Jay Forbes Web Design


Journal

August 10, 2010

Pure CSS Icons: Make The Madness Stop

Unfortunately, some people have started experimenting with CSS as a “design tool” and it suddenly hit upon a large audience, and seemingly overnight it has become a trend. So what’s the problem with people exploring techniques like these? Actually, a couple things.

Faruk Ateş argues pure CSS Icons and the like are cool technology demos but they’re really not appropriate for production purposes: too difficult to maintain and not semantic.

Via Think Vitamin


August 2, 2010

Does Anyone Want Normal Websites?

Amber Weinberg wonders why she’s not getting requests for brochure sites (5 static pages and a blog) anymore:

I think the market is changing. Clients are becoming more and more informed about web design and development. They now know that Internet Explorer stinks and we shouldn’t hold sites back because of it. They know we now have 26″ monitors, iPads, iPhones and Androids to make sites work in.

So with these devices come variety. No longer is a simple 5 page brochure site enough. It needs to be mobile friendly, progressively enhanced, semantic and accessible.

I think there’s a nugget of truth there.


July 31, 2010
July 28, 2010

Thoughts on Designing for iPad

Derek Powazek on building iPad apps:

The iPad is an intimate experience for a user. The direct touch input removes a layer of abstraction, and that’s a really big deal. In this way, it was like going back to design for print – when you push it with your finger, it moves! – but it’s utterly unlike print in every other way imaginable. Point is, the direct interface really does mean reevaluating every assumption when it comes to interactive design.

Two fairly depressing articles about the web

Two Times articles for your Instapaper:

The Web Means the End of Forgetting

It’s often said that we live in a permissive era, one with infinite second chances. But the truth is that for a great many people, the permanent memory bank of the Web increasingly means there are no second chances — no opportunities to escape a scarlet letter in your digital past. Now the worst thing you’ve done is often the first thing everyone knows about you.

Malwebolence — The World of Web Trolling

Does free speech tend to move toward the truth or away from it? When does it evolve into a better collective understanding? When does it collapse into the Babel of trolling, the pointless and eristic game of talking the other guy into crying “uncle”? Is the effort to control what’s said always a form of censorship, or might certain rules be compatible with our notions of free speech?

One promising answer comes from the computer scientist Jon Postel, now known as “god of the Internet” for the influence he exercised over the emerging network. In 1981, he formulated what’s known as Postel’s Law: “Be conservative in what you do; be liberal in what you accept from others.” Originally intended to foster “interoperability,” the ability of multiple computer systems to understand one another, Postel’s Law is now recognized as having wider applications. To build a robust global network with no central authority, engineers were encouraged to write code that could “speak” as clearly as possible yet “listen” to the widest possible range of other speakers, including those who do not conform perfectly to the rules of the road. The human equivalent of this robustness is a combination of eloquence and tolerance — the spirit of good conversation. Trolls embody the opposite principle. They are liberal in what they do and conservative in what they construe as acceptable behavior from others. You, the troll says, are not worthy of my understanding; I, therefore, will do everything I can to confound you.


July 21, 2010

10 Tips for Designing Mobile Websites

Covers recommended layouts, working with iPhone 4’s retina display, optimizing for speed, etc. Bookmark this.

Free Fonts: Technical and Artistic Quality

What comes next may sound biased to some readers, yet I simply can’t help it – it’s the reality of the situation. The vast majority of the free fonts out there are – to put it mildly – of inferior quality. And although a very small percentage is fit for professional use, statistics tell us you’ll more likely stumble upon – to put it mildly again – less successful creations.

Overview of what makes a quality font. Very informative.


July 15, 2010
July 13, 2010

It’s not always sunny in Philadelphia

raindrops on the window

FYI

Make it responsive

Note to self: must look into rejiggering this site to take advantage of CSS media queries. Would love to be able to deliver mobile/iPad optimized layouts via CSS. New designs from SimpleBits and Hicksdesign are really inspiring.

Upgrade complete

Upgraded to EE 2.1 this morning. So far so good. No real changes to the control panel from the public beta as far as I can tell.

Kudos to the EE team on launching their new website. Looks great.


June 17, 2010

EE 1.x isn’t dead yet

...but it will be soon. EE 2.x beta will close with the launch of EE 2.1 due any day now.  Looks like support for EE1.x will be phased out sometime next year:

  • If you own an EE 1.x license you will have continued download access to EE 1.×.
  • New EE 2.1 purchases will also have access to EE 1.×. You will still be able to start with EE 1.x and migrate to 2.x at your convenience just like you can now with the EE 2 beta. We will offer this through Dec. 31st, 2010. After that, EE 1.x will not be available with new purchases but will continue to be available for download if you own a license.
  • When EE 2.1 launches, EE 1.x will be available as a separate download link instead of packaged with the EE 2 download like it currently is.
  • We will continue to provide technical support for EE 1.x as long as there is sufficient demand for it. Realistically we expect this to be throughout 2010 and a good deal into 2011 at the least.
  • EllisLab will provide six months notice prior to discontinuing EE 1.x support.
  • When EE 2.1 launches EllisLab will continue to provide security updates for EE 1.x in our usual speedy and thorough fashion.
  • EllisLab will continue to provide bug fixes for EE 1.x, though this will be at a reduced rate as development priority will be firmly on EE 2.×.

June 15, 2010
June 10, 2010

The Dunning-Kruger Effect

You Are Not So Smart explains why the Dunning-Kruger Effect makes it difficult to gauge your expertise. Put another way, “amateurs are far more likely to think they are experts than actual experts are.”

The more skilled you are, the more practice you’ve put in, the more experience you have, the better you can compare yourself to others. As you strive to improve, you begin to better understand where you need work. You start to see the complexity and nuance; you discover masters of your craft and compare yourself to them and see where you are lacking…

On the other hand, the less skilled you are, the less practice you’ve put in and the fewer experiences you have, the worse you are at comparing yourself to others on certain tasks…

Education is as much about learning what you don’t know as it is about adding to what you do.

How do you overcome the Dunning-Kruger Effect? Practice.

If want to be great at something, you have to practice, and then you have to sample the work of people who have been doing it for their whole lives. Compare and contrast and eat some humble pie.

Safari Extensions

As you’ve no doubt heard, Safari 5 finally introduced extensions. Jonas Wisser is keeping a running list of extensions that are available now. Apple will eventually introduce an extension gallery on the Safari website, but all extensions will have to be blessed by Apple so how knows how that will work.

Here are some early favs:

  • Faceblock — blocks various annoying Facebook ads.
  • SafariRestore — restores tabs from your previous session. This is a lifesaver.
  • YouTube5 — replaces Flash embed code with HTML5 video tags. Less CPU usage, no in-video ads.
  • Google Reader Styles — loads various CSS themes for Google Reader. Helvetireader is nice.
  • NoMoreiTunes — stops iTunes preview pages from loading iTunes.
  • Invisible Status Bar — creates an unobtrusive, Chrome-like status bar.
  • Tynt Blocker — prevents Tynt copy/paste jackassery.
  • Developer — toolbar that adds some handy web dev functionality such as resizing, validation, CSS disabling, etc. Not as useful as the Firefox Web Developer toolbar but it’s a start.

June 9, 2010

On this Safari 5 Reader Hysteria

Nik Fletcher on Safari 5 Reader’s “ad blocking”:

If anything, instead of this beligerant whinging, web publishers should wise up that people visit their sites to read content. Safari Reader does hide ads, after they – along with the almost-constant barrage of ‘Share This’, ‘Tweet This’, ‘Buzz This’ bullshit – are shown alongside each post, and above all: it’s not mandatory to use, or enforced any more than the RSS button. Perhaps instead of flamebait posts of ‘Apple are out to get us’ media companies should be asking themselves ‘how did reading content online become so sucky’?

Via Daring Fireball.


June 8, 2010

Safari 5’s ‘Reader’ Nudges Web Publishers to App Store

Safari 5 Reader strips out ads from web pages. However…

Guess where publications’ ads won’t get blocked? Inside an iOS app. And if those same publishers choose to run Apple iAds within their iPhone apps, Apple wins again, earning a 40 percent cut of resulting ad revenue — a position in which no other ad blocker or web browser finds itself.


June 6, 2010

Entire Facebook Staff Laughs As Man Tightens Privacy Settings

According to internal sources, the entire staff of Facebook was left gasping for air minutes later when the “hilarious” Herrick believed he had actually blocked third-party ads.

From The Onion (of course).

Does the Internet Make You Smarter?

Must read article by Clay Shirky:

The past was not as golden, nor is the present as tawdry, as the pessimists suggest, but the only thing really worth arguing about is the future. It is our misfortune, as a historical generation, to live through the largest expansion in expressive capability in human history, a misfortune because abundance breaks more things than scarcity.

There is no easy way to get through a media revolution of this magnitude; the task before us now is to experiment with new ways of using a medium that is social, ubiquitous and cheap, a medium that changes the landscape by distributing freedom of the press and freedom of assembly as widely as freedom of speech.