Archive for uncategorized

Web 101 for Designers: What you should know before your first site

I gave a talk yesterday at the monthly meeting for the Twin Cities Creatives Group: we’re a group of professionals in the Twin Cities metro region, mostly traditional graphic designers, product designers, photographers, writers and few web designers. We have an email list and generally try to help each other when there are any questions of a design or technical nature.

Since there was much interest at a previous meeting in web sites I offered to give a talk about what a graphic designer, or any designer, should know about designing for the web. Just the basics. A fast overview. Nothing too in depth. Forty people showed up, and I ended up recording a screencast of the talk and distributing a PDF of it afterwards. I thought I’d put it up here so that those of you who missed it could see it, and perhaps benefit from it.

It’s a long talk: 1hr 40mins. I spliced it up into 3 parts, each a little over 30 minutes in length. They’re hosted out on Vimeo as part 1, 2 and 3. I’ve also embedded the first part down here for viewing. The video is available in HD, so be sure to maximize it to see the full quality of the slides (and my handsome face of course).

How to get 3 free months of XM/Sirius Radio (for current subscribers)

So, just like everyone else, I’m tightening our collective family budget belt. One of the first things to go was the XM Radio subscription that conveniently gets charged to my credit card every quarter. Sure, it’s small enough not to be that bad but every little bit helps: $60/qtr is $20/month after all.

Don’t get me wrong, I’m not advocating you play the system here… this post is just supposed to be about my experience with the XM Radio service person and what she offered. The first time I called the number from their website, I was asked to verify my account information and then I was transferred over to another department. At this point, I got cut off! I’m sure it was a technical mishap on their part, so I called back and just asked to be transferred again, which I was. The customer service rep was very nice and when I told her I was canceling because of budgetary reasons, she asked me if I had enjoyed the service.

“Of course I enjoy the service”, I said.But I still want to cancel. She asked if I would like 3 free months. I asked “Would I have to call back and cancel after 3 months?”. “Yes,” she said, “I would.” I declined — I just wanted to be done — I only ever listen to it in the car and it just seems like it’s not worth it.

After I hung up, I realized that I could have just taken the 3 free months if I had said yes. But, then again, I would have to remember to call them again and cancel. So that’s how I could’ve gotten 3 free months of XM/Sirius Radio.

WIRED Magazine is 56.2% fullpage ads

I received the December 2008 issue of WIRED magazine in the mail today. Yes, I’m a subscriber. Not because it’s the right thing to do (I get all of my tech news from the web) but because I like to flip through an actual magazine and read the articles. I don’t have as much time as I used to, but I do try to give the whole magazine a flip at least once every month. Now, I skipped flipping through the last few months, so after about a 3 month hiatus, I picked up today’s delivery and gave it a once over.

WTF? Where did all the artcles go? Where was the clever commentary? Where were the gadgets of tomorrow I was looking to find? And WTF is all this advertising?? It seems that in the past few months, WIRED Magazine went from respected geek reading material to advertising super-bitch. So I wanted to see exactly how much advertising was in this latest issue. I sat down in my living room and ripped out every single page of the magazine. I sorted them into three piles:

  • pages that have ads on both sides
  • pages with ads on only one side
  • pages with no ads anywhere

The results didn’t surprise me that much. Of the 120 physical pages that I pulled out of the magazine, 28 of them had zero advertising on them, 43 had advertising on BOTH sides and 49 had adverstising on one side and “content” on the other. And by “content” I mean something that wasn’t trying to sell me the latest version of Office, or a great James Bond watch, or whatever. It was either one of those articles I was looking for, or a table of contents for the magazine, or credits, or even a photo of a gadget propped up against a steel number.

And if you do the math, it turns out that the December 2008 WIRED magazine is:

  • 43.8% “content”
  • 56.2% advertising

I guess the only thing I’m wondering now is: why?

Links as a result of a golf outing

Just a short entry to capture the many geek related things Jon Gordon (twitter) and I talked about on the course yesterday:

If I think of any more, I’ll be sure to add them!

Fortune Tweet

I was really missing those sweet little fortunes you used to get when logging in to an old school linux terminal way back in the 90’s. So, I went ahead and downloaded the latest fortune app via YUM on a CentOS box I have, and then wrote a little PHP script that posts fortunes to the Twitter API on the hour, every hour.

You can follow the fortunes here:

http://twitter.com/fortunetweet

And you can follow me here:

http://twitter.com/ten7

All in only 18 lines of code. Enjoy!

moving hosting providers

i am moving hosting companies. as a result, you might see some funky data in your trend lines. all your data might seem to disappear, or, just the last few days. this is normal and expected while the dns entries transition the domain from one provider to another. as soon as the dns has caught up, i will merge the databases in both providers, and all trend data should get restored.

more on why i’m moving, and the ordeal that i had with bluehost in a later post. once i have all data off their servers. woooosh.

update: move is complete. all went well… stay tuned for reasons why a goooood web host is hard to find.

Services I use and recommend…