Jun 16

Search Engine Optimisation is a method of reverse engineering a webpage - its contents and designs - so as to make it search engine friendly. SEO involves many steps, but one of the crucial methods employed is Link Building. The rule of thumb is, larger the number of links pointing to a website, the more is its relevance in front of a search engine bot.

SEO is crucial for Online Marketing initiatives. If you have an online business, the first step is to search engine optimize the website. Without getting visibility in search engine results, no online business stands to succeed in the longer run.

Jun 12

Quotes are used to emphasize excerpts of text. Since users almost never read but scan we need to provide them with some focus anchors to fix their attention to the most important parts of our articles. Furthermore, quotes are always used for testimonials and sometimes for blog comments. They can be styled using graphics, CSS and a little bit of JavaScript. Sometimes, creative dynamic solutions can be applied as well.

This post presents creative examples and best practices for design of pull quotes. We’ve tried to identify some common solutions and interesting approaches you may want to use or develop further in your projects.

You may also want to take a look at the posts

Aren’t all these quotes the same?

No. First of all: quote ≠ block quote ≠ pull quote. Pull quotes are short excerpts from the presented text. They are used to pull a text passage out of the reader’s flow and give it a more dominant position in the post or the article.

Screenshot Pullquote
Pull quote included into an article. The pulled out passage is mentioned few blocks further.

Just like a pull quote blockquote (actually block quotations) are also set off from the main text as a distinct paragraph or block. However, they refer to some external citation which isn’t already mentioned in the article. Block quotations are usually placed within the reader’s flow.

Finally, “normal” quotes cite the content found in some other sources and are included to support the content rather than dominate over it.

Blockquote vs. Q vs. Cite

According to HTML specifications, there are three elements which are supposed to semantically mark up quotations, namely <blockquote>, <q> and <cite>. Although all intended to markup quotes, they should be used in different contexts. So when should you use what? HTML Dog provides a nice and compact overview of these elements:

<blockquote>

blockquote is a large quotation. The content of a blockquote
element must include block-level elements such as headings, lists, paragraphs
or div’s. This element can also have an optional attribute cite
that specifies the location (in the form of a URI) where the quote has come from. Example:

<blockquote cite=”http://www.htmldog.com/reference/htmltags/blockquote/”>

   <p>A large quotation. The content of a blockquote element must include block-level elements such as headings, lists, paragraphs or div’s.</p>
   <p>cite can be used to specify the location (in the form of a URI) where the quote has come from.</p>

</blockquote>

<q>

q is a small quotation. The content of this element is an in-line quote. Modern browsers know how to interpret <q> which is why you can style quotations using this HTML-elements via CSS. Example:

<p>Bob said <q>sexy pyjamas</q> but Chris said <q>a kimono</q></p>

Although <q> is almost never used, it has some useful properties. For instance, you can specify the appearance of quotes within the <q>-element via CSS. That’s reasonable as different languages use different quotation marks for the same purpose. For instance, these ones:

Q {}
Q { quotes: '»' '«'   }
Q { quotes: '„' '“' }

Modern browsers support this way of styling. Of course, Internet Explorer (even in its 8th version) doesn’t support it although it knows <q> pretty well. In particular, since some problems with encoding of quotes can appear sometimes it’s useful to provide numeric values (see below).

According to standards you can even specify the appearance of quotation marks depending on the browser’s language of the user. This is how a W3C-example looks like:

:lang(fr) > Q { quotes: '« ' ' »' }
:lang(de) > Q { quotes: '»'   '«' '2039' '203A' }

As pretty as they may be, pull quotes have inherent problems in the way they are placed in the middle of HTML content. To a visual, CSS enabled browser all might seem hunky-dory, but to those browsers that are not CSS-abled and fall back on the plain HTML or to screen readers for visually impaired users, the pull quotes will appear slap bang in the middle of the main content. A quote suddenly appearing between two paragraphs is clearly out of place and will confusingly break the flow.

If you are using pull-quotes, it is wise to provide a little extra information for users who would stumble on this problem. In the XHTML you can provide a message, hidden from view with CSS that reads something like "Start of pull-quote" before the quote and then "end quote" after it. You could even have a link similar to the "skip navigation" link, which would offer the user the ability to skip the pull-quote and continue to the main content.

<cite>

cite defines an in-line citation or reference to another source. Example:

<p>And <cite>Bob</cite> said <q>No, I think it’s a banana</q>.</p>

Summing up: for large quotes use blockquote, for small quotes use q and for references to another sources cite should be used. In practice, usually only blockquote and q are used.

Gallery of Pull Quotes and Citations

Quotes, braces, lines, dialogue boxes, balloons — there are a number of paths a designer can take to create a beautiful and memorable quote. Design solutions vary in colors, forms and sizes. Different techniques produce different result: however, it is important that it is clear to the visitors that the quote is actually a quote, otherwise it becomes easy to keep track on the content.

Keep in mind: pull quotes shouldn’t be used too often, they shouldn’t be too large and they shouldn’t be included for the wrong purposes. In most cases an ordinary article should have at most 1-2 pull quotes, otherwise they lose their appeal and the article becomes harder to scan.

Screenshot Pullquote

Take a look at the example above. 99designs uses a block quotation to emphasize what the site is about. However, the text put in the quotes actually isn’t a quotation. We do not know why quotation mark is used in this case. We do know, though, that they shouldn’t be used in this context.

1. Simple indentation

In most cases simple indentation is enough. In this case the structure of the content makes clear that the intended content is taken out from the main content flow. However, using this approach you need to make sure you have a very intuitive typographic and visual hierarchy and the indentation won’t be misunderstood. Often italics are used to indicate that the content is a quote and sometimes quotation is centered. The latter technique, however, is used quite rarely.

Screenshot Pullquote

Screenshot Pullquote

Screenshot Pullquote

2. Quotes and indentation

Another standard approach for design of pull quotes is to use the quote itself as a visual element to clearly indicate what the text passage is supposed to stand for. This technique is by far the most popular one and there is a good reason behind it: it unambiguously communicates the meaning of the text block. Surprisingly, the quote visuals are almost always placed on the left of the quote. You may try to experiment with quote on the right, or at the bottom of the passage.

Screenshot Pullquote

Screenshot Pullquote

Screenshot Pullquote

Screenshot Pullquote

Screenshot Pullquote

Screenshot Pullquote

Screenshot Pullquote

Screenshot Pullquote

Screenshot Pullquote

Screenshot Pullquote

Screenshot Pullquote

3. Lines and indentation

Standard, most usual and recommended way of designing blockquotes.

Screenshot Pullquote

Screenshot Pullquote

Screenshot Pullquote

Screenshot Pullquote

Screenshot Pullquote

Screenshot Pullquote

4. Quotations highlighted with a color

Frequently designers use indentation together with a variation of color which is applied to the quote. Usually if the layout is dark quotes are presented in colors which are darker than the main content. And if the layout is light the quote is presented in lighter colors. If quotes need to be strongly emphasized vibrant colors are used. For modest highlighting usually slight variations of main colors suffices to indicate the difference between the main content and cited text.

Screenshot Pullquote
Natalie Jost displays a random quote from the Bible on her blog

Screenshot Pullquote

Screenshot Pullquote

Screenshot Pullquote

5. Pull Quotes

Actually we know it from print where quotes-neighbours are supposed to emphasize some important message or interview excerpts. Pull quotes are placed not within, but next to the content. Such quotes are usually short and don’t provide any additional information as they can also be found in the article. In Web the technique is seen rather rarely, but it has a charm of its own and — if used properly and for the right purposes — may strongly support the content. To clearly separate the “neighbours” from the main content designers often use lines or a large amount of whitespace.

It is important to understand that in such cases pull quotes break the usual content flow which may make it harder for the readers to actually follow the argumentation of the article. In some cases it is more effective to avoid quotes (e.g. if a complex matter is described) while in other cases quotes can quicken and simplify the understanding (e.g. the main statement in the interview).

Quotes-neighbours are usually placed on the right side of the content in order to not break the reader’s flow and remain passive.

Screenshot Pullquote

Screenshot Pullquote

Screenshot Pullquote

Screenshot Pullquote

6. Creative solutions

Sometimes designers come up with creative solutions one actually wouldn’t expect from such an element as a quote. Here are some of them. Hopefully, they’ll help you to come up with further interesting ideas for the design of pull quotes.

Screenshot Pullquote

Screenshot Pullquote

Screenshot Pullquote

Screenshot Pullquote

Screenshot Pullquote

Screenshot Pullquote

Screenshot Pullquote

Screenshot Pullquote

Screenshot Pullquote

Screenshot Pullquote

7. Quotations as a standalone element

Often quotations are used and designed not inside an article, but as a standalone design element which is given the dominant position in the design. This is often the case in testimonials where companies present quotes from their customers and clients to confirm the quality they actually promise. In such cases quotations are usually big, bold and clearly visible.

In testimonials quotes are sometimes “rotated” meaning that among 5-7 testimonials only one is displayed at once.

Screenshot Pullquote

Screenshot Pullquote

Screenshot Pullquote

Screenshot Pullquote

Screenshot Pullquote

Screenshot Pullquote

8. Bonus: Footnotes

In books and scientific documents citations are often provided with a footnote reference to the original document. In the Web, where references are commonly just linked to, this technique has never managed to become popular, however footnotes aren’t difficult to achieve with pure CSS.

For instance, if you’d like to cite an excerpt from a book, instead of providing the corresponding title and page number you can simply refer to a footnote below the article. Thus you can avoid overloading your article with too many references. Footnotes, hence, can make it easier for your readers to actually read your article and provide details “on-demand” — only when they are needed.

Sometimes footnotes are also used by authors to provide some remarks to the article (similar to books). However, it is not always reasonable to use footnotes for links. Web is a dynamic medium and links are extremely powerful - you don’t have to send your visitors to the footer of the page first to be able to follow a given link.

Screenshot

Take a look at the following example. Naz Hamid uses both a blockquote (label 2 in the image above) and a footnote in his articles. The reference to the footnote and the footnote itself are interconnected: visitors can click on the reference and jump to the footnote. And in the footnote the “return”-icon allows the user to jump from the footnote to the place in the article where it is referred to. The author uses the footnotes to provide a personal remark on what has been mentioned in the article (labels 1 and 2).

With footnotes you can offer your visitors some traditional, classic layout feeling without overwhelming them with long references to citations you provide.

Tutorials

Further references

  • Elements of Design: Pull Quotes
    Christian Watson showcases 20 examples of attractive, unusual and beautiful pull quotes.
  • WordPress Plugin: JavaScript Pull-Quotes
    A plugin that allows you to easily insert pull-quotes into your posts and pages. It uses client-side JavaScript.
  • Fancy Pull-quotes
    A simple plugin for wordpress that allows you to obtain a nice pullquote of a specified text. The pullquote will be formatted with a fancy nice style, exactly like one of those you can read on a regular magazine.
  • Grid-Based Design: Six Creative Column Techniques at Smashing Magazine
    Look at the “Escaping Boundaries” section (fourth from the top). Pull-quotes are an example of a design element that presents an opportunity to break out of your established visual flow. The older version of Andy Rutledge’s Design View used interesting pull-quotes that broke the visual flow of the column. Doing this places greater emphasis on the pull-quotes than if they were kept within the content of the column.

Original post by Vitaly Friedman & Sven Lennartz and software by Elliott Back

Jun 11

Space wallpapers have something overwhelming, mysterious and somehow enigmatic. They illustrate something which is too far away to be observed and provide us with some insights we wouldn’t be able to gain otherwise. In fact, space wallpapers can be extremely beautiful and hence extremely attractive to our eye. And this is a good reason for putting them on the desktop where “cosmic” motifs can serve as a fresh perspective in the tiresome daily routine.

This post presents over 35 space and nebula wallpapers and related resources. Some of the presented wallpapers are real photos, some of them have been created using Photoshop or Illustrator. In either case the result is pretty impressive and definitely worth a look if you are looking for some “cosmic” inspiration out there.

Just to clarify: according to Wikipedia, a nebula (from Latin: “mist”) is an interstellar cloud of dust, hydrogen gas and plasma. It is the first stage of a star’s cycle. In these regions the formations of gas, dust and other materials ‘clump’ together to form larger masses, which attract further matter, and eventually will become big enough to form stars. The remaining materials are then believed to form planets, and other planetary system objects.

Nebula and Space Wallpapers

Pismis 24-1
Psimis 24-1 is the core of the nebula NGC 6357. Well, nice to know. Source: NASA.

Awesome Wallpapers - Wallpaper - Nebulae Wallpaper

Stellar Spire in the Eagle Nebula (M16)
Appearing like a winged fairy-tale creature poised on a pedestal, this object is actually a billowing tower of cold gas and dust rising from a stellar nursery called the Eagle Nebula. The soaring tower is 9.5 light-years or about 90 trillion kilometres high, about twice the distance from our Sun to the next nearest star. Credit: NASA, ESA, and The Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA).

Awesome Wallpapers - Wallpaper - Nebulae Wallpaper

Preiades Star Cluster
A set of wallpapers from Crestock: together with 12 further wallpapers, this one is available in 8 resolutions. Both wide screen and full screen versions are available for free download.

Awesome Wallpapers - 13 Fantastic Free Wallpaper Images | Crestock.com Blog

Red Square Nebula
A symmetric bipolar nebula around MWC 922. Source: Caltech Palomar Observatory. Resolution: 1680×1050.

Awesome Wallpapers - Wallpaper - Nebulae Wallpaper

The Horsehead Nebula
Photo by Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA/NASA).

Awesome Wallpapers - Wallpaper - Nebulae Wallpaper

Greg Martin
Greg Martin has some beautiful designs and illustrations related to cosmic motifs. In various resolutions.

Wallcoo Space Art
60 high-resolution wallpapers illustrating space.

Awesome Wallpapers - Wallpaper - Nebulae Wallpaper

Awesome Wallpapers - Wallpaper - Nebulae Wallpaper

The Orion Nebula
This picture shows the great nebula in the constellation of Orion the Hunter. It is probably the most spectacular of all the objects cataloged by Charles Messier and now called by their `M’ numbers. M42 had been known since the beginnings of recorded astronomy as a star, but it is so outstanding that it was first noted as an extended nebula in 1610, only a year after Galileo’s first use of the telescope. Detailed descriptions started appearing later in the seventeenth century, and it has been a popular target for anyone with a telescope ever since.

Wanderingspace Wallpapers
The growing collection of astronomy-related wallpapers: planets, galaxies and space in high-resolution-wallpapers: 1440×900, 1680×1050 and 2560×1600. Wallpapers for iPhone are available as well. Please get to know them: Neptune, Sun, Jupiter.

Awesome Wallpapers - Wallpaper - Nebulae Wallpaper

Awesome Wallpapers - Wallpaper - Nebulae Wallpaper

Awesome Wallpapers - Wallpaper - Nebulae Wallpaper

Etherlight
“The inside of a nebula - depicting Starbirth.” Designed by antifan-real

Ethereal Bloom
Designed by sumopiggy.

M16 - Eagle Nebula Close
“Appearing like a winged fairy-tale creature poised on a pedestal, this object is actually a billowing tower of cold gas and dust rising from a stellar nursery called the Eagle Nebula”.

Nebulae Wallpaper
“I tried to combine two of my favorited styles - the detailed one with realistic planet surfaces and the colorful nebulae “WTF?” style. Here is the outcome.” Available in 1024×768, 1280×960, 1280×1024, 1400×1050, 1600×1200, 1680×1050.

Awesome Wallpapers - Wallpaper - Nebulae Wallpaper

Pierced Heaven
Designed by Yatsuzuka.

Between Realms
“An odd silence resumes after the inexplicable shattering of the universal space continuum; it is during this odd silence, after the shock felt throughout the entire universe, that it becomes evident that a rift has formed, the two realms collaborate in a splash of light & colour, like a dream & yet so real are the liquescent forms of light - it is unlike anything of this realm, as if a pure bliss is breaking through the darkness” Created by j4m3sb0nd.

Reconnaissance
by dilekt

Exotica
Designed by *SamODJ 1680×1050 px

Sky Wallpapers

Wishing I could fly
1280×1024 px. Designed by s3vendays.

Electrical Storm
1600×1200 px.

Peacekeeper Missile Testing

“LG-118A Peacekeeper missile system being tested at the Kwajalein Atoll in the Marshall Islands”

Atardecer

Clouds III
Designed by emailandthings

Aurora Sky
Available in resolutions 1024×768, 1152×864, 1280×1024, 1600×1200, 1920×1440, 1280×800, 1440×900, 1680×1050 and 1920×1200.

Out with the Lion, In with the Lamb
“This was the scene after one of the hardest hitting storms I’ve ever been in.”

Sources and Resources

  • Space wallpapers
    offers probably the largest selection of free high quality space wallpapers for your desktop and Playstation Portable.
  • NASA Wallpapers
    NASA site has collections of real stars and nebulas wallpapers in various resolutions.
  • Inspiration: Stars, Planets and Galaxies
    This article will have you grabbing a telescope or heading over to NASA. Learn about the recent rage in space style effects in design. Take a look at artists that have been working in this field long before Apple branded Leopard with such cool space imagery and lighting effects.

Ulises E. is the writer of el50.com (in Spanish), a weblog about design, music, internet and some cool stuff.

Original post by Vitaly Friedman & Sven Lennartz and software by Elliott Back

Jun 10

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Introducing 170 PNG crystal icons free for download only for you.

Be sure to subscribe to my feed to get more free stuff.

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Original post by Garcya and software by Elliott Back

Jun 10

free vector globes

Six vector globes in one single EPS file.

Bonus: in the archive you’ll also find some cool Design Elements, see below:

design elements

These thumbs were taken on my mac with the combination: cmd+shift+4. Find out more about this reading this post.


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Original post by Garcya and software by Elliott Back

Jun 10

Last week Google tweaked their favicon (that little 16×16 pixel icon in your browser’s tab), changing it from an uppercase G to a lowercase g.

Now, a change like this is normally something that shouldn’t matter — it’s not like they changed their actual logo to begin with a lowercase g, or made any changes to their home page. They just tweaked the 256 pixels in the browser’s tab. But this is one of the strongest brands in the world, and tabbed browsing has become a standard feature in all browsers.

Favicons are no longer an optional “nice-to-have” — users come to rely on them as a usability aid, so those 256 pixels are an extension of a company’s brand. Add to that the fact that people generally don’t like change, and the result is hundreds of blogs complaining about how ugly the new icon was.

Personally, I don’t mind it. The new icon threw me at first — the big G was instantly recognizable, and being able to jump to a tab based on that visual aid is a crucial part of how I navigate. However, after a few days of getting used to it, I realized that change was inevitable, for a number of reasons:

  • Lowercase letters just look better at small resolutions. I don’t have any data to back this statement up, it’s just my opinion.
  • Lowercase logos say “friendly and hip Web 2.0 startup“. Uppercase logos say “stuffy corporate”. Google has started to make efforts recently to open up and engage with their user base more; this supports that approach.
  • The G was starting to look a little old. With mobile services forming an integral part of Google’s future offerings, it would have been difficult to make a big impact with a tired logo.

Google’s Marissa Mayer obviously isn’t completely sold on the new look though — Google is crowdsourcing the next stage of the icon’s design, in case someone outside of Google can come up with an improvement:

The design process was much harder than we thought at first. By no means is the one you’re seeing our favicon final; it was a first step to a more unified set of icons. If you have your own notions about the Google favicon, please send them to us … maybe your idea will be the one that people see billions of times per day.

If you think you can do a better job, Google have opened submissions for improvements on the little g. You have until June 20 to submit your image.




Original post by mattymcg and software by Elliott Back

Jun 09

Over the last weeks we have again selected dozens of useful development and web design-related books, we’ve bought all of them and we wanted to give them all away to our readers — for free. Unfortunately, it turned out that some books were unavailable, some were sold out and some are still waiting for the next edition. Consequently, we’ve decided to give away at least the books which are available now and keep the rest for future give-aways.

Well, why would we do that? Basically, for four reasons:

  1. we truly appreciate our readers’ support, trust and interest and we want to give something back,
  2. we want to make the Web a better place and encourage designers to help us in achieving this aim,
  3. we like to smash things,
  4. and well, we can afford it.

In this post we are giving away 8 professional web design-related books — the books cover the topics CSS, usability, user interface design, innovation, web navigation, web form design and JavaScript programming. Hopefully, the winners of the books will be able to widen their horizon in web development and create more effective, more user-friendly and more beautiful web designs.

Please keep in mind: the Smashing Style Switchers Contest is running — design a style switcher, submit a comment to our post and and you can win an Apple Cinema 20 Flat Panel Display.

How can I participate?

To participate, you have to

  1. choose one book in the table below which you like most,
  2. write something nice in the comment to this post (one word is enough) and write the number of the book on the next line.

Please notice that

  • participants can post comments until the 14th of June 2008. The comments will be closed on the 15th of June at 00:01 CET.
  • the winners will be determined by a random generator; for each book only the group of visitors who’d like to have the same book will be considered,
  • only participants who’ve selected one book can participate
  • make sure that you fill your e-mail in the comment field correctly, so we can contact you afterwards.

Books You Can Win

# Cover Title

by Author

Description
1 Screenshot Transcending CSS
by Andy Clarke
The fine art of web design. Find out how creative designers learn to be artistic yet functional.
2 Screenshot Designing the Obvious: A Common Sense Approach to Web Application Design

by Robert Hoekman

The book offers practical advice about how to achieve the quality of successful web-based applications and consistently and successfully reproduce them.
3 Screenshot Designing for the Social Web
by Joshua Porter
Learn how to design effective, user-centric social web-applications.
4 Screenshot About Face 3: The Essentials of Interaction Design
by Alan Cooper
Presents the effective and practical tools you need to design great desktop applications, Web 2.0 sites, and mobile devices.
5 Screenshot The Myths of Innovation
by Scott Berkun
This book reveals how ideas truly become successful innovations — truths that people can apply to today’s challenges.
6 Screenshot Designing Web Navigation: Optimizing the User Experience
by James Kalbach
Learn how to design web site navigation properly: how to let people find information and guide them through it.
7 1,000 Graphic Elements

Web Form Design: Filling in the Blanks
by Luke Wroblewski
Learn how to design effective and engaging Web forms.
8 The Designers Complete Index

The JavaScript Anthology: 101 Essential Tips, Tricks & Hacks
by Cameron Adams
Shows how to apply JavaScript to solve over 101 common Web Development challenges.

1. Transcending CSS

Transcending CSS by Andy Clarke

Transcending CSS

The Web has changed, and so has the art of creating web sites. Few visual designers are natural programmers, and as a result, visualizing how to work with markup, CSS and a range of programmatic techniques to create beautiful design is difficult.

To make things more complicated, most web design teaching materials focus on the technical rather than the creative. Countless resources and guides focus on semantics, compliance, and validity. While these are all important, they mean little to the creative designer who wants to impress his or her clients and employers with exceptional design without worrying that the way they approach the design will be compromised by creativity-limiting technical issues. So how do creative designers learn to be artistic yet functional? With Transcending CSS: The Fine Art of Web Design.

2. Designing the Obvious

Designing the Obvious: A Common Sense Approach to Web Application Design by Robert Hoekman

Screenshot
Source

Designing the Obvious explores the character traits of successful Web applications and uses them as guiding principles of application design so the end result of every project instills customer satisfaction and loyalty. These principles include building only whats necessary, getting users up to speed quickly, preventing and handling errors, and designing for the activity. Designing the Obvious does not offer a one-size-fits-all development process — in fact, it lets you use whatever process you like. Instead, it offers practical advice about how to achieve the qualities of great Web-based applications and consistently and successfully reproduce them.

3. Designing for the Social Web

Designing for the Social Web by Joshua Porter

Screenshot

No matter what type of web site or application you are building, social interaction among the people who use it will be key to its success. They will talk about it, invite their friends, complain, sing its high praises, and dissect it in countless ways. With the right design strategy you can use this social interaction to get people signing up, coming back regularly, and bringing others into the fold. With examples from real-world interfaces and a touch of the underlying social psychology theory, Joshua Porter shows you how to design your next great social web application.

4. About Face 3: The Essentials of Interaction Design

About Face 3: The Essentials of Interaction Design by Alan Cooper

Screenshot

Alan Cooper is a professional designer, specialized on software design, and all his knowledge is represented in this book. He makes emphasis on Goal-Directed Design, meaning that goals, not features, are the key to the product success. This technique is based on the use of personas and scenarios to conduct user research. Goals are explained in three categories, experience goals, end goals and life goals.

This volume presents the effective and practical tools you need to design great desktop applications, Web 2.0 sites, and mobile devices. This book will teach you the principles of good product behavior and introduce you to Cooper’s Goal-Directed Design method, from conducting user research to defining your product using personas and scenarios. In short, About Face 3 will show you how to design effective digital products and services.

5. The Myths of Innovation

The Myths of Innovation by Scott Berkun

Screenshot

How do you know whether a hot technology will succeed or fail? Or where the next big idea will come from? The best answers come not from the popular myths we tell about innovation, but instead from time-tested truths that explain how we’ve made it this far. This book shows the way.

In The Myths of Innovation, Scott Berkun takes a careful look at innovation history, including the software and Internet Age, to reveal how ideas truly become successful innovations — truths that people can apply to today’s challenges. Using dozens of examples from the history of technology, business, and the arts, you’ll learn how to convert the knowledge you have into ideas that can change the world.

6. Designing Web Navigation

Designing Web Navigation: Optimizing the User Experience by James Kalbach

Screenshot

Thoroughly rewritten for today’s web environment, this book offers a fresh look at a fundamental topic of site navigation design. Amid all the changes to the Web in the past decade, the basic problems of creating a good web navigation system remain. Designing Web Navigation demonstrates that good navigation is not about technology — it’s about the ways people find information, and how you guide them.

7. Web Form Design: Filling in the Blanks

Web Form Design: Filling in the Blanks by Luke Wroblewski

Screenshot

Forms make or break the most crucial online interactions: checkout (commerce), registration (community), data input (participation and sharing), and any task requiring information entry. In Web Form Design, Luke Wroblewski draws on original research, his considerable experience at Yahoo! and eBay, and the perspectives of many of the field’s leading designers to show you what you need to know about designing effective and engaging Web forms.

8. The JavaScript Anthology

The JavaScript Anthology: 101 Essential Tips, Tricks & Hacks by Cameron Adams

Screenshot

Using a cookbook approach, The JavaScript Anthology will show you how to apply JavaScript to solve over 101 common Web Development challenges. You’ll discover how to optimize your code so that it runs faster, create Ajax applications with the XmlHttpRequest object, validate web forms to improve usability, take control of your web pages with the DOM, ensure that your JavaScript code is accessible and create slick drop-down menu systems.

Included in this book is extensive coverage of DHTML and Ajax, including how-to create and customize advanced effects such as draggable elements, dynamically sorting data in a Web Browser, advanced menu systems, retrieving data from a Web Server using XMLHttpRequest and more. The JavaScript Anthology also includes extensive coverage of object oriented coding, efficient script design, accessibility, and cross-browser issues.

Original post by Vitaly Friedman & Sven Lennartz and software by Elliott Back

Jun 09

You know, to make a print screen on Windows based PC it’s fair simple, you just have to hit the “Print Screen” button and then open paint or Adobe Photoshop and paste your printed screen.

What if you could do the same on mac but even easier ?

Try hitting on your mac cmd + shift + 3 and look on your desktop. You’ve probably already heard a “photo camera click” and on your desktop you’ll have your print screen as a jpg file. Sweet, huh?

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Original post by Garcya and software by Elliott Back

Jun 09

'Screenshot of three different types of RSS icon

I just came across three versions of the RSS icon on the Stargate Worlds web site.

I’ve not seen green or blue icons being used to represent video and audio RSS feeds before.

I was wondering if this was a convention I wasn’t aware of or if this was just how they were trying to differentiate the feeds on this web site.

If the second option is true, I’m not how well it works as the only way to know what the blue and green RSS icons represent is to mouse over them. This doesn’t make them particularly ‘discoverable.’

Anyone have any ideas?

Original post by dennislembree@yahoo.com (Dennis E. Lembree) and software by Elliott Back

Jun 09

If you’ve been following Smashing Magazine for a while, you know that almost all posts from the Monday Inspiration series are pretty colorful and eye-catching. This post is an exception. Compared to colorful designs where catchy colors help the design to stand out, in black-and-white designs the ability to stand out depends only on its ability to communicate rather than on its appealing visual presentation.

Indeed, beautiful black and white photography doesn’t attract with its play of colors. Here close attention to composition, lighting, perspective and the context it is shot in are important. Hence, before considering the photos presented below please prepare some patience and time. This post presents some truly excellent examples of beautiful black-and-white photography.

Notice: this post isn’t supposed to showcase the best black-and-white-photos of world’s best photographers; please see it as a modest attempt to inspire designers for experimenting with black and white instead of using a variety of vibrant colors all the time. Hopefully, everybody will find something interesting and unusual for herself or himself.

You may want to take a look at our related posts

All photos belong to the respective owners.

Beautiful Black-And-White-Photography

Toni Frissell
In her legendary photos Toni Frissell impresses with a strong trend toward surrealism or realism. The photo presented below, although in black and white, is both extremely sharp and clear. To achieve such level of clarity in black and white is extremely hard.

Black and White Photography

Alin Ciortea
Alin Ciortea presents examples of modern street photography. In black and white, of course.

Black and White Photography

Black and White Photography

Birds
Unfortunately, the photographer is unknown. The photo seems to be taken at exact the right moment from exactly the right angle with a perfect lighting. Black and white can be powerful as well.

Black and White Photography

Sally Mann
This photo, titled Candy Cigarette, not just displays something, it tells a story. It is both emotional and beautiful. This is what the originality of black-and-white-photography is all about.

Black and White Photography

Larry Towell
This shot was taken in El Salvador. Child with star mask during “Day Of The Dead”. Other child in background rolls tire for repair in garage where he works at an adult’s job. The photo is full of tiredness and stubbornness. Simple motif conveying strong emotions.

Black and White Photography

Aneta Kowalczyk
Aneta Kowalczyk specializes in portrait photography. Some of her photos are provoking, some are strange and some are extremely beautiful. The example below displays the beautiful side of black and white photography.

Black and White Photography

Nick Brandt
Nick Brandt is a renown animal photographer which has become famous with his book of photographs, “On This Earth”, which was published in October 2005.

Black and White Photography

Gary Winogrand
Taking a shot just at the right moment.

Black and White Photography

Larry Louie
Woman Of Tibet. Realism at its best. Awarded with International Photography Awards in 2007.

Black and White Photography

Gabriele Caretti
Tour Eiffel: extraordinary contrast and perspective. Strong, clean and very precise shot.

Black and White Photography

Ghost Town Charm
Excellent lighting.

Black and White Photography

Ansel Adams
One of the most famous contemporary black and white photographers. Classic!

Black and White Photography

Maurizio Polese
Polese’s works pay close attention to small, tiny details. The tones are perfects and compositions are beautiful which is why the photos are presented in this post. Notice the sharp contrast and the lighting at the first image below and the sharp pathway leading to the light in the second one.

Black and White Photography

Black and White Photography

Top 10 Wired.com Reader Black-and-White Photos
Ten extraordinary black and white photographs sent to the Wired.com editorial by its readers.

Black and White Photography

Black and White Photography

Black and White Photography

Michele Clement
Artistic yet beautiful and extremely powerful shot. Michele Clement is the winner of Black & White Spider Awards 2007 in category “Outstanding Achievement”.

Black and White Photography

Snyder Alison
This photo has been taken in South Crillon Glacier, Washburn.

Black and White Photography

Abbas
Iranian film director Abbas Kiarostami on the hills surrounding the captital, where his film “Taste of Cherry”, which was co-awarded the Golden Palm in Cannes 1997, was shot.

Black and White Photography

Patrick Figaj
Ceremony.

Black and White Photography

Jack Radcliffe
Alison’s life in black and white photos. The significance of these pictures emerges in retrospect. “When my daughter Alison was born, in the tradition of a new parent, I began to photograph her, initially in a separate and private body of work. However, in the process of documenting Alison’s growth, I developed a passionate interest in human relationships and capturing intimate moments in the lives of family and friends.”

Black and White Photography

Black and White Photography

Arndt Laude
Alignment. Sometiems all it takes is to be at the right place in the right moment and take a shot under the right angle. That’s what happened here.

Black and White Photography

Ralph Gibson
Staircase is an example of Gibson’s high-contrast, minimalist black and white compositions have influenced a generation of photographers. By isolating the essential elements of a scene, his pictures show a style that is unique and immediately recognizable. [via]

Black and White Photography

Elliott Erwitt
Erwitt, an advertising and journalistic photographer known for his black and white candid shots of ironic and absurd situations within everyday settings — the master of the “indecisive moment”.

Black and White Photography

Black and White Photography

Roy Mckeown
Snowy Sheep.

Black and White Photography

Adam Hinton

Black and White Photography

Van Shnooken Raggen
Two Warehouses.

Black and White Photography

Rodney Smith
Rodney Smith has his own understanding of professional black-and-white-photography. Unusual, abstract and surrealistic works.

Black and White Photography

Drole Deciel
Smiley.

Black and White Photography

Shazeen Samad
Simple yet excellent composition. This photo manages not just to show something, but to capture a moment of life in all its beauty and vividness.

Black and White Photography

Scott Bush
Berk-plage - France. What a sky! A really strange squadron: octopussy, teddy bear and skates.

Black and White Photography

Pedro Meyer
Pedro Meyer shows the life of people across the globe. This photo was taken in Rio De Janeiro.

Black and White Photography

Black and White Photography

Mitch Dobrowner
Mitch Dobrowner is famous due to his Earth photos.

Black and White Photography

Black and White Photography

Black and White Photography

Black and White Photography

Robertino Nikolic
lighting plays with geometry. Or geometry plays with lighting? The winner of the Black & White Spider Awards 2007.

Black and White Photography

Matthias Just
747.

Black and White Photography

Unknown
Capturing the right moment at the right point of time.

Black and White Photography

Bert (Quasebart)
Perfect timing, perfect lighting. A dreamy shot.

Black and White Photography

Hughes Leglise-Bataille
That’s a quite unusual perspective for a photograph.

Black and White Photography

Santosh Korthiwada
“No peeping please!” Very powerful, emotional and somehow sad photo.

Black and White Photography

Rui Palha
Rui Palha photographs simple people in simple situations. Result: extraordinary photos of simple things surrounding our life.

Black and White Photography

Black and White Photography

Black and White Photography

Watanabe
Straws.

Black and White Photography

Lauren
Two Tree Hill. The composition looks very surreal, yet powerful and beautiful.

Black and White Photography

G. Diaz Deleon
Ventana XIV. Geometric minimalism at its best.

Black and White Photography

Maurizio Polese
Escape. Unusual angle, unusual perspective.

Black and White Photography

Jana Stolzer
Nameless.

Black and White Photography

Vega Omer
Struggling to survive.

Black and White Photography

Ezra Caldwell
Dog snout. Sometimes the moments from our life are the most valuable moments we should enjoy and keep in mind.

Black and White Photography

Last Click

Crossing Lines

Black and White Photography

Classics in Lego
An illustrative summary of iconic pictures with their pairs of Balakov’s Lego figure pictures which are reconstucting famous moments in the history of mankind.

Black and White Photography

Black and White Photography

Mark Daniel Owen
I heart you. Do you see what we see?

Black and White Photography

Sources and Resources

Original post by Vitaly Friedman & Sven Lennartz and software by Elliott Back