Posts Tagged presentation

12 resources for getting a jump on HTML 5

Cameron Moll Go to the source

Recently I’ve seen a considerable amount of press on blogs and such regarding HTML 5, “the 5th major revision of the core language of the World Wide Web” (W3C). I have virtually no experience (yet) with HTML 5, so as I jump on the bandwagon and begin familiarizing myself with it, I thought I’d share some of the resources I’m reading along the way. So far from what I’m learning, the consensus among several of these articles seems to be this: The world isn’t ready for HTML 5 at large just yet, but we can begin preparing for it by using common, semantic selector names ( header , nav , section , etc.) — or even new attribute names — derived from HTML 5 within our HTML 4.01 or XHTML 1.x documents. This is by no means an exhaustive list, just a start. In each of these you’ll find other resources to help you dig deeper. … Read the rest here

The Audio of the System of the World

Adactio Go to the source

Four months after the curtain went down on dConstruct 2008 , the final episode of the podcast of the conference has just been published. It’s the audio recording of my talk The System Of The World . I’m very happy indeed with how the talk turned out: dense and pretentious …but in a good way, I hope. It’s certainly my favourite from the presentations I have hitherto delivered. Feel free to: listen to the recording of The System Of The World , read the hypertext document The System Of The World or look through the slides on Slideshare … Read the rest here

The Audio of the System of the World

Adactio Go to the source

Four months after the curtain went down on dConstruct 2008 , the final episode of the podcast of the conference has just been published. It’s the audio recording of my talk The System Of The World . I’m very happy indeed with how the talk turned out: dense and pretentious …but in a good way, I hope. It’s certainly my favourite from the presentations I have hitherto delivered. … Read the rest here

Reflections

Snook Go to the source

It’s that time of year when people see the big number roll over and decide to reminisce over good times and bad, and talk of where they plan to go until the big number rolls again. This blog post will be no exception. On the Personal Front It’s interesting to look at last years pontificating . In some ways, things haven’t changed. … Read the rest here

Dropbox & Leap sitting in a tree

Hicksdesign Go to the source

I’ve waffled a lot this year about Evernote, Littlesnapper and their ilk, but I now feel I’ve found the best scrapbooking solution for me. In the comments to my Littlesnapper post , Jo mentioned Leap.app , the file browser alternative to the Finder, as a way improving the approach of using the Finder to browse scrapbook images: Your comment about tagging in Finder reminded me of a program I stumbled across, ages ago, that is a pretty cool alternative/replacement to Finder: Leap. It provides preview thumbnails of just about everything (you can pick the size and zoom in at will), tagging (I believe it covers tag completion, as well; it at least auto-tags based on folders you

On the value of candor

Cameron Moll Go to the source

About a year after starting college, I was settled on the idea of majoring in music, specifically music composition. It was the perfect blend of two passions of mine. The first was drumming. The second was a long-standing love affair with film scores. James Horner , John Barry , James Newton Howard , Alan Silvestri , and John Williams were just a few of the composers I grew up listening to. To become one of them was the impossible dream. … Read the rest here

Tokyo Express

SimpleBits Go to the source

I returned from Tokyo on Monday. I gave a talk at the Web Directions East conference. I’ve never had a simultaneous translation of a presentation before. I hope it went OK. … Read the rest here

New Issue: Tools for Concept Designing

Digital Web Go to the source

Victor Lombardi returns to Digital Web this week with a particularly compelling contribution, Concept Design Tools . Fresh off his presentation at Euro Information Architecture Summit , Victor brings practical tools for setting the foundation for forward-thinking concepts and set aside technical or situational constraints. From the Euro IA description of his talk, “Great design concepts have a visceral effect. They force us to think differently. … Read the rest here

Live: InfoCamp 2008 - Plenary: Tamara Adlin

Digital Web Go to the source

Day two kicks off with Aaron giving thanks to sponsors. Aaron then asks the audience about the sessions that occurred yesterday and what they found interesting and if there could be sessions today to expand on that. Audience is talking about things they learned from yesterday. Topics include Dutch libraries, Creative Commons, privacy on the web, EULA s, Denim, financial banking, etc. Rachel comes up to introduce Tamara Adlin. Tamara takes the stage. … Read the rest here

Lunch is on us at InfoCamp 2008!

Digital Web Go to the source

Digital Web Magazine is happy to be a sponsor of InfoCamp 2008 . For those who don’t know what InfoCamp is, here is a little blurb from their website: InfoCamp is an interdisciplinary un-conference for information architecture, user-centered design, librarianship, and information management. It features an egalitarian, community-driven format in which presentations are designed and delivered by attendees. InfoCamp is this Saturday and Sunday in Seattle and Digital Web Magazine will be sponsoring free lunch for everyone! Yes, that’s right, we’re having tacos! If you see me or Tiff Fehr at the event please say hello! I hope to see you there, this year looks like it will be a record turnout! … Read the rest here

FAQ: How to convince my boss to let me attend a web conference?

Cameron Moll Go to the source

Q: I am a course developer for a university. I am interested in attending An Event Apart and need to justify to my supervisor why this conference would be really great for me and the university. I have explained that the learning more about standards-based HTML, CSS and accessibility are a must as an employee of a state university, and that some of the best creative minds in the world will be speaking at the conference. However, my boss would like to know how this conference would benefit me and my department in terms of creating instructional websites. I was hoping you might be able to add deeper insight to my case? … Read the rest here

Beauty at BarCamp Brighton

Adactio Go to the source

As soon as dConstruct was over, it was time for the next wonderful gathering of geeks: BarCamp Brighton 3 . I didn’t manage to make it to the event for the kick-off, having spent the previous evening celebrating at the after-party and after-after-party that my talk was really over and done with. That meant that I missed some of the early speaking slots but I still managed to see some great talks (including Nat ’s excellent IE 6 bug-squashing quiz) and spend a pleasant evening playing CSS Specificity Snap and Semantopoly . Despite the fact that the venue boasted eight separate locales for giving talks, speaking slots were at a premium, which is a testament to the enthusiasm of the attendees. I managed to grab a spot towards the end of the day two… Read the rest here

dConstruct 2008: Cognitive Bias and Social Design

Digital Web Go to the source

There have been a couple of great presentations either side of lunch here at dConstruct. Joshua Porter — social web expert and occasional Digital Web contributor — revealed the hidden mental tics (or “cognitive biases”) that designers should be aware of when thinking about how best to attract engage with their users; and Daniel Burka (Pownce, Digg) shared his recommendations on how to approach the key pain points when designing for social interaction. Keep an eye out for the dConstruct podcasts of these talks; in the meantime, Daniel’s slides are on SlideShare — when I find Josh’s I’ll post the link here too. … Read the rest here

An Event Apart, Day Two

Adactio Go to the source

The second day of An Event Apart San Francisco is drawing to a close. The day opened with my talk, Patterns in the Process . You can download the slides if you like—Creative Commons licensed, as usual—but just looking at the slides is like trying to listen to a presentation by putting a glass against the wall of the building next door. When I was giving my talk, I thought it was kind of rambling and incoherent. But it went down well and lots of people told me they liked it afterwards so I’ll put my self-criticism away… Read the rest here

An Experiment in Rounded Corners

Snook Go to the source

An idea had struck me this afternoon that there might be some technology deep in the depths of Internet Explorer that might unlock the secret to easy rounded corners. Unfortunately, my initial idea fell flat and I was left in the same place I was before. However, bouncing from idea to idea, I thought to try VML. VML is an XML-based approach that Microsoft came up with and proposed it to the W3C . Alas, the proposal never went anywhere but that’s neither here nor there… Read the rest here

An Event Apart, Day One

Adactio Go to the source

The first day of An Event Apart is wrapping up in San Francisco. The quality of talks has been outstanding. Now I’m really bricking it about my talk tomorrow morning. The bar has been set ridiculously high. I’ve done my best to liveblog throughout the day. Inevitably there will be mistakes and omissions in these second-hand reports but here they are: Understanding Web Design by Jeffrey Zeldman The Lessons of CSS Frameworks by Eric Meyer Storytelling by Design by Jason Santa Maria Web Application Hierarchy by Luke W. … Read the rest here

Implementing Design: Bulletproof A-Z

Adactio Go to the source

Dan Cederholm is in the house at An Event Apart San Francisco. He’s all about the bulletproofing. Simplebits describe what they do as hand crafted pixels and text . This idea of craft, building something with your hands, is what Dan wants to concentrate on. It isn’t always obvious in web design how well-crafted a web site is. Dan will run through a case study that focus on three aspects of web design: being bulletproof, being adaptable and focusing on the details. … Read the rest here

Use the Best Available Ampersand

SimpleBits Go to the source

I love ampersands. And interest in this quirky character seems to be on the rise as of late. Case in point: Just last week, I purchased not one, but two t-shirts adorned with nothing more than an ampersand. That’s telling, no? For much of last year, I had a little portion of a presentation dedicated to using CSS to serve up alternate, compelling ampersands. It’s also something I’ve done here on SimpleBits for quite awhile in our tagline. … Read the rest here

The In-House Designer

Cameron Moll Go to the source

An Event Apart Chicago is just a few months away, and I’ll have the privilege of speaking on a brand new topic, “The In-House Designer”: The fundamental principles of design remain constant irrespective of organization size, technical discipline, and the like. Yet within larger organizations, the dynamics of applying these principles, the ability to produce quality output, and overall job satisfaction are a challenge at times. Learn how to hone your technical skills, and, more importantly, your soft skills, to effectively grapple with the politics and red tape that are common to larger organizations

Any-Element Linking Demo

Eric Meyer Go to the source

In support of the still-to-be-finished proposal for allowing most HTML 5 elements to become hyperlinks, I’ve written a quick proof-of-concept demo for your perusal. Basically, it’s a page with some JavaScript that captures the whole document tree, looks for any elements with an href attribute, and then sprinkles some events on those elements in order to make them act like hyperlinks. There’s also some CSS that applies old-school link presentation to said elements (blue and underlined, baby!). I’m using href because it was the easiest thing to do. I’m sure I could have written a more elegant script (and yes , I know , your favorite JS framework would done it in half the lines and seventeen times the page weight) and I suspect there are some things I’m missing… Read the rest here