Archive for April, 2008

Links for Today

Thursday, April 17th, 2008

I found a video of a guy who gets stuck in an elevator for 41 hours straight in New York, and this is a video of what he did during that time. Â I got claustrophobic just by watching it. Â How does this even happen, really?

Here’s an “image” some online genius created of Homer Simpson image made entirely with CSS. Â The cool thing about this image is that there are absolutely no images involved. Â It’s all CSS, and totally amazing. Â How someone comes up with an idea like this is beyond me, but completely blows my mind. Â Yay for CSS and for this guy’s creativity.

Also, I found this image of some train tracks in Frankfurt that I thought was pretty interesting. Â The complexity of all of those tracks is pretty neat, and also pretty hard to believe that it’s real. Â I’d hate to be the guy who pulls the wrong lever day and derails/reroutes all the trains. Â

Facepalm

Wednesday, April 16th, 2008

Sometimes it’s nothing short of 100% appropriate. Â FacePalm.Org is a handy website that has conveniently put lots of images together for you! Â Totally hilarious.

Not sure what a facepalm is? Â A facepalm is what you do when something happens that is so asinine and ridiculous that you can’t really say anything, you just put your hand up to your forehead. Â It is sometimes accompanied by a grunt or moan. Â Very helpful in situations where words are no good.

Use it wisely!

Tic Tac Awesome

Monday, April 14th, 2008

I saw this on Peleg Design, an Israeli product design studio. Â They have some beautiful work, especially this reflective Tic Tac Toe board. Â How awesome! Â

It’s pretty safe to say I’d like one.

Good laptop bags for cheap?

Friday, April 11th, 2008

The guys at Steep and Cheap have you covered.  They’ve currently got a pretty sick Oakley bag to fit that sexy little MacBook of yours.

Normally it’s 90 bucks at my local Apple Store, they offer it for $28.  Makes me wonder WTF is up with Apple’s “modest” markup.

The Dinner Party

Friday, April 11th, 2008

My head almost exploded it was so hilarious! Â I’m so glad it’s back on the air.

Here it is from Hulu in case you missed it. Â Which you shouldn’t have, but I forgive you if you did.

The Beauty of Information

Wednesday, April 9th, 2008

There have been a few examples recently of really beautifully displaying information. Â I came across this video tonight and was really into it. Â The way all the information was presented was gorgeous, and it didn’t hurt that it was set to a pretty nice tune. Â It’s by Royksopp, and called “Remind Me.” Â If anyone knows who designed this, please let me know. Â Thanks!

It also should go without saying that the opening credits for Stranger Than Fiction were gorgeous too, but I’m sure you already knew that.  Here’s a link on MK12’s site in case you forgot how they looked.

A Few Good Creative Men

Wednesday, April 9th, 2008

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Warning: Â little language here.

Flickr Does Video!

Tuesday, April 8th, 2008

Totally awesome turn of events: Â you can now post your videos to your stream and show them off with all the neato interaction and community Flickr has. Â See above video of my two favorite wizards for reference.

I’m not a video guy mostly; however, given the chance (and a camera) I’d go nuts. Â

Their servers were getting hammered when I saw it, but I’m sure it’s better now. Â Check it out!

Minimum Requirements VS Standards

Tuesday, April 8th, 2008

I keep seeing these sites that have minimum requirements for viewing. Â Some require ridiculous resolutions (yay, look at my alliteration, mom!) that are way above the standard, and I felt like it was worth discussing here. Â

I can understand if you want to cater to a specific audience. Â Not to state the obvious, but when you cater to a specific audience, you leave out lots of other potential visitors and customers, and if it’s a site like a portfolio or e-commerce, that means you’re going to lose customers.

Instead, you should be friendly towards the majority and work within the accepted standard screen resolution of 1024×768. Â Yes, we know your site is mega-fresh and super awesome with lots of neat Flash eye candy, but you should still design it and build it to function in a normal window. Â

On that note, here’s what I do.  I’ve been designing sites that have a width of no more than 950 pixels, and have had a lot of luck with it so far.  Sometimes height is also a concern, depending on the site.  If it a concern, I usually make a guide at 600 pixels to make sure all the most important information is above that line.  (A horizontal guide at 600 pixels compensates for all the toolbars and whatnots people add onto their browsers.)  That way you don’t tax those browsers below 1024×768 screens too hard, and seems to fit nicely within the current standards.

What do you do when designing websites? Â Do you care about standards, and what do you do in consideration of them?

A fun little phone message.

Tuesday, April 8th, 2008

In honor of the greatest show on television coming back Thursday, a phone message from Pam and MIchael for you to put on your phone!

Hear it here!