Archive for the ‘General’ Category

The Way of Windows

Sunday, April 13th, 2008

A couple of Gartner Research analysts said recently what a lot of people have been thinking for a while: Microsoft Windows is in danger of losing relevance. Windows is still huge of course, and Linux still isn’t a big threat on the desktop (even though it’s free), and the Mac, as great as it is, still has a far smaller (but growing) market share. It really comes down to this: People are tired of the Windows way—the bugs, the flaky documentation, the need for proprietary code—and with the rise of legitimate, productive open source applications and the web browser as the platform, we have an alternative. The real question is how long it will take for the Enterprise market to make the shift and wean themselves from Redmond.

Cool site you probably don’t know about

Friday, January 18th, 2008

MediaFire is a free file hosting site that lets users upload and share their files. You can link directly to your uploaded files, and there’s a generous 100 MB size limit per file (how many 100 MB files do you have, anyway?).  The site is well organized, easy to use, and offers a worthwhile (and free) service. What more can you ask for?

Browser Wars

Friday, September 7th, 2007

At the dawn of the Internet Age — way back in the mid 1990’s, — Microsoft and Netscape waged what came to be known as the Browser Wars, a battle for the hearts and minds of Internet users. We all know who came out on top then.

With the release of Mozilla Firefox in 2004, a second battle commenced that continues today. It is more competition than conflict this time around, and as a result we have a lot more choices than we did in the days when Webvan seemed like a good idea. For those of you reading this blog on a version of Internet Explorer, I encourage you to investigate other ‘user agent’ options available to you for browsing the web; you might be surprised at what you find. Oh yeah, of course: I am an avid Firefox user with some Camino thrown in occasionally for flavor.

Why Standards Matter

Wednesday, August 15th, 2007

How important is it that your site be standards compliant? There is a good article in BusinessWeek featuring Jeffrey Zeldman: Jeffrey Zeldman: King of Web Standards. Zeldman is known as a champion and one of the early advocates of the importance of technology standards on the web. Whether a web site conforms to web W3C recommended standards - properly formed XHTML and CSS, among other things - is something that many web developers care about, but 90% of web users don’t know anything about. What matters is that a site looks good and functions well. This of course, is exactly the reason standards-based design exists. Read the article here.

Today’s web metaphor

Monday, July 30th, 2007

When I see a piano player in concert, I hope he or she isn’t thinking about what I want to hear. I hope the pianist is thinking about making great music. Web site design is like playing the piano: The designer/developer needs to ask the client what kind of music they want to make. Taking it a step further and incorporating UCD principles means that they also have to consider what the audience wants to hear as well.

The challenge of intelligent visual and functional design is to balance business needs with consumer needs. And if it’s an interface, it has to be functional and look nice, too. I’d like to pose the question: How many projects have you been involved in that take all of these factors into consideration?


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