The document provides statistics on various types of media and information over time, including books, photos, videos, the internet, and more. Key details include that 10% of all books were published last year, over 3.8 trillion photos have been taken total, 500 million tweets are sent per day, and 90% of all data ever created was generated in just the past two years. The rapid growth of information and how it is shared online is highlighted throughout the document.
WATCH THE VIDEO HERE: https://vimeo.com/63437853
We're being inundated with more information than ever before.
With the rise of all this information, we're being exposed to a tremendous amount of bullshit.
We have to decide if we want to contribute to the noise or if we want to be part of the signal.
These are the slides from my Creative Mornings talk in Pittsburgh, PA.
Slides from a presentation for K-12 teachers and student teachers at St. Mary's Academy in Winnipeg, Manitoba, 26 April 2010: an exploration of the possibilities offered by modern mobile technology for k12 students.
Master Slide Deck from a presentation at the Mobile Learning Technology Conference in Winnipeg, Manitoba, March 16, 2010: an exploration of the possibilities offered by modern mobile technology for k12 students.
Slides from a presentation for Sr. High students at the Mobile Learning Technology Conference at the University College of the North in The Pas, Manitoba, March 22, 2010: an exploration of the possibilities offered by modern mobile technology for k12 students.
WATCH THE VIDEO HERE: https://vimeo.com/63437853
We're being inundated with more information than ever before.
With the rise of all this information, we're being exposed to a tremendous amount of bullshit.
We have to decide if we want to contribute to the noise or if we want to be part of the signal.
These are the slides from my Creative Mornings talk in Pittsburgh, PA.
Slides from a presentation for K-12 teachers and student teachers at St. Mary's Academy in Winnipeg, Manitoba, 26 April 2010: an exploration of the possibilities offered by modern mobile technology for k12 students.
Master Slide Deck from a presentation at the Mobile Learning Technology Conference in Winnipeg, Manitoba, March 16, 2010: an exploration of the possibilities offered by modern mobile technology for k12 students.
Slides from a presentation for Sr. High students at the Mobile Learning Technology Conference at the University College of the North in The Pas, Manitoba, March 22, 2010: an exploration of the possibilities offered by modern mobile technology for k12 students.
Adapting to Input — Smashing Conference NYCJason Grigsby
Responsive Web Design has forced us to accept that we don't know the size of our canvas, and we've learned to embrace the squishiness of the web. Input, it turns out, is every bit as challenging as screen size. We have tablets with keyboards, laptops that become tablets, laptops with touch screens, phones with physical keyboards, and even phones that become desktop computers.
In this session, Jason will guide you through the input landscape, showing you new forms of input like sensors and voice control, as well as new lessons about old input standbys. You'll learn the design principles necessary to build web sites that respond and adapt to whatever input people use.
Slides from my talk at Generate London on the 23 September 2016 http://www.generateconf.com/london-2016 #generateconf
ABSTRACT
There was a time when we did glossy page designs and those designs were pretty much what we saw in our desktop browsers. With the rise of smartphones, tablets and smartwatches, there isn’t one view of our designs any more.
With further developments in technology and screens, our content could go anywhere. As a result we need to move away from designing for specific devices to solutions that are device-agnostic. For UX designers that means means letting content guide layouts, and moving away from designing pages to focusing on the modules that those views are made up of.
In this talk Anna will walk through why device-agnostic design matters, what it means and how we go about it.
Talk from The Web Is in Cardiff, October 2014 exploring the business case for web performance, and some of the underlying factors that can make sites slow
A hands-on workshop at EuroIA in Brussels, Belgium, on 27 Sept. 2014.
Learn the process for creating responsive websites. Gain an understanding of the HTML & CSS behind responsive design, so you can design responsive experiences that can be easily implemented by a multi-disciplinary team. Target audience: UX designers with at least a basic knowledge of HTML & CSS.
A talk members of the Forum One Communications UX team gave at UXCampDC 2013. The focus was on some pain points we hit while trying to wrap our brains around Responsive Design and the tool we've made to help sketch solutions more easily and quickly.
Content strategists at Facebook plan, structure, and create content for more than a billion people. But they’re not writers or content marketers—they’re interaction designers, information architects, and UX practitioners. They design and build product experiences that are simple, straightforward and human.
And so can you. Content strategy isn't just for big organizations. It's for anyone who's building an experience. And by using our approach, you can start building better content.
In this presentation, you'll learn:
- How content strategy works in a context of product design and development
- A framework for minimum viable content that provides quality and consistency
- How to build and iterate on product content experiences to meet people's needs
- How to stand up and become a better advocate for the people using your products
Stand up for putting The Why before The How.
Stand up for value, ease of use, and craft.
Stand up for meeting (and exceeding) people's needs.
Stand up for BETTER CONTENT!
Inspired by Maria Giudice of Facebook, Ian Lurie of Portent, and Jason Mesut of Plan. Based on the works of Jesse James Garrett, Simon Sinek, A.H. Maslow, Kristina Halvorson, Rachel Lovinger, Dan Saffer/Kicker Studio, Erin Kissane, Michael Powers, Sarah O'Keefe, Hilary Marsh, Wouter De Bres, Matt Toback, Eric Ries/The Lean Startup, Dr. Chun Wei Choo, Libby Brittain, and more. Featuring the design work of the Facebook Analog Research Lab, including concepts by Julie Zhuo, Russ Maschmeyer, and Adam Mosseri of Facebook along with content standards from Facebook's Content Strategy team.
Originally presented at Content Marketing World on September 10, 2014 in Cleveland, Ohio.
You can learn more about Jonathon Colman at http://www.jonathoncolman.org/ and follow him on Twitter at http://twitter.com/jcolman
Also see 200+ free, curated Content Strategy resources at http://www.jonathoncolman.org/2013/02/04/content-strategy-resources/
EduWeb - Building a Responsive Website for the Presidential DebateJon Liu
“Building a Responsive Website for the Presidential Debate” by Jon Liu at eduWeb Conference in Boston on July 31, 2012
Videos in presentation:
Monkey Video - http://www.ted.com/talks/frans_de_waal_do_animals_have_morals.html
Dollar Shave Club -
JAX2013 Keynote - When open-source enables the Internet of ThingsBenjamin Cabé
Be it the building you live in, your car, the pacemaker of your grandmother, or your toaster, it is expected that by 2020, there will be tens of billions of connected objects. While there are solutions already deployed nowadays, the real take-off of M2M cannot happen without open source. In this keynote talk, Benjamin Cabé will explore the challenges of the Internet of Things, and share insights on the open-source technologies developed by the Eclipse M2M initiative.
Sosyal medya hesaplarınızı yükseltmek için sizde web sitemizden takipçi,beğeni ve yorum paketlermizden satın alabilirsiniz. Günün her saati canlı destek sistemimizden bilgi alabilir ve kolay sipariişinizi verebilirsiniz. Kolay ödeme yöntemlerimizden birini seçerek ödemenizi tamamlayabilirsiniz. Satın almış ürün kısa süre içerisinde tamamlanacaktır.
The notion of allowing access to your website content and data via API's and other machine readable means is well embedded in geek circles.
This presentation aims to look at the non-technical reasons why these approaches are a good idea, arguing that it is time for Machine Readable Data (MRD) approaches to be better communicated to content owners, budget holders and other non-technical stakeholders.
For a Future-Friendly Web (Mobilism 2012)Brad Frost
As the digital landscape continues to become more complex, it's essential for us to start thinking beyond the desktop and embrace the unpredictability of the future. Mobile is forcing us to rethink the content we create and the context in which people interact with our products and services. This session will cover how to change our thinking and start acting differently in order to create more future-friendly experiences.
For full breakdown, visit http://bradfrostweb.com/blog/web/for-a-future-friendly-web/
This talk was from Web Design Day (http://webdesignday.com) in beautiful Pittsburgh, PA.
This talk introduces the need to start thinking and acting in a more future-friendly (http://futurefriend.ly) way when approaching web design. The diversity of web-enabled devices is increasing at an alarming rate. We have to rethink our content and the contexts in which our content is viewed.
Brad Frost
Web designer
Style Guide Best Practices
We’re tasked with creating experiences that look and function beautifully across a dizzying array of devices and environments. That’s a tall order in and of itself, but once you factor in other team members, clients, stakeholders, and organizational quirks, things start looking downright intimidating. With so many variables to consider, we need solid ground to stand on. Style guides are quickly proving to be foundational tools for tackling this increasingly-diverse web landscape while still maintaining your sanity. Style guides promote consistency, establish a shared vocabulary, make testing easier, and lay a future-friendly foundation. This session will detail best practices and considerations for creating and maintaining style guides, so you can set up your organization for success.
Adapting to Input — Smashing Conference NYCJason Grigsby
Responsive Web Design has forced us to accept that we don't know the size of our canvas, and we've learned to embrace the squishiness of the web. Input, it turns out, is every bit as challenging as screen size. We have tablets with keyboards, laptops that become tablets, laptops with touch screens, phones with physical keyboards, and even phones that become desktop computers.
In this session, Jason will guide you through the input landscape, showing you new forms of input like sensors and voice control, as well as new lessons about old input standbys. You'll learn the design principles necessary to build web sites that respond and adapt to whatever input people use.
Slides from my talk at Generate London on the 23 September 2016 http://www.generateconf.com/london-2016 #generateconf
ABSTRACT
There was a time when we did glossy page designs and those designs were pretty much what we saw in our desktop browsers. With the rise of smartphones, tablets and smartwatches, there isn’t one view of our designs any more.
With further developments in technology and screens, our content could go anywhere. As a result we need to move away from designing for specific devices to solutions that are device-agnostic. For UX designers that means means letting content guide layouts, and moving away from designing pages to focusing on the modules that those views are made up of.
In this talk Anna will walk through why device-agnostic design matters, what it means and how we go about it.
Talk from The Web Is in Cardiff, October 2014 exploring the business case for web performance, and some of the underlying factors that can make sites slow
A hands-on workshop at EuroIA in Brussels, Belgium, on 27 Sept. 2014.
Learn the process for creating responsive websites. Gain an understanding of the HTML & CSS behind responsive design, so you can design responsive experiences that can be easily implemented by a multi-disciplinary team. Target audience: UX designers with at least a basic knowledge of HTML & CSS.
A talk members of the Forum One Communications UX team gave at UXCampDC 2013. The focus was on some pain points we hit while trying to wrap our brains around Responsive Design and the tool we've made to help sketch solutions more easily and quickly.
Content strategists at Facebook plan, structure, and create content for more than a billion people. But they’re not writers or content marketers—they’re interaction designers, information architects, and UX practitioners. They design and build product experiences that are simple, straightforward and human.
And so can you. Content strategy isn't just for big organizations. It's for anyone who's building an experience. And by using our approach, you can start building better content.
In this presentation, you'll learn:
- How content strategy works in a context of product design and development
- A framework for minimum viable content that provides quality and consistency
- How to build and iterate on product content experiences to meet people's needs
- How to stand up and become a better advocate for the people using your products
Stand up for putting The Why before The How.
Stand up for value, ease of use, and craft.
Stand up for meeting (and exceeding) people's needs.
Stand up for BETTER CONTENT!
Inspired by Maria Giudice of Facebook, Ian Lurie of Portent, and Jason Mesut of Plan. Based on the works of Jesse James Garrett, Simon Sinek, A.H. Maslow, Kristina Halvorson, Rachel Lovinger, Dan Saffer/Kicker Studio, Erin Kissane, Michael Powers, Sarah O'Keefe, Hilary Marsh, Wouter De Bres, Matt Toback, Eric Ries/The Lean Startup, Dr. Chun Wei Choo, Libby Brittain, and more. Featuring the design work of the Facebook Analog Research Lab, including concepts by Julie Zhuo, Russ Maschmeyer, and Adam Mosseri of Facebook along with content standards from Facebook's Content Strategy team.
Originally presented at Content Marketing World on September 10, 2014 in Cleveland, Ohio.
You can learn more about Jonathon Colman at http://www.jonathoncolman.org/ and follow him on Twitter at http://twitter.com/jcolman
Also see 200+ free, curated Content Strategy resources at http://www.jonathoncolman.org/2013/02/04/content-strategy-resources/
EduWeb - Building a Responsive Website for the Presidential DebateJon Liu
“Building a Responsive Website for the Presidential Debate” by Jon Liu at eduWeb Conference in Boston on July 31, 2012
Videos in presentation:
Monkey Video - http://www.ted.com/talks/frans_de_waal_do_animals_have_morals.html
Dollar Shave Club -
JAX2013 Keynote - When open-source enables the Internet of ThingsBenjamin Cabé
Be it the building you live in, your car, the pacemaker of your grandmother, or your toaster, it is expected that by 2020, there will be tens of billions of connected objects. While there are solutions already deployed nowadays, the real take-off of M2M cannot happen without open source. In this keynote talk, Benjamin Cabé will explore the challenges of the Internet of Things, and share insights on the open-source technologies developed by the Eclipse M2M initiative.
Sosyal medya hesaplarınızı yükseltmek için sizde web sitemizden takipçi,beğeni ve yorum paketlermizden satın alabilirsiniz. Günün her saati canlı destek sistemimizden bilgi alabilir ve kolay sipariişinizi verebilirsiniz. Kolay ödeme yöntemlerimizden birini seçerek ödemenizi tamamlayabilirsiniz. Satın almış ürün kısa süre içerisinde tamamlanacaktır.
The notion of allowing access to your website content and data via API's and other machine readable means is well embedded in geek circles.
This presentation aims to look at the non-technical reasons why these approaches are a good idea, arguing that it is time for Machine Readable Data (MRD) approaches to be better communicated to content owners, budget holders and other non-technical stakeholders.
For a Future-Friendly Web (Mobilism 2012)Brad Frost
As the digital landscape continues to become more complex, it's essential for us to start thinking beyond the desktop and embrace the unpredictability of the future. Mobile is forcing us to rethink the content we create and the context in which people interact with our products and services. This session will cover how to change our thinking and start acting differently in order to create more future-friendly experiences.
For full breakdown, visit http://bradfrostweb.com/blog/web/for-a-future-friendly-web/
This talk was from Web Design Day (http://webdesignday.com) in beautiful Pittsburgh, PA.
This talk introduces the need to start thinking and acting in a more future-friendly (http://futurefriend.ly) way when approaching web design. The diversity of web-enabled devices is increasing at an alarming rate. We have to rethink our content and the contexts in which our content is viewed.
Brad Frost
Web designer
Style Guide Best Practices
We’re tasked with creating experiences that look and function beautifully across a dizzying array of devices and environments. That’s a tall order in and of itself, but once you factor in other team members, clients, stakeholders, and organizational quirks, things start looking downright intimidating. With so many variables to consider, we need solid ground to stand on. Style guides are quickly proving to be foundational tools for tackling this increasingly-diverse web landscape while still maintaining your sanity. Style guides promote consistency, establish a shared vocabulary, make testing easier, and lay a future-friendly foundation. This session will detail best practices and considerations for creating and maintaining style guides, so you can set up your organization for success.
Beyond Squishy: The Principles of Adaptive DesignBrad Frost
Responsive web design has hit the scene like a bomb, and now designers everywhere are showing off to their bosses and peers by resizing their browser windows. "Look! The site is squishy!"
While creating flexible layouts is important, there's a whole lot more that goes into truly exceptional adaptive web experiences. This session will introduce the Principles of Adaptive Design: ubiquity, flexibility, performance, enhancement and future-friendliness. We need go beyond media queries in order to preserve the web's ubiquity and move it in a future-friendly direction.
Everyone's screaming "We need to be 'on' mobile!" What does that even mean? Where do you start? One of the biggest challenges is getting clients, coworkers and stakeholders on board with the mobile web and actually execute a project the right way. The hurdles are many: lack of understanding of the medium, small budgets, outdated processes and many more. Every organization is different so changing existing behaviors and processes takes a lot of effort, patience and time.
This presentation shows you how to execute a mobile web project successfully with a cross-disciplinary team. We'll provide a set of helpful tools and practices to get you started and help educate your coworkers and clients at the same time.
Topics discussed:
- Selling the mobile-first philosophy and strategy
Using mobile as an excuse to develop a strong content strategy
- Overcoming "App-itis" (people's tendency to think anything made for mobile needs to be a native app)
- How to create future-friendly mobile web experiences
For a Future-Friendly Web (WebVisions Chicago 2012)Brad Frost
Our digital landscape includes desktops, laptops, smartphones, featurephones, tablets, e-readers, netbooks and more. But this is just the beginning.
As the digital landscape continues to become even more complex, it's essential for us to start thinking beyond the desktop and embrace the unpredictability of the future. There's no such thing as future-proof, but there are things we can do in order to better prepare ourselves for the era of ubiquitous connectivity. We need to start thinking and acting differently in order to create meaningful web experiences that continue to be relevant well beyond the scope of the initial projects.
This session will cover:
A better understanding of future friendly principles
Tips for better supporting today's device landscape while being better prepared for tomorrow's
How to apply future friendly thinking in your current web projects
how do brands get customer attention in an increasingly digital world? The aim of this presentation is to create conversation about how the physical world (stores & showrooms) can better integrate digital.
EnerWe Communication Conference - Death of a B2B SalesmanErik Eskedal
Endringene i kundenes kjøpsprosess gjør at selskaper må tenke annerledes. Salg, markedsføring og kommunikasjon MÅ snakke sammen og bruke de digitale kanalene for å kommunisere med kundene på den måten som de vil, der de vil.
Presentasjonen ble holdt på EnerWe Communication Conference av Erik Eskedal i Iteo
Digital advertising social marketing and tech trends predictions in 2015Soap Creative
We’ve taken another light-hearted look at what we think the zeitgeist of 2015 will be for marketing, tech, pop culture and everything in-between.
Follow us for more updates or view our uploads for more insights.
Invitation for Input: OpenTeal Project (Oct 2015)Edwin Jansen
We are considering building a wiki for any Teal organization who would like to document their Teal practices for their own & public reference. Need some more input from Teal orgs before we build it.
This deck accompanied Kelly Baron's SXSW talk on 3/13/17. Nudge theory is about hacking human nature using subtle, context-driven interventions. We all sometimes buy into the shampoo commercial dream that our products can make us into better people, but what if that were true?
Thanks to IoT, we’re designing products that make and break our habits. We applied nudge theory to our healthcare wearable, Under Currents, to solve billions of dollars’ worth of medical errors and save lives. When common sense fails, common sensors help us be the best version of ourselves.
Join Kelly Baron, a business designer from Fjord Austin, as she talks about how to apply nudge theory theory to digital experiences.
Preserving Interactive Media - SXSW 2017Johan Oomen
http://schedule.sxsw.com/2017/events/PP96792
Interactive documentaries are at the vanguard of current media technologies. Taking into account every framework imaginable, its makers challenge some of our assumptions about how these technologies can or cannot support bringing a non-fiction storyline to a audience. In over a decade of IDFA DocLab’s existence, web technologies have changed dramatically and many producers experience how complicated it can be to keep their creations accessible and ‘experienceable’.
In this panel, chair Johan Oomen from Sound and Vision, will outline the challenges to creating dynamic web archives. We will then take a deeper look at particular cases. NFB collaborated with Google on the re-making of Bear 71 - porting it from a Flash-based to a WebVR online experience. Megan Lindsay will present this collaboration on re-representing a modern classic. After the presentations, there will be room for questions.
KVH Plug & Trade™ is a key part of the KVH Financial Extranet, a global low latency network that connects market venues, market participants and their service providers, and offers robust infrastructure for the secure management and delivery of mission-critical information.
KVH Plug & Trade™ is our flagship offering to trading participants in the KVH Financial Extranet.
In this deck I answer four dead questions: What is the problem of saying stuff is dead?
Why do people say stuff is dead?
Why do we believe stuff is dead?
How do we stop people saying SEO is dead?
Primarily it's about SEO's integration into the wider marketing mix.
5 Reasons to Love Fuzzy Lookup | BrightonSEO 2020Marco Bonomo
Excel Fuzzy Lookup allows fuzzy matching of pretty much any set of data, representing a flexible solution for cutting down manual redirect mapping for 404 not-found pages and website migrations.
Learning Lunch. Prob won't make much sense without me wittering on in the background. About setting up the new business, branded utility, some Google stuff and a few pieces of inspiration (do check out the Royal Society Animate videos on YouTube, the one on time is incredible).
What is Creative Commons? for University HS StudentsJane Park
We addressed students from University High School in Indianapolis, Indiana. They were in SF on a field trip exploring "the conditions (cultural, artistic, demographic) that fostered, created and elicited some of the most exciting, groundbreaking and progressive thinking, art and technology in the world."
The presentation went over an hour long.
Turbocharge your journalism by employing online tools and resources for better and faster backgrounding of people and organizations. Social media can be used as powerful reporting tools, whether you're facing a big breaking news story or an enterprise project. This session explains how to use social media platforms and complementary websites to locate diverse expert and “real people” sources, listen to your community and identify news stories, verify user-generated content, crowdsource using Google Forms and call-outs, and create a social dossier on a person in the news. Trainer P. Kim Bui is the director of audience innovation at the Arizona Republic.
The web you were used to is gone. Architecture and strategy for your mobile c...Alberta Soranzo
*Updated version—delivered as in-agency talk on 9/24 in Bristol, UK*
Information architecture and content strategy are the foundation of any website but, when it comes to mobile, they can literally mean the life or death of a product.
The truth is that even the best-designed and well-engineered mobile products can still fail if their IA is not sound, and that’s because mobile information architecture doesn’t only define the structure of content, but also determines how users will interact with it. And speaking of content, do you know what content should go on your mobile sites and apps? Are your users finding what they came for?
In this talk we will take a look at the thought process that drives mobile content strategy, the specific challenges and opportunities of the mobile space and how information architecture and content strategy contribute to the creation of outstanding mobile experiences.
An overview for user experience designers of mobile experience considerations, approaches to creating mobile web sites, and some of the new capabilities for interaction and UI adaptation introduced via HTML5 and CSS3.
Full text transcript of my talk available at: http://jenmatson.com
Nobody works alone in a vacuum, and successful work hinges on how well a team communicates and collaborates with each other. This talk will explore many methods, tools, and techniques teams use to produce great web experiences. How do front-end development teams make sure they write clean and consistent code together? How do designers ensure colors, typography, and other design elements are used correctly? What deliverables should be created in an effective web design process? How are decisions communicated with the team, stakeholders, and the broader organization? There are no “right” answers to these questions, but this talk will cover some important principles and helpful tactics to help your team make great work together.
Atomic Design - An Event Apart San DiegoBrad Frost
Design systems, not pages. This is an introduction to atomic design (http://bradfrostweb.com/blog/post/atomic-web-design/), a methodology for crafting an effective interface design system. It also introduces Pattern Lab (http://patternlab.io/), a tool for implementing atomic design systems and pattern libraries.
All matter, no matter how complex, can be broken down into molecules which can be broken down further into atomic elements. All web interfaces can be broken down down the same way. Atomic Design provides a methodology for building an effective design system. It consists of five distint stages: atoms, molecules, organisms, templates and pages.
Beyond Media Queries: An Anatomy of an Adaptive Web Design (at Smashing Confe...Brad Frost
Media queries may be responsive design's secret sauce, but we know there's a whole lot more that goes into crafting amazing adaptive experiences. By dissecting an example of a mobile-first responsive design, we'll uncover the principles of adaptive design and highlight some considerations for creating contextually-aware Web experiences. We'll go over emerging mobile Web best practices and responsive patterns that can assist in our journey toward a future-friendly Web.
Beyond Media Queries: Anatomy of an Adaptive Web DesignBrad Frost
Media queries may be responsive design’s secret sauce, but we know there’s a whole lot more that goes into crafting amazing adaptive experiences. By dissecting an example of a mobile-first responsive design, we can uncover the principles of adaptive design and highlight some considerations for creating contextually-aware web experiences. This goes over emerging mobile web best practices and responsive patterns that can assist in our journey toward a future-friendly web.
White wonder, Work developed by Eva TschoppMansi Shah
White Wonder by Eva Tschopp
A tale about our culture around the use of fertilizers and pesticides visiting small farms around Ahmedabad in Matar and Shilaj.
7 Alternatives to Bullet Points in PowerPointAlvis Oh
So you tried all the ways to beautify your bullet points on your pitch deck but it just got way uglier. These points are supposed to be memorable and leave a lasting impression on your audience. With these tips, you'll no longer have to spend so much time thinking how you should present your pointers.
Dive into the innovative world of smart garages with our insightful presentation, "Exploring the Future of Smart Garages." This comprehensive guide covers the latest advancements in garage technology, including automated systems, smart security features, energy efficiency solutions, and seamless integration with smart home ecosystems. Learn how these technologies are transforming traditional garages into high-tech, efficient spaces that enhance convenience, safety, and sustainability.
Ideal for homeowners, tech enthusiasts, and industry professionals, this presentation provides valuable insights into the trends, benefits, and future developments in smart garage technology. Stay ahead of the curve with our expert analysis and practical tips on implementing smart garage solutions.
Expert Accessory Dwelling Unit (ADU) Drafting ServicesResDraft
Whether you’re looking to create a guest house, a rental unit, or a private retreat, our experienced team will design a space that complements your existing home and maximizes your investment. We provide personalized, comprehensive expert accessory dwelling unit (ADU)drafting solutions tailored to your needs, ensuring a seamless process from concept to completion.
Can AI do good? at 'offtheCanvas' India HCI preludeAlan Dix
Invited talk at 'offtheCanvas' IndiaHCI prelude, 29th June 2024.
https://www.alandix.com/academic/talks/offtheCanvas-IndiaHCI2024/
The world is being changed fundamentally by AI and we are constantly faced with newspaper headlines about its harmful effects. However, there is also the potential to both ameliorate theses harms and use the new abilities of AI to transform society for the good. Can you make the difference?
You could be a professional graphic designer and still make mistakes. There is always the possibility of human error. On the other hand if you’re not a designer, the chances of making some common graphic design mistakes are even higher. Because you don’t know what you don’t know. That’s where this blog comes in. To make your job easier and help you create better designs, we have put together a list of common graphic design mistakes that you need to avoid.
Book Formatting: Quality Control Checks for DesignersConfidence Ago
This presentation was made to help designers who work in publishing houses or format books for printing ensure quality.
Quality control is vital to every industry. This is why every department in a company need create a method they use in ensuring quality. This, perhaps, will not only improve the quality of products and bring errors to the barest minimum, but take it to a near perfect finish.
It is beyond a moot point that a good book will somewhat be judged by its cover, but the content of the book remains king. No matter how beautiful the cover, if the quality of writing or presentation is off, that will be a reason for readers not to come back to the book or recommend it.
So, this presentation points designers to some important things that may be missed by an editor that they could eventually discover and call the attention of the editor.
35. THINGS SHARED ON FACEBOOK EVERY DAY
4,000,000,000
http://techcrunch.com/2011/07/06/zuckerberg-online-sharing-is-growing-at-an-exponential-rate-and-
users-are-sharing-4-billion-things-a-day/
38. There were 5 exabytes of information created
between the dawn of civilization through 2003,
but that much information is now created every
2 days, and the pace is increasing.
-Eric Schmidt
http://techcrunch.com/2010/08/04/schmidt-data/
57. We’re getting to a point where we’re
understanding how to allow people to
produce more content every single day.
- Kevin Systrom, Instagram CEO
http://gigaom.com/2012/11/07/instagram-ceo-the-speed-of-the-product-dictates-how-often-its-used/
66. bull·shit /ˈbo͝olˌSHit/
1. Superfluous, unnecessary
2. Cluttered, clunky or needlessly complex
3. Intentionally deceptive or insincere
4. Excrement of an adult male bovine mammal
72. Citigroup today announced a series of
repositioning actions that will further reduce
expenses and improve efficiency across the
company while maintaining Citi's unique
capabilities to serve clients, especially in the
emerging markets. These actions will result in
increased business efficiency, streamlined
operations and an optimized consumer
http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2012/12/citigroup-lays-offs-11-000-people-in-the-most-
corporate-speaky-paragraph-in-history/265925/
73. Citigroup today announced [lay offs].
These actions will [save money].
http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2012/12/citigroup-lays-offs-11-000-people-in-the-most-
corporate-speaky-paragraph-in-history/265925/
84. The online publishing game is all about volume
right now. It’s not about quality and originality.
When volume is your organizing principle, you
take shortcuts. Ripping off others’ work is
simply the norm now. It is absolutely effective,
and it is absolutely depressing.
-Brian Morrissey
http://digiday.com/publishers/the-price-of-original-content/
95. This is a quote. This is where you
put the quote text.
-Quote AuthorCONTENT
BULLSHIT
BULLSHIT
BULLSHIT
BULLSHIT
BULLSHIT
BULLSHIT
BULLSHIT
BULLSHITBULLSHIT
96. This is a quote. This is where you
put the quote text.
-Quote Author
97. This is a quote. This is where you
put the quote text.
-Quote Author
98. This is a quote. This is where you
put the quote text.
-Quote Author
99. This is a quote. This is where you
put the quote text.
-Quote Author
CONTENT
BULLSHIT
BULLSHIT
BULLSHIT
BULLSHIT
BULLSHIT
BULLSHIT
BULLSHIT
BULLSHIT BULLSHIT
BULLSHIT
BULLSHIT
BULLSHIT BULLSHIT
BULLSHIT BULLSHIT
BULLSHIT
BULLSHIT
109. My landline phone serves the same
purpose as my Hotmail email address;
only given to those likely to spam me
and totally safe to ignore.
-Harry Roberts
https://twitter.com/csswizardry/status/365181535030218754
110.
111. Good morning Gilt!
Good morning J. Crew sale!
Good morning LinkedIn Premium!
-Chapin Clark
https://twitter.com/chapinc/status/356421062088597505
118. When was the last time you felt
emotionally moved by an online ad? Or
compelled to buy something? or discussed
an ad with your peers?
-Mark Boulton
https://twitter.com/markboulton/status/275897664153976832
119.
120. You’re more likely to survive a plane crash
than to click a banner ad.
http://www.digiday.com/publishers/15-alarming-stats-about-banner-ads/
156. I don’t want breaking news. I want slow,
thoughtful, deeply researched news.
Especially now.
- Mandy Brown
https://twitter.com/aworkinglibrary/status/343087061127024640
208. I don't give two hoots what you do with any of the
design or code you find here.
http://css-tricks.com/license/
209. Actually, I do. I hope you take it and use it, uncredited,
on a super commercial website and get wicked rich off
it. I hope you use it at work and your boss is
impressed and you get a big promotion. I hope it helps
you design a website and that website impresses
somebody you think is super hot and you get married
and have smart, chill babies. I hope you use the code
in a blog post you write elsewhere and that website
gets way more popular and awesome than this one.
http://css-tricks.com/license/
210. If you feel like telling me about it, cool. If not, no big
deal. If you feel better crediting it, that's cool. If not,
don't sweat it.
http://css-tricks.com/license/
211. If you copy an entire article from this site and republish it
on your own site like you wrote it, that's a little uncool. I
won't be mad at you for stealing, I just think you're better
than that and want to see you do better. I'm not going to
come after you though. I'd rather play ball with my dog.
The only time I'll be mad at you is if you go out of your way
to try and hurt me somehow. And again I probably won't
even be mad, just sad. Unless I'm having a bad day too, in
which case I apologize in advance for my snarky replies.
http://css-tricks.com/license/
212. I want the web to get better and being all
Johnny Protective over everything doesn't get
us there. I understand other people feel
differently about this and might have semi-
legit reasons for protecting certain code,
design, writing, or whatever. I work on some
closed-source projects myself. CSS-Tricks isn't
one of them. Go nuts.
http://css-tricks.com/license/
217. The opportunity before us, individually and
collectively, is enormous; what we do with it
will be determined largely by how well we are
able to imagine and reward public creativity,
participation, and sharing.
- Clay Shirky