to avoid infringement
which provisions you need when drafting an agreement
how to obtain permission to use other people’s materials

You’ll find complete, step-by-step instructions to draft:

employment agreements
contractor and consultant agreements
development agreements
license agreements

The 5th edition of Legal Guide to Web & Software Development is completely updated to provide the latest case law and statutory revisions.
On sale now check it out!

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icon for podpress  An Event Apart: Interview with Jonathan Worent Senior Developer, Online Innovative Creations: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

 
icon for podpress  An Event Apart: Interview with Jonathan Worent Senior Developer, Online Innovative Creations: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

I’m moving on from the media coverage of the Adobe Max conference to other Web design events taking place around the U.S. For today’s podcast, I connected up with Jonathan Worent, Senior Developer Online Innovative Creations (OIC) Group, Inc. Jonathan participated in the AnEventApart Conference that took place in Chicago, Illinois that took place last week.

In addition to having a great time, Jonathan met a number of speakers including Jeffrey Zeldman and Andy Clarke and Dan Cederholm. In this interview Jonathan shares a few walkways that he intends to implement with his customers right away.

Check out the three minute interview on today’s Web Professional Minute.

A full transcript will follow in twenty for hours.

Today’s Web Professional Minute is sponsored by WebProTraining.org. WOW is pleased to announce the availabilty of the Creating Accessible Web Forms Course. Creating web forms that are accessible to people with disabilities requires understanding of the labeling features of HTML markup and how browsers interpret labeling markup for assistive technologies like screen readers. The online course is being taught by Dr. Gunderson University of Illinois Urbana/Champaign. The course also provides great value and is highly reccomended by Web professionals worldwide.

WOW members will receive a discounted rate of $150.00. Check out all of the details on the Web Pro Training website and register today!

Check out all of the great links on the Web Professional Minute Website.

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icon for podpress  Google Analytics vs. Omniture: “Owning your own Data” QandA session with Kevin Lynch, CTO Adobe.: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

 
icon for podpress  Google Analytics vs. Omniture: “Owning your own Data” QandA session with Kevin Lynch, CTO Adobe: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

Today’s podcast is a final in a series of podcast of the media coverage of the Adobe Max Conference. I sat in on a QandA session with Kevin Lynch, CTO Adobe where he was asked to explain the differences between Google Analytics and Omniture. Adobe as you may recall, has agreed to buy Ominiture and it appears that they have a billion reasons why they would want to. For today’s podcast, Kevin explains them in detail.

Check out the three minute interview on today’s Web Professional Minute.

A full transcript will follow in twenty for hours.

Today’s Web Professional Minute is sponsored by WebProTraining.org. WOW is pleased to announce the availabilty of the Creating Accessible Web Forms Course. Creating web forms that are accessible to people with disabilities requires understanding of the labeling features of HTML markup and how browsers interpret labeling markup for assistive technologies like screen readers. The online course is being taught by Dr. Gunderson University of Illinois Urbana/Champaign. The course also provides great value and is highly reccomended by Web professionals worldwide.

WOW members will receive a discounted rate of $150.00. Check out all of the details on the Web Pro Training website and register today!

Check out all of the great links on the Web Professional Minute Website.

About Adobe Acquiring Omniture

Combined Company Will Deliver Comprehensive Solutions for Creation, Delivery and Optimization of Content and Applications

Adobe Systems Incorporated (Nasdaq:ADBE) and Omniture, Inc. (Nasdaq:OMTR) today announced the two companies have entered into a definitive agreement for Adobe to acquire Omniture in a transaction valued at approximately $1.8 billion on a fully diluted equity-value basis. Under the terms of the agreement, Adobe will commence a tender offer to acquire all of the outstanding common stock of Omniture for $21.50 per share in cash. Adobe’s acquisition of Omniture furthers its mission to revolutionize the way the world engages with ideas and information. By combining Adobe’s content creation tools and ubiquitous clients with Omniture’s Web analytics, measurement and optimization technologies, Adobe will be well positioned to deliver solutions that can transform the future of engaging experiences and e-commerce across all digital content platforms and devices. The combination of the two companies will increase the value Adobe delivers to customers. For designers, developers and online marketers, an integrated workflow — with optimization capabilities embedded in the creation tools — will streamline the creation and delivery of relevant content and applications. This optimization will enable advertisers, advertising agencies, publishers and e-tailers to achieve greater ROI from their digital media investments and improve their end users’ experiences.

About Kevin Lynch, Chief Technology Officer Senior Vice President, Experience & Technology Organization

As chief technology officer and senior vice president, Experience & Technology Organization, Kevin Lynch oversees Adobe’s experience design and core technology across business units. This role includes driving Adobe’s technology platform for designers and developers across desktops and devices, including Adobe® Flash® Player, Portable Document Format (PDF), Adobe Flex® and Adobe AIR™, the cross-operating system application runtime that bridges the computing power and data capabilities of the desktop with the real-time dynamic capabilities of the web. He also oversees Adobe’s developer relations program, including the integration of customers and partners in the development process through Adobe Labs and customer advisory councils.

Prior to being named CTO in 2008, Lynch served as senior vice president and chief software architect for Adobe’s Platform Business Unit. Lynch joined Adobe through the company’s 2005 acquisition of Macromedia, Inc., where he served as chief software architect and president of product development. He headed up the creation of the company’s mobile and devices group and served as general manager of the web publishing group. Lynch also oversaw the initial development of Macromedia® Dreamweaver®, a leading web development product.

Before joining Macromedia in 1996, Lynch worked for General Magic, where he pioneered a navigational user interface for handheld communicators. Previously, he designed the user interface and developed the first Macintosh release of FrameMaker® software for Frame Technology, later acquired by Adobe. While at the University of Illinois, Lynch developed early Macintosh applications, including a desktop publishing program that introduced user interface elements in common use today.

Lynch holds three patents with others currently pending, and he is involved in Adobe’s international standards efforts with organizations such as the W3C, ECMA and ISO. Lynch studied interactive computer graphics at the University of Illinois, working with artists and engineers in the Electronic Visualization Laboratory.

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icon for podpress  Adobe Flash Platform, Web Standards Interview: Jeremy Schultz, Independent Web Designer : Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

 
icon for podpress  Standard Podcast: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

Last week WOW participated in the Adobe MAX 2009 conference that took place in downtown Los Angeles, CA. The goal for WOW’s participation was to report to WOW members and to the subscribers of this podcast the goings on, where the industry is heading, the trends and the skills that will keep Web professionals employed for sometime to come.

To that end, I reached out to interview Adobe’s executives and those attendees exiting the keynotes and sessions. For today’s podcast, I have an interview with Jeremy Schultz, independent Web designer from West Des Moines, Iowa regarding his take on the event and the Adobe Flash Platform Keynote that we sat in on and how designing with Web standards fits into the overall Flash Platform mix.

According to Adobe, the Adobe® Flash® Platform is an integrated set of technologies surrounded by an established ecosystem of support programs, business partners, and enthusiastic user communities. Together, they provide everything you need to create and deliver the most compelling applications, content, and video to the widest possible audience.

Check out the three minute interview on today’s Web Professional Minute.

A full transcript will follow in twenty for hours.

Today’s Web Professional Minute is sponsored by WebProTraining.org. WOW is pleased to announce the availabilty of the Creating Accessible Web Forms Course. Creating web forms that are accessible to people with disabilities requires understanding of the labeling features of HTML markup and how browsers interpret labeling markup for assistive technologies like screen readers. The online course is being taught by Dr. Gunderson University of Illinois Urbana/Champaign. The course also provides great value and is highly reccomended by Web professionals worldwide.

WOW members will receive a discounted rate of $150.00. Check out all of the details on the Web Pro Training website and register today!

Check out all of the great links on the Web Professional Minute Website.

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icon for podpress  Adobe MAX 2009: Interview with Bob Flynn, Manager IT Community Partnerships at Indiana University: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

 
icon for podpress  Standard Podcast: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

Today’s podcast is a continuation of WOW’s media coverage of the Adobe Max conference that took place in Los Angeles, CA October 4-7, 2009. To get a better sense for the value proposition of attending the week long event from a university perspective, I sat down with Bob Flynn, Manager IT Community Partnerships at Indiana University.

In this three minute interview, Bob shares the value of attending the event, the value to the university from a teaching perspective, the value to students ranging from from the creative, technical scientific and the value to the universities research projects utilizing RIA resources.

Bob ask that Web professionals and those that teach check out the BFlex 09 Conference October 24-25, 2009 on the Indiana University Campus

Bob also announces the availability of Web professional training open to teachers and students. If you’re looking for affordable hands on training consider checking out the BFLEX conference

The event is offering Flash Camps, Cold Fusion like BFusion and BFlex and hands on training for around $ 10.00.

What: Two days of hands-on training from the experts in Adobe Flex and ColdFusion.
ColdFusion — October 24, 2009
Flex —
When: October 25, 2009
Where: Bloomington, Indiana

For additional information check out the BFlex conference website

Check out the full three minute podcast on today’s Web Professional Minute.

A full transcript will follow in twenty for hours.

Today’s Web Professional Minute is sponsored by the Nokia Corporation and their Nokia Web Runtime (WRT) Extension for Adobe Dreamweaver CS4 software making the creation of mobile WRT widgets for supporting Nokia devices easier then ever. Through the Nokia Ovi Store and Adobe AIR Marketplace, developers and designers have an easy way to engage, build and publish their content to Nokia mobile device customers. For additional information check out the Nokia Forum.

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icon for podpress  Adobe MAX: Interview with Ted Patrick, Senior Evangelist Platform at Adobe: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

 
icon for podpress  Standard Podcast: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

Today’s Podcast is a continuation of WOW’s media coverage of the Adobe MAX conference 2009 Los Angeles, CA. Adobe promised an event that would connect, discover and inspire. I walked away with all of that and much more.

Although the keynote on day one kicked off a little late, the professionals at Adobe recovered with an uncanny ability to regroup, refocus and shine.

For Web professionals, Adobe MAX is part design, development and business. Candidly, I can’t recall a time in the eleven years that I’ve been managing the WOW organization that I’m walking away from a conference with something for everyone. Over the course of the next few days, I’d like to expand on that. I’d also like to provide you with a series of interviews why I think this conference provided solutions for designers, developers, those that teach and mission critical business applications that will keep Web professionals like us for a long time.

For today’s podcast, I caught up with Ted Patrick, Senior Evangelist Platform at Adobe. Ted shares his thoughts on the content, the develop and the design community and jobs.

Check out the full five minute podcast on today’s Web Professional Minute. Check out the video of Adobe’s FedEx demo on the YouTube Video below:

A full transcript will follow in twenty for hours.

Today’s Web Professional Minute is sponsored by the Nokia Corporation and their Nokia Web Runtime (WRT) Extension for Adobe Dreamweaver CS4 software making the creation of mobile WRT widgets for supporting Nokia devices easier then ever. Through the Nokia Ovi Store and Adobe AIR Marketplace, developers and designers have an easy way to engage, build and publish their content to Nokia mobile device customers. For additional information check out the Nokia Forum.

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