re Disney earnings beat as streaming profit tops estimates By finance.yahoo.com Published On :: 2024-11-14T11:40:55Z Full Article
re Futures muted ahead of economic data, Powell speech By finance.yahoo.com Published On :: 2024-11-14T11:16:26Z Full Article
re Super Micro Stock Could Get Delisted. What to Consider If You Own the Shares. By www.barrons.com Published On :: 2024-11-13T21:33:00Z Full Article
re 2 High-Yield Midstream Stocks to Buy Hand Over Fist and 1 to Avoid By finance.yahoo.com Published On :: 2024-11-14T10:00:00Z Full Article
re Prediction: The Trump Stock Market Rally Is Doomed for This Simple Reason By finance.yahoo.com Published On :: 2024-11-13T09:47:00Z Full Article
re Stocks and Dollar Rise Before Data, Powell Speech: Markets Wrap By finance.yahoo.com Published On :: 2024-11-14T11:03:22Z Full Article
re Super Micro Stock Has Made a ‘Round Trip’ From Last Year. Where It Is Headed Next, According to History. By www.barrons.com Published On :: 2024-11-14T08:30:00Z Full Article
re 1 Top Cryptocurrency to Buy Before It Soars 16,939%, According to MicroStrategy Chief and Billionaire Michael Saylor By finance.yahoo.com Published On :: 2024-11-14T11:00:00Z Full Article
re Down More Than 30%: 2 ‘Strong Buy’ Stocks at Steep Discounts By finance.yahoo.com Published On :: 2024-11-14T11:12:57Z Full Article
re If You Invested $100 In Dogecoin When The Meme Coin Launched, Here's How Much You'd Have Today By finance.yahoo.com Published On :: 2024-11-13T17:54:38Z Full Article
re ICE cotton rebounds from monthly low as crude oil recovers By www.fibre2fashion.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 15:53:02 GMT ICE cotton futures saw a slight rebound after recent lows, capped by a stronger dollar. Traders have shifted focus to the March 2025 contract, with trading volume remaining high. Crude oil's recovery offset earlier price declines, easing polyester costs. Other agricultural commodities showed mixed trends. Traders await the USDA export sales report, with attention on Chinese demand. Full Article Textiles
re ITMA ASIA + CITME Singapore 2025 almost fully sold By www.fibre2fashion.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 17:03:02 GMT ITMA ASIA + CITME 2025, set for October in Singapore, has nearly sold out its 60,000 sqm exhibition space with strong interest from 731 global tech providers. The event, supported by CEMATEX and CTMA, will showcase innovations tailored for Asia’s growing textile hubs. Key sectors include finishing, spinning, and knitting, highlighting sustainable tech and automation trends. Full Article Textiles
re Finland’s Suominen ‘s net sales increase to $120.53 mn in Q3 2024 By www.fibre2fashion.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 17:03:02 GMT Suominen Corporation has reported Q3 2024 net sales of €111.6 million (~$120.53 million), up from €106.4 million YoY. The company suffered a net loss of €3.2 million (~$3.4 million) due to operational challenges. YTD sales reached €343.8 million (~$370.9 million), and the company expects a full-year EBITDA increase. Sustainability efforts earned Suominen a Gold Medal from EcoVadis. Full Article Technical Textiles
re Global cotton prices steady amid marginal decreases in key markets By www.fibre2fashion.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 17:03:02 GMT Global cotton markets saw slight declines and stabilisation in recent weeks, with NY/ICE December futures trading between 67–75 cents/lb since June, now at 71 cents/lb. The global A Index dipped from 85 to 83 cents, while China's index dropped from 101 to 97 cents due to a weaker yuan. Indian and Pakistani spot prices also declined, but both rupees remained stable against the dollar. Full Article Textiles
re German brand Puma honoured in 2024 Laureus Sport for Good Index By www.fibre2fashion.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 17:03:02 GMT The 2024 Laureus Sport for Good Index honours brands advancing the 17 SDGs through sport, highlighting impactful initiatives that address key social and ecological issues. Head of Partnerships Astin Ewington emphasises the Index’s role in showcasing sport's power to drive positive change, inspiring more brands to use sport as a platform for meaningful, sustainable impact. Full Article Apparel/Garments
re Japan’s Wacoal Holdings reports $586.1 mn H1 revenue, down 5.2% YoY By www.fibre2fashion.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 17:03:01 GMT Wacoal Holdings has reported revenue of ¥90,167 million (~$586.1 million) in H1 2024, down by 5.2 per cent YoY. Gross profit fell 4.9 per cent to ¥51,056 million (~$331.86 million). Domestic revenue dipped 4.8 per cent to ¥45,006 million, while overseas revenue declined 1.4 per cent to ¥34,549 million. The company’s business profit was ¥2,304 million, down 39.6 per cent YoY in its overseas segment. Full Article Apparel/Garments
re Hong Kong’s Epic Group announces major leadership reshuffle By www.fibre2fashion.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 17:03:01 GMT Epic Group has restructured its leadership team, appointing Sunil Daryanani and Dinesh Virwani as executive vice chairmen, and Suraj Kalra as CEO to drive its strategic objectives. Led by founder Ranjan Mahtani, the committee also includes leaders in finance, HR, procurement, and digitalisation, aiming to strengthen Epic’s global presence, improve operations, and enhance stakeholder value. Full Article Apparel/Garments
re Where knowledge management meets AI: Solutions, approaches, and considerations By www.kmworld.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 03:05:00 EST KM experts joined KMWorld's latest webinar, Enabling Knowledge-Based AI, to examine key components and best practices for adopting AI-enabled approaches that evolve, extend, and power knowledge systems. Full Article
re AI-Powered Customer Service: Use-Cases and Real-World Examples By www.kmworld.com Published On :: Fri, 04 Oct 2019 12:00:00 EST Cognitive/AI technologies for customer engagement are white hot. No wonder professionals, who had removed AI from their resumes, are scrambling to add it back in! Full Article
re From ?Searching? to ?Finding?: How AI is Unlocking the Power of Unstructured Data By www.kmworld.com Published On :: Fri, 04 Oct 2019 12:00:00 EST Unstructured data, which comprises almost 80% of any enterprise's data, holds untapped value when it comes to addressing challenges and embracing opportunities. Full Article
re 3 Things to Know Before Starting Your AI Journey By www.kmworld.com Published On :: Fri, 04 Oct 2019 12:00:00 EST AI-Powered Search Engines?referred to as "Insight Engines" by Gartner and "Cognitive Search" by Forrester?can deliver significant value to organizations these days, provided certain risks are avoided. Full Article
re Understand. Anticipate. Improve. How Cognitive Computing Is Revolutionizing Knowledge Management By www.kmworld.com Published On :: Fri, 04 Oct 2019 12:00:00 EST For decades, organizations have tried to unlock the collective knowledge contained within their people and systems. And the challenge is getting harder, since every year, massive amounts of additional information are created for people to share. We've reached a point at which individuals are unable consume, understand, or even find half the information that is available to them. Full Article
re Worker Injured by Falling Pipe Should Have Been Granted Summary Judgment By ww3.workcompcentral.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 00:00:00 -0800 A New York appellate court ruled that a worker injured in an accident caused by a falling pipe should have been granted summary judgment on his Labor Law claim. Case: Jara-Salazar… Full Article
re Supreme Court Upholds Finding of Compensability for Worker's Knee Injury By ww3.workcompcentral.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 00:00:00 -0800 West Virginia’s Supreme Court upheld a finding of compensability for a worker with a knee injury. Case: P&G Tabler Station v. Hiett, No. 23-703, 10/30/2024, published. Facts: David Hiett worked for P&G Tabler… Full Article
re Injured Worker Not Entitled to Underinsured Motorist Coverage By ww3.workcompcentral.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 00:00:00 -0800 The Missouri Court of Appeals upheld a determination that a worker was not entitled to underinsured motorist benefits for an on-the-job injury caused by an inattentive driver. Case: Preston v. Progressive… Full Article
re WCRI Webinar to Review Study of Attorney Impact By ww3.workcompcentral.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 00:00:00 -0800 The Workers Compensation Research Institute is holding a webinar on Nov. 21 to discuss findings from a recent study of the impact of attorney representation on claim payments. Bogdan Sayvch The… Full Article
re Governor Appoints Heather Jordan WCA Director By ww3.workcompcentral.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 00:00:00 -0800 New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham appointed Heather Jordan as the new director of the Workers' Compensation Administration, effective immediately. Heather Jordan Jordan succeeds Robert Doucette, who will serve as cabinet… Full Article
re Bien-Être Simple’s Vibrant Branding and Web Design by Impulso By abduzeedo.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 15:09:06 +0000 Bien-Être Simple’s Vibrant Branding and Web Design by Impulso abduzeedo1113—24 Explore Bien-Être Simple’s engaging branding and web design by Studio Impulso, blending accessibility and modern aesthetics. Bien-Être Simple (BÊS) has long been a trusted source for accessible content on mental and physical health. Recently, the media platform underwent a comprehensive rebrand led by Studio Impulso, transforming its digital presence with a vibrant, fresh, and friendly identity. The result is a visual language that breaks down barriers, ensuring health topics remain approachable and free from stigma. Studio Impulso’s primary goal was to redefine how Bien-Être Simple communicates with its audience. The design had to feel like a safe, welcoming space, reflecting the platform’s mission of inclusivity. Every aspect, from the color palette to the web layout, was chosen to convey warmth and accessibility. The new branding signals that tough conversations about health can be approached with compassion and openness. Color Palette: A Mix of Vibrancy and Comfort Color plays a crucial role in this rebrand. The selected hues are bright yet calming, striking a balance between energy and comfort. Shades of blue instill a sense of trust and calm, while pops of green and yellow bring a playful edge, representing hope and vitality. This thoughtful combination ensures the platform is both visually engaging and emotionally resonant, making health topics feel less intimidating. Typography in the new design reflects a clean and modern sensibility. Sans-serif fonts dominate, chosen for their readability across screens. Paired with strategic use of bold and light weights, the text hierarchy is clear, making it easy for users to navigate the content. The font choices align with the platform’s mission: to deliver crucial information in the most digestible way possible. A User-Centric Web Experience The redesigned website, crafted by Studio Impulso, prioritizes user experience. Clean lines, intuitive navigation, and ample white space ensure that visitors can easily access articles and resources. The layout is responsive, adapting beautifully to various devices, a necessity for a platform dedicated to being universally accessible. Smooth transitions and interactive elements guide the user without feeling overwhelming. The new visual identity and web design make Bien-Être Simple a standout in the health and wellness space. It’s a masterclass in how design can drive inclusivity and encourage meaningful engagement. Studio Impulso has successfully balanced creativity with clarity, delivering a look that embodies Bien-Être Simple’s core values. For more details on this inspiring project, visit Studio Impulso’s portfolio at http://studioimpulso.com. Branding and web design artifacts Credits Art direction : @impulso.studio Website : www.studioimpulso.com Instagram : @impulso.studio Full Article
re Now you can own this rare collector’s edition book set of wildlife fine art photography By www.diyphotography.net Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 11:42:53 +0000 Wildlife photography fans now have a unique opportunity to own a true collector’s piece from renowned wildlife photographer David Lloyd. For the first time, David... The post Now you can own this rare collector’s edition book set of wildlife fine art photography appeared first on DIY Photography. Full Article news Photography Book wildlife photography
re We are giving away over $1,500 in filmmaking gear By www.diyphotography.net Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 12:56:20 +0000 We have teamed up with three amazing brands, Accsoon, Saramonic, and SmallRig, to give a lucky winner a break into the filmmaking world. A complete... The post We are giving away over $1,500 in filmmaking gear appeared first on DIY Photography. Full Article news giveaway
re The Mambapod is a compact tripod you can mount anywhere By www.diyphotography.net Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 14:26:18 +0000 Mini tripods have become increasingly popular over the last few years. They’ve become a versatile and invaluable part of many creators’ kit bags. There are... The post The Mambapod is a compact tripod you can mount anywhere appeared first on DIY Photography. Full Article Gear Gear Announcement kickstarter tripod
re From burnout to breakthrough: Five key steps to breaking the creative block By www.diyphotography.net Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 15:52:08 +0000 For many of us creative folks, periods of low inspiration and creative block are inevitable. Max Kent also felt disconnected from his craft, but found... The post From burnout to breakthrough: Five key steps to breaking the creative block appeared first on DIY Photography. Full Article Inspiration inspiration
re Reversed Logotype By jontangerine.com Published On :: Mon, 24 May 2010 07:48:51 PDT This image shows a particular optical illusion that confronts us every day. Notice the difference between the black text on a white background and the reverse. With reversed type — light text on a darker background — the strokes seem bolder. Black text on white is very familiar, so we can be forgiven for thinking it correctly proportioned. For familiarity’s sake we can say it is, but there are two effects happening here: The white background bleeds over the black, making the strokes seem thinner. With reversed type the opposite is true: The white strokes bleed over the black, making it seem bolder. Punched, backlit letters on a sign outside the Nu Hotel, Brooklyn. One of the most obvious examples of this is with signs where the letters are punched into the surround then lit from inside. In his article, Designing the ultimate wayfinding typeface, Ralph Herrmann used his own Legibility Text Tool to simulate this effect for road and navigational signs. One might say that characters are only correctly proportioned with low-contrast. Although objective reality hails that as true, it isn’t a good reason to always set type with low contrast. Type designers have invariably designed around optical illusions and the constraints of different media for us. Low-contrast text can also create legibility and accessibility problems. Fortunately, kind folks like Gez Lemon have provided us with simple tools to check. As fascinating as optical illusions are — the disturbing, impossible art of Escher comes to mind — we can design around reversed body type. On the Web, increasing tracking and leading are as simple as increasing the mis-named letter-spacing and line-height in CSS. However, decreasing font weight is a thornier problem. Yes, we will be able to use @font-face to select a variant with a lighter weight, but the core web fonts offer us no options, and there are only a few limited choices with system fonts like Helvetica Neue. Reversing a logotype For logotype there are plenty of options, but it makes me slightly uncomfortable to consider switching to a lighter font for reversed type logos. The typeface itself is not the logotype; the variant is, so switching font could be tricky. Ironically, I’d have to be very sure that that was no perceivable difference using a lighter weight font. Also, with display faces, there’s often not a lighter weight available — a problem I came across designing the Analog logo. The original Analog logo seen here is an adapted version of Fenway Park by Jason Walcott (Jukebox Type). The logotype worked well when testing it in black on white. However, I wanted a reversed version, too. That’s when I noticed the impact of the optical illusion: (Reversed without any adjustment.) It looked bloated! Objective reality be damned; it simply wouldn’t do. After a few minutes contemplating the carnage of adjusting every control point by hand, I remembered something; eureka! (Reversed then punched.) Punching the paths through a background image in Fireworks CS4 removed the illusion. (Select both the path and the background then using Modify > Combine Paths > Punch.) Is this a bug? I don’t know, but if it is, it’s a useful one for a change! Modify > Combine Paths > Punch in Fireworks CS4. N.B. I confess I haven’t tested this in any other Adobe products, but perhaps you will be so bold? (’scuse the pun. :) Matthew Kump mentions an Illustrator alternative in the comments. I grinned. I was happy. All was well with the world again. Lovely! Now I could go right ahead and think about colour and I wouldn’t be far from done. This is how it emerged: A final note on logotype design & illusions Before we even got to actual type for the Analog logo, we first had to distill what it would convey. In our case, Alan took us through a process to define the brand values and vision. What emerged were keywords and concepts that fed into the final design. The choice of type, colour, and setting were children of that process. Style is the offspring of meaning. I always work in greyscale for the first iterations of a new logo for a few simple reasons: The form has to work independently of colour — think printing in greyscale or having the logo viewed by people with a colour-impairment. It allows for quick testing of various sizes — small, high contrast versions will emphasise rendering and legibility issues at screen resolutions, especially along curves. I like black and white. :) I realise that in this day and age the vast majority of logos need to perform primarily on the Web. However, call me old-fashioned, but I still think that they should work in black and white, too. Brands and display faces emerged with consumer culture during the 19th Century. Logotypes were displayed prominently in high streets, advertising hoardings, and on sign boards. In many instances the message would be in black and white. They were designed to be legible from a distance, at a glance, and to be instantly recognisable. Even with colour, contrast was important. The same is true for the Web today; only the context has changed, and the popularity of logomarks and icons. We should always test any logo at low resolutions and sizes, and the brand must still have good contrast (regardless of WCAG 2.0) to be optimal. A combination of colour and form works wonders, but in a world of a million colours where only a handful are named in common parlance, having the right form still seems a smarter choice than trying to own a palette or colour. A final word This article was prompted by a happy accident followed by a bit of reading. There are many references to optical illusions in design and typography books. The example image at the start of this article was inspired by one found in the excellent Stop Stealing Sheep and Find Out How Type Works by Erik Spiekermann and E.M. Ginger. There’s also plenty of online material about optical or visual illusions you can dive into. There’s also more on . Oh, and don’t forget the work of M. C. Escher! Human eyes are amazing. In two sets of watery bags we get a wide-angle lens with incredibly sharp focus and ridiculous depth of field. Apparently our brain is even clever enough to compensate for the lag in the signal getting from retina to cortex. I know next to nothing about ocular science. Spending a morning reading and thinking about optical illusions, and contemplating my own view here in the garden office is pretty awe-inspiring. If only my photographs were as good as my eyes, illusions or no. Full Article
re 2010 in Retrospect By jontangerine.com Published On :: Wed, 29 Dec 2010 08:30:13 PST Analog, Mapalong, more tries at trans-Atlantic sleep, Cuba, Fontdeck, and my youngest son entering school; it all happened in the last year. At the end of 2007, I wrote up the year very differently. After skipping a couple of years, this is a different wrap-up. To tell the truth I put this together for me, being the very worst of diarists. It meant searching through calendars, Aperture, and elsewhere. I hope it prompts me to keep a better diary. I give you: 2010 in pictures and words: January Albany Green, Bristol. Analog.coop is still fresh after launching in December. We’re still a bit blown away by the response but decide not to do client work, but to make Mapalong instead. We jump through all kinds of hoops trying to make it happen, but ultimately it comes down to our friend and colleague, Chris Shiflett. He gets us going. It snows a lot in Bristol. The snow turns to ice. I slip around, occasionally grumpy, but mostly grinning like an idiot. February Morón, Cuba. My family and I go to Cuba on our first ever all inclusive ‘package’ holiday. It’s a wonderful escape from winter, tempered by surreptitious trips out of the surreal, tourist-only island, to the other Cuba with an unofficial local guide. My boys love the jacuzzi, and sneaking into the gym. Z shoots his first arrow. Just after we return, he turns 4 years old. Now, he wants to go back. March DUMBO from the men’s loo at 10 Jay St. — home of Analog NY in Studio 612a. I visit Chris in Brooklyn to work on Mapalong. We play football. Well, Chris plays. I cripple myself, and limp around a lot. At the same time I meet the irrepressible, Cameron Koczon. We all get drunk on good beer at Beer Table. Life is good. Cameron comes up with the Brooklyn Beta name. It starts to move from idea to action. Just before Brooklyn, a discussion about First Things First opens during a talk at BathCamp. The follow-ups become passionate with posts like this straw man argument and a vociferous rejoinder. April and May In the garden, at home. The sun comes out. The garden becomes the new studio. Alan Colville and Jon Gibbins stop by as we work on Mapalong. The hunt starts for a co-working space in Bristol. I write pieces about self-promotion and reversed type. Worn out from the sudden burst, I go quiet again. June Mild Bunch HQ! We find a place for our Bristol co-working studio studio. Mild Bunch HQ is born! I design desks for the first time. Our first co-workers are Adam Robertson, Kester Limb, Eugene Getov, and Ben Coleman. Chris and I meet again across the Atlantic; he makes a flying visit to Bristol. The gentle pressure mounts on fellow Analogger, Jon Gibbins to come to Bristol, too. Something special begins. Beer Fridays have started. Fontdeck! Fontdeck comes out of private beta! Almost 17 months after Rich Rutter and I talked about a web fonts service in Brighton for the first time, the site was live thanks to the hard work of Clearleft and OmniTI. Now it features thousands of fonts prepared for the Web, and many of the best type designers and foundries in the world. The Ulster Festival programme. For the first time in around 15 years I visit Belfast. At the invitation of the Standardistas, Chris and Nik, Elliot Stocks and I talk typography at the Ulster Festival of Art and Design. We’re working on the Brooklyn Beta branding, so talk about that with a bit of neuroscience thrown in as food for thought. Belfast truly is a wonderful place with fantastic people. It made it hard to miss Build for the second time later in the year. June was busier than it felt. :) July Mild Bunch summer; Pieminister, Ginger beer, and Milk Stout. Summer arrived in earnest. X has a blast at his school sports day. I do, too. Mild Bunch HQ is liberally dosed with shared lunches from Herbert’s bakery and Licata’s deli, and beers on balmy evenings outside The Canteen with friends. That’s all the Mild Bunch is, a group of friends with a name that made us laugh; everyone of friendly disposition is welcome! August 8Faces and .Net magazine. 8 Faces number 1 is published and sells out in a couple of hours. I was lucky enough to be interviewed, and to sweat over trying to narrow my choices. The .Net interview was me answering a few questions thrown my way from folks on Twitter. Great fun. Elliot, Samantha Cliffe, and I had spent a great day wandering around Montpelier taking pictures in the sun earlier in the year. One of her portraits of me appeared in both magazines. Later that month, I write about Web Fonts, Dingbats, Icons, and Unicode. It’s only my fourth post of the year. Birthday cake made by my wife, Lowri. Sometimes, some things strip me of words. Thank you. September East River Sunrise from 20 stories up at the home of Jessi and Creighton of Workshop. The whole of Analog heads to Brooklyn for a Mapalong hack week with the Fictive Kin guys. We start to show it to friends and Brooklyn studio mates like Tina (Swiss Miss) who help us heaps. It’s a frantic week. I get to spend a bit of time with my Analog friend Andrei Zmievski who I haven’t seen in the flesh since 2009. Everyone works and plays hard, and we stay in some fantastic places thanks to Cameron and AirBnB. Cameron Koczon (front), Larry Legend (middle) and Jon Gibbins (far back with funky glove) in Studio 612a during hack week. Just before I head to NY, Z starts big school. He looks too small to start. He’s 4. How did time pass so fast? I’m still wondering that after I get back. October Brooklyn Beta poster. The whole of Analog, the Mild Bunch HQ and many others from Bristol, and as far away as Australia and India, head to New York for Brooklyn Beta! A poster whipped together my me, printed in a rush by Rik at Ripe, and transported to NY by Adam Robertson, is given as one of the souvenirs to everyone who comes. Meanwhile, Jon Gibbins works frantically to get Mapalong ready to give BB an early glimpse of what we’re up to. Two thousand people reserve their usernames before we even go to private beta! Brooklyn Beta! Simon Collison giving his Analytical Design workshop on day 1. Chris and Cameron work tirelessly. Many, many fine people lend a hand. We add some last minute touches to the site, like listing all the crew and attendees as well as the speakers. Cameron shows off Gimme Bar with an hilarious voice-over from Bedrich Rios. Alan narrates Mapalong and we introduce our mapping app to our peers and friends! Day 2: Chris does technical fixes, Cameron tells jokes, and Cameron Moll waits with great poise for his talk to start. It’s something we hoped, but never expected: Brooklyn Beta goes down as one of the best conferences ever in the eyes of veteran conference speakers and attendees. ‘Are you sure you’ve not done this before?’ I hear Jonathan Hoefler of Hoefler Frere-Jones ask Cameron. It makes me smile. The fact one of our sponsors asked this question in admiration of Chris and Cameron’s work meant a lot to me. I was proud of them, and grateful to everyone who helped it be something truly friendly, open, smart, and special. Aftermath: Cameron (blury in action centre left) regales us at Mission Delores; Pat Lauke (left), Lisa Herod (back centre right), Nicholas Sloan (right). The BB Flickr group has a lot of pictures and links to blog posts. Brooklyn Beta will return again in 2011! November Legoland, Windsor. X turns 7. I realise he really isn’t such a toddler anymore. It took me a while even though he amazes me constantly with his vocabulary and eloquence. His birthday party ensues with a trip to Legoland on the last weekend of the season to watch fireworks and get into trouble. Fun times finding Yoda and the rest of the Star Wars posse battling each other below the Space Shuttle exhibit. 8 Faces 8 Faces number two is published after being announced at Build. Much of the month was spent juggling Mapalong work, and having a great time typesetting the selections spreads for each of the eight faces chosen by the interviewees. That, and worrying with Elliot how it might print with litho. It all turned out OK. I think. The .Net Awards take place in London. Christened the ‘nutmeg’ awards thanks to iPhone auto-correction, I’m one of millions of judges. We use it as an excuse for a party. At the end of the month, lots of the Mild Bunch go to see Caribou at The Thekla. Good times. December Mapalong! Mapalong goes into private beta! We start inviting many of the Brooklyn Beta folks, and others who’ve reserved their usernames. Lots of placemarks get added. Lots of feedback comes our way. Bug hunting starts. Next design steps start. We push frequently and add people as we go. Big things are planned for the new year! Clove heart from Lowri. The Mild Bunch Christmas do goes off with a bang thanks to Adam Robertson making sure it happened. Folks come from far and wide for a great party in The Big Chill Bar in Bristol. Lowri sneaks shots of Sambuca for the girls onto my tab, and we drink all the Innis and Gunn they have. A few parties later, and the year draws to a close with a very traditional family Christmas in our house. Wood fires, music, the Christmas tree, and two small boys doing what kids do at Christmas. It’s just about perfect; A tonic to the background strife of the month, with a personal tragedy for me, and illness in my close family. Everything worked out OK. Steam-powered fairground rides, dressing up as dinosaurs, and detox follows with a bit of reflection. New Year’s Eve probably means staying in. Babysitters are like gold dust, but I just found we have one for tonight, so it looks like our celebration is coming early! 2011 In the new year, I’ll be mostly trying to do the best I can for my family, my colleagues, and myself. The only goals I have are to help my children be everything they can be, make Mapalong everything we wish it to be, and feel that calm, quiet sense of peace in the evening that only comes from a day well done. Other than that I’ll keep my mind open to serendipity. (…and do something about some bits of my site and the typesetting that’s bugging me after writing this. :) If you made it this far, thank you, and here’s to you and yours in 2011; may the best of your past be the worst of your future! Full Article
re Web Design as Narrative Architecture By jontangerine.com Published On :: Wed, 30 Mar 2011 05:48:21 PDT Stories are everywhere. When they don’t exist we make up the narrative — we join the dots. We make cognitive leaps and fill in the bits of a story that are implied or missing. The same goes for websites. We make quick judgements based on a glimpse. Then we delve deeper. The narrative unfolds, or we create one as we browse. Mark Bernstein penned Beyond Usability and Design: The Narrative Web for A List Apart in 2001. He wrote, ‘the reader’s journey through our site is a narrative experience’. I agreed wholeheartedly: Websites are narrative spaces where stories can be enacted, or emerge. Henry Jenkins, Director of Comparative Media Studies, and Professor of Literature at MIT, wrote Game Design as Narrative Architecture. He suggested we think of game designers, ‘less as storytellers than as narrative architects’. I agree, and I think web designers are narrative architects, too. (Along with all the multitude of other roles we assume.) Much of what Henry Jenkins wrote applies to modern web design. In particular, he describes two kinds of narratives in game design that are relevant to us: Enacted narratives are those where: […] the story itself may be structured around the character’s movement through space and the features of the environment may retard or accelerate that plot trajectory. Sites like Amazon, New Adventures, or your portfolio are enacted narrative spaces: Shops or service brochures that want the audience to move through the site towards a specific set of actions like buying something or initiating contact. Emergent narratives are those where: […] spaces are designed to be rich with narrative potential, enabling the story-constructing activity of players. Sites like Flickr, Twitter, or Dribbble are emergent narrative spaces: Web applications that encourage their audience use the tools at their disposal to tell their own story. The audience defines how they want to use the narrative space, often with surprising results. We often build both kinds of narrative spaces. Right now, my friends and I at Analog are working on Mapalong, a new maps-based app that’s just launched into private beta. At its heart Mapalong is about telling our stories. It’s one big map with a set of tools to view the world, add places, share them, and see the places others share. The aim is to help people tell their stories. We want to use three ideas to help you do that: Space (recording places, and annotating them), data (importing stuff we create elsewhere), and time (plotting our journeys, and recording all the places, people, and memories along the way). We know that people will find novel uses for the tools in Mapalong. In fact, we want them to because it will help us refine and build better tools. We work in an agile way because that’s the only way to design an emerging narrative space. Without realising it we’ve become architects of a narrative space, and you probably are, too. Many projects like shops or brochure sites have fixed costs and objectives. They want to guide the audience to a specific set of actions. The site needs to be an enacted narrative space. Ideally, designers would observe behaviour and iterate. Failing that, a healthy dose of empathy can serve. Every site seeks to teach, educate, or inform. So, a bit of knowledge about people’s learning styles can be useful. I once did a course in one to one and small group training with the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development. It introduced me to Peter Honey and Alan Mumford’s model which describes four different learning styles that are useful for us to know. I paraphrase: Activists like learning as they go; getting stuck in and working it out. They enjoy the here and now, and are happy to be dominated by immediate experiences. They are open-minded, not sceptical, and this tends to make them enthusiastic about anything new. Reflectors like being guided with time to take it all in and perhaps return later. They like to stand back to ponder experiences and observe them from many different perspectives. They collect data, both first hand and from others, and prefer to think about it thoroughly before coming to a conclusion. Theorists to understand and make logical sense of things before they leap in. They think problems through in a vertical, step-by-step logical way. They assimilate disparate facts into coherent theories. Pragmatists like practical applications of ideas, experiments, and results. They like trying out ideas, theories and techniques to see if they work in practice. They positively search out new ideas and take the first opportunity to experiment with applications. Usually people share two or more of these qualities. The weight of each can vary depending on the context. So how might learning styles manifest themselves in web browsing behaviour? Activists like to explore, learn as they go, and wander the site working it out. They need good in-context navigation to keep exploring. For example, signposts to related information are optimal for activists. They can just keep going, and going, and exploring until sated. Reflectors are patient and thoughtful. They like to ponder, read, reflect, then decide. Guided tours to orientate them in emergent sites can be a great help. Saving shopping baskets for later, and remembering sessions in enacted sites can also help them. Theorists want logic. Documentation. An understanding of what the site is, and what they might get from it. Clear, detailed information helps a theorist, whatever the space they’re in. Pragmatists get stuck in like activists, but evaluate quickly, and test their assumptions. They are quick, and can be helped by uncluttered concise information, and contextual, logical tools. An understanding of interactive narrative types and a bit of knowledge about learning styles can be useful concepts for us to bear in mind. I also think they warrant inclusion as part of an articulate designer’s language of web design. If Henry Jenkins is right about games designers, I think he could also be right about web designers: we are narrative architects, designing spaces where stories are told. The original version of this article first appeared as ‘Jack A Nory’ alongside other, infinitely more excellent articles, in the New Adventures paper of January 2011. It is reproduced with the kind permission of the irrepressible Simon Collison. For a short time, the paper is still available as a PDF! —∞— Full Article
re We, Who Are Web Designers By jontangerine.com Published On :: Mon, 19 Sep 2011 09:06:33 PDT In 2003, my wife Lowri and I went to a christening party. We were friends of the hosts but we knew almost no-one else there. Sitting next to me was a thirty-something woman and her husband, both dressed in the corporate ‘smart casual’ uniform: Jersey, knitwear, and ready-faded jeans for her, formal shoes and tucked-in formal shirt for him (plus the jeans of course; that’s the casual bit). Both appeared polite, neutral, and neat in every respect. I smiled and said hello, and asked how they knew our hosts. The conversation stalled pretty quickly the way all conversations will when only one participant is engaged. I persevered, asked about their children who they mentioned, trying to be a good friend to our hosts by being friendly to other guests. It must have prompted her to reciprocate. With reluctant interest she asked the default question: ‘What do you do?’ I paused, uncertain for a second. ‘I’m a web designer’ I managed after a bit of nervous confusion at what exactly it was that I did. Her face managed to drop even as she smiled condescendingly. ‘Oh. White backgrounds!’ she replied with a mixture of scorn and delight. I paused. ‘Much of the time’, I nodded with an attempt at a self-deprecating smile, trying to maintain the camaraderie of the occasion. ‘What do you do?’ I asked, curious to see where her dismissal was coming from. ‘I’m the creative director for … agency’ she said smugly, overbearingly confident in the knowledge that she had a trump card, and had played it. The conversation was over. I’d like to say her reaction didn’t matter to me, but it did. It stung to be regarded so disdainfully by someone who I would naturally have considered a colleague. I thought to try and explain. To mention how I started in print, too. To find out why she had such little respect for web design, but that was me wanting to be understood. I already knew why. Anything I said would sound defensive. She may have been rude, but at least she was honest. I am a web designer. I neither concentrate on the party venue, food, music, guest list, or entertainment, but on it all. On the feeling people enter with and walk away remembering. That’s my job. It’s probably yours too. I’m self-actualised, without the stamp of approval from any guild, curriculum authority, or academic institution. I’m web taught. Colleague taught. Empirically taught. Tempered by over fifteen years of failed experiments on late nights with misbehaving browsers. I learnt how to create venues because none existed. I learnt what music to play for the people I wanted at the event, and how to keep them entertained when they arrived. I empathised, failed, re-empathised, and did it again. I make sites that work. That’s my certificate. That’s my validation. I try, just like you, to imbue my practice with an abiding sense of responsibility for the universality of the Web as Tim Berners-Lee described it. After all, it’s that very universality that’s allowed our profession and the Web to thrive. From the founding of the W3C in 1994, to Mosaic shipping with <img> tag support in 1993, to the Web Standards Project in 1998, and the CSS Zen Garden in 2003, those who care have been instrumental in shaping the Web. Web designers included. In more recent times I look to the web type revolution, driven and curated by both web designers, developers, and the typography community. Again, we’re teaching ourselves. The venues are open to all, and getting more amazing by the day. Apart from the sites we’ve built, all the best peripheral resources that support our work are made by us. We’ve contributed vast amounts of code to our collective toolkit. We’ve created inspirational conferences like Brooklyn Beta, New Adventures, Web Directions, Build, An Event Apart, dConstruct, and Webstock. As a group, we’ve produced, written-for, and supported forward-thinking magazines like A List Apart, 8 Faces, Smashing Mag, and The Manual. We’ve written the books that distill our knowledge either independently or with publishers from our own community like Five Simple Steps and A Book Apart. We’ve created services and tools like jQuery, Fontdeck, Typekit, Hashgrid, Teuxdeux, and Firebug. That’s just a sample. There’s so many I haven’t mentioned. We did these things. What an extraordinary industry. I know I flushed with anger and embarrassment that day at the christening party. Afterwards, I started to look a little deeper into what I do. I started to ask what exactly it means to be a web designer. I started to realise how extraordinary our community is. How extraordinary this profession is that we’ve created. How good the work is that we do. How delightful it is when it does work; for audiences, clients, and us. How fantastic it is that I help build the Web. Long may that feeling last. May it never go away. There’s so much still to learn, create, and make. This is my our party. Hi, I’m Jon; my friends and I are making Mapalong, and I’m a web designer. Full Article
re I’ve shot at this location a few times but for some reason... By blog.verneho.com Published On :: Sun, 18 Dec 2016 12:03:12 -0500 I’ve shot at this location a few times but for some reason I’ve never seen it from the other side. Literal proof that shooting with other creatives gives you new perspective. ???? (at Toronto, Ontario) Full Article
re BIG NEWS: My custom Lightroom presets are now available and 50%... By blog.verneho.com Published On :: Mon, 19 Dec 2016 08:03:45 -0500 BIG NEWS: My custom Lightroom presets are now available and 50% off for a limited time with discount code HOLIDAY50. Link in profile! This collection includes two styles (Everyday and Clean) that I use to edit every shot on this feed. I can’t wait to see what you all do with them! Stay tuned to my upcoming tutorials on how to put the presets to good use. ???? (at Toronto, Ontario) Full Article
re Thanks for all the positive support and reception to my... By blog.verneho.com Published On :: Mon, 19 Dec 2016 17:09:05 -0500 Thanks for all the positive support and reception to my Lightroom presets so far, especially to those who pulled the trigger and became my first customers! I’d love to hear your feedback once you try them out! . Still time to enter the giveaway or to take advantage of the 50% sale! See my last post for full details and the link in my profile. ❤️ (at Toronto, Ontario) Full Article
re Bricks are better black. ◾️ (at Toronto, Ontario) By blog.verneho.com Published On :: Tue, 20 Dec 2016 17:02:40 -0500 Bricks are better black. ◾️ (at Toronto, Ontario) Full Article
re Lights, camera, action. ???? — A few more days left to get 50% off... By blog.verneho.com Published On :: Wed, 21 Dec 2016 08:03:46 -0500 Lights, camera, action. ???? — A few more days left to get 50% off my custom Lightroom presets! Link in profile. (at Toronto, Ontario) Full Article
re And while we’re in the process of missing European... By blog.verneho.com Published On :: Thu, 22 Dec 2016 17:26:00 -0500 And while we’re in the process of missing European architecture… ???? — 4 more days left to catch my Lightroom presets for 50% off! ⌛️ (at Copenhagen, Denmark) Full Article
re Preset (Everyday) + transform + exposure + graduated filter +... By blog.verneho.com Published On :: Sat, 24 Dec 2016 12:01:10 -0500 Preset (Everyday) + transform + exposure + graduated filter + radial filter. If shots like this take more than 2 minutes to edit, it’s probably not worth editing. ⏱ — Boxing Day will be the last day to get my Lightroom presets discounted, which leaves you only 3 more days! Get on it! ???? (at Toronto, Ontario) Full Article
re Trying to straighten all the lines on this shot is a sure fire... By blog.verneho.com Published On :: Mon, 26 Dec 2016 17:20:04 -0500 Trying to straighten all the lines on this shot is a sure fire way to go blind. ???? (at London, United Kingdom) Full Article
re I just realized that I can export my entire story all at once... By blog.verneho.com Published On :: Tue, 27 Dec 2016 17:02:17 -0500 I just realized that I can export my entire story all at once now, which means uploading my tutorials to my Facebook page will be a million times easier (it was tedious to stitch all the individual clips together before). ???? . Related: I posted a story this morning deconstructing the edit on yesterday’s shot. . Also related: I uploaded the 3 tutorials from my November feature on @thecreatorclass to my Facebook page this morning too. More to come! (at London, United Kingdom) Full Article
re I took this shot about a year ago when I had a very different... By blog.verneho.com Published On :: Wed, 28 Dec 2016 08:09:35 -0500 I took this shot about a year ago when I had a very different editing style. A ton of faded blacks and, believe it or not, a subtle green tint (unknowingly inherited from the preset I was using at the time). Re-editing it now, I’m happy with the way my style has evolved, though I can already sense that I’m on the brink of evolving it again. And I’m okay with that. ???? (at London, United Kingdom) Full Article
re A lot to look forward to in 2017. How did 2016 treat you: ???? or... By blog.verneho.com Published On :: Sat, 31 Dec 2016 12:24:31 -0500 A lot to look forward to in 2017. How did 2016 treat you: ???? or ????? (at San Francisco, California) Full Article
re A Guide to UX Competitors’ Analysis for User Research By webdesignernews.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 12:35:00 +0000 UX competitor analysis is a valuable user research method that focuses on understanding your products’ competitors, helping you better understand your market and goals. Idea Theorem™ has worked with many clients that required a UX competitor analysis to get actionable insights about their competitors’ strengths, weaknesses, and mistakes to avoid and know what they are doing right. Full Article UX
re 20+ Artistic Effect Lightroom Presets for Creative Photographers By webdesignernews.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 12:39:54 +0000 The right photo effect can transform an ordinary image into a work of art. Adjustments to lighting, color balance, and texture help you create the perfect mood for your project. Full Article Resources
re Tell Your iPhone to Forget a Wireless Network By www.macinstruct.com Published On :: Wed, 10 Apr 2013 13:08:54 +0000 When you connect an iPhone to a wi-fi network, the iPhone remembers that network and will automatically attempt to connect to it in the future. This is a great feature for wi-fi networks you trust and use frequently. But mistakes happen. If you connect to the wrong network at a coffee shop, your iPhone will automatically attempt to join that network every time you visit the coffee shop in the future. And if the password for a known network changes, your iPhone might have trouble connecting to it. What's the solution? Telling your iPhone to forget the wi-fi network. Forgetting a network will remove the network's password and prevent your iPhone from joining it automatically in the future. Here's how to tell your iPhone to forget a wireless network: From the home screen, tap Settings. Tap Wi-Fi. The window shown below appears. Locate the wireless network you want the iPhone to forget, and then tap the blue arrow next to the network name. The window shown below appears. Tap Forget this Network. The iPhone will forget the wireless network. You have successfully told your iPhone to forget the wi-fi network. The iPhone will not attempt to connect to the network in the future. And if the network required a password, that password has been forgotten. Related Articles How to Connect an iPhone to a Wi-Fi Network Make Your iPhone Ask to Join Wi-Fi Networks Meet Your Macinstructor Matt Cone, the author of Master Your Mac, has been a Mac user for over 20 years. A former ghost writer for some of Apple's most notable instructors, Cone founded Macinstruct in 1999, a site with OS X tutorials that boasts hundreds of thousands of unique visitors per month. You can email him at: matt@macinstruct.com. Full Article