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TEDxSMU An Experience of a Lifetime

Thursday, December 8th, 2011

 

 

TEDxSMU 2011

I spent this past weekend at TEDxSMU. To get to attend the live event you have to apply (okay no big deal), fill out a form (name, address), answer the essay question (ANSWER THE ESSAY QUESTION!?!). I haven’t answered an essay question in oh, since college. Oh, and 130 people are going to be selected. No pressure there…

So I filled out the form, wrote my essay and waited to receive the email that says “TEDxSMU invites you to TEDxSMU 2011: Disruption”. Woo Hoo! I’m in. I click to attend (you have to go through Eventbrite to pay) – ah, another TED test. You have 15 minutes to finalize your registration, including choosing three icebreakers (words or short phrases). Yikes, who knew just registering would be so challenging!

Okay, I finally make it to The Dee & Charles Wyly Theatre (where it was held). An amazing group of people; everyone is friendly. I run into people I know almost immediately. We head in and I am lucky enough to get one of the coveted FatBoy beanbag seats right up front and the show begins.

Absolutely amazing speakers. I can’t mention them all but a couple stood out for me – Elise Ballard, Peter Brown and Kate Canales from frog (okay, okay – the girl from ribit liked the speaker from frog – get the amphibian jokes out of the way now…).

Elise talked about her journey to start what became her book: epiphany True Stories of Sudden Insight. She started with an epiphany of her own that changed her life and then she began asking others if they had ever had an epiphany. She then began taping people’s stories and before you know it she had a book, a web site and a new career.

Peter Brown, of Peter Brown Architects took us on a journey through the design of Dallas, Texas. Having grown up here in Dallas (yes, I’m a native Dallasite!) it was a trip down memory lane, as Peter showed postcards of my past – hotels with “modern features”, Neiman Marcus fortnights (does anyone remember fortnights – where Stanley Marcus traveled to far away countries like Japan and turned his stores into a foreign land for a week, where we could taste the food and see the culture…), and the foresight of Raymond Nasher, who built Northpark in 1965 as the largest climate controlled mall in the world. Nasher built the mall with an eye to design as anyone who has been there can tell you, from the art sculptures inside and out. Which all led up to Peter showing us the latest school he designed, the Hector Garcia Middle School. It is gorgeous and still qualifies as a LEED certified building.

And then there was Kate Canales from frog. Kate spoke to us about interesting things she has seen and just had to take pictures of: like the restroom with a sign to the left of the door that said Women’s, a sign on the door said Women’s Room and then someone had taped a piece of paper on it that say Women Only. As Kate said, you wonder what happened to prompt the handwritten sign…. She also showed us a sign she found while looking for someplace to hang some of her clothing in a hotel she was staying in. The sign said (and I am paraphrasing) ‘Do Not Hang Anything on Sprinkler Head. It Will Break and Cause Flooding.’ Kate suggested that if they had spent money on adding hooks people could hang clothes on, rather than signs…. Some designs solutions are just so simple they have to be overlooked!

We learned about many other things: helping to teach children in underserved countries by teaching them where they are, not by trying to get them to schools. That if we use lignin to produce plastic bags, it will cost the same, but they will biodegrade in 150 days and still cost the same as traditional plastic bags! Not to mention how Chef Homaro Cantu took us on a “flavor tripping” experience where he made bitter dark chocolate sweet and lemons less sour!

Going to TEDxSMU was an awesome and inspiring experience. I learned a lot and I’m looking forward to the videos of the event being available on the TEDxSMU web site so I can go back and see if I missed anything!

If you get the chance to go to a TEDx event, go. You will meet awesome people, learn valuable lessons. And if you’re lucky, you’ll get to do down front, sitting in a FatBoy!

TEDxSMU-2011

Google Web Fonts, Will They Change the World?

Wednesday, December 8th, 2010

The constant battle over fonts on a web site, is there a solution in sight? Clients always want to have beautiful fonts on their web sites, the only way we have had to do that and assure that “everyone” can see them has been to use images. The issue with images of course is that they have to be downloaded, have to be worked into your layout and they don’t get the same SEO (search engine optimization). Now Google has a beta solution for us.

So what is the big deal about fonts. Presently a web site can only display a font that is installed on your computer. So to make sure that everyone sees the same exact thing on every computer (more or less – lets not go into different browsers and different versions of different browsers…) web designers end up using a short list of fonts that all computers (both Macs and PCs) have pre-installed.

Unfortunately, clients are not satisfied with the limited amount of fonts that are presently available. There are some work arounds to this such as Font Burner, which has a WordPress plugin – but it is only compatible up to WordPress version 2.8, while WordPress is up to version 3.0.3; or hardcore code, which Internet Explorer and 64-bit Windows machines don’t render correctly – so these are not a perfect fix.

Now enter stage left – Google Web Fonts. Yes Google. They have approximately 38 fonts (with a smattering of variants) that reside on Google’s servers and you can use their API to make your text beautiful. And as of last week they work on most mobile devices including Android, iPhone and iPad. There is even a WordPress plugin (compatible up to version 3.0.3) for Google Fonts that has had over 12,449 downloads! Is it the answer to our web designer prayers? The jury is still out on that (it is still in beta), but it does look exciting! We’re looking at using it on our site…check back soon to see….

Web Site Design for Beginners – Part 3

Friday, August 27th, 2010

The third and final post in this series, Web Site Design for Beginners, is now up on Edmee Roche’s (@edmeeroche) She’s Gone Blogging site.

This blog post covers one of the most important decision you will have to make: what type of web site you are going to develop: informational or e-commerce. Will your site be static, or will it be built with a Content Management System (CMS) so you can easily update the content. If you have an e-commerce site do you want to host your e-commerce site or do you want to use a hosted solution.

Whether you choose a static site, a CMS driven site, an e-commerce site you host or a hosted solution, don’t forget Search Engine Optimization (SEO). I cover all this and more!

Web Design for Beginners

Tuesday, August 10th, 2010

I was honored to be asked by Edmee Rochee (@edmeeroche) to guest blog on her site She’s Gone Blogging about Web Design for Beginners. It is a fun topic, one I really enjoy.

It is being done as a series of posts, so you need to keep going back – it covers what you need to know before you start to design a site. I even go into the basics of shopping carts and the differences between them. It is an overview for beginners, so if you just want the basics, you should check it out!

Art of the Logo

Friday, June 4th, 2010

Following on Robin’s excellent post about branding, I wanted to take a closer look at one specific aspect of building your brand, the thing that one might say is the foundation of every brand: the logo.

We here at ribit do a lot of work for start-ups and small businesses in additional to our larger, established clients, and one of my favorite challenges when we get those clients is being able to start at the very beginning in building their brand, and specifically in doing their logo design.  The reason it is a challenge is largely due to the fact that so many people have trouble understanding what a logo is, and what it is supposed to do.

A logo is a hieroglyph.  A rune.  A pictogram.  It is a simple, easily recognized symbol that stands in for the name of your business.  Done properly, a logo can become a sort of  letter added to the collective symbol alphabet.  It should not, and indeed cannot, capture everything about you and your business.  To do so would require it to be very complex, and when it comes to logos, simplicity is best.

Consider the Nabisco logo. If you don’t know what it is, go look in your pantry. Chances are something in there will have it. On any of their products, it will be in the upper-left corner. It is a red triangle with the word “NABISCO”, surrounded by something that looks vaguely like an old fashioned T.V. antennae. Nothing about that thing (and incidentally, it is actually called “The Nabisco Thing” in internal Nabisco marketing documentation) seems to say anything about what Nabisco does. Taken out of context, that thing does not say Ritz or Nilla Wafers. Heck, it doesn’t even say “snack food”.

But we all know that it means Nabisco. We’ve been seeing it on the upper-left corner of boxes of crackers since we were children. That thing is possibly the ultimate logo ever created. Everyone knows what it means, that silly little oval and line sketch has become a symbol, a hieroglyph; a letter in our collective alphabet that means “Nabisco”.

As far as possible, every logo should aspire to that standard.  It should be simple, instantly and easily recognizable, and it should be usable but also unobtrusive on every piece of paper and every web page or TV ad that your company produces.

Some basic guidelines:

  1. Simplicity!  Do not be afraid of “plain”.  Your logo is like a letter, not a painting.
  2. Recognizability.  Avoid obscure or arcane looking symbols.  If the viewer stops and thinks about what the logo is rather than what it stands for , they are no longer thinking about your company.
  3. Scalability.  Your logo should look good on packaging, on a letterhead, projected large on slideshow, or printed small on a business card.
  4. Professionalism.  The logo is your business, not yourself.  If, for instance, you dislike a certain color, but that color works well in the logo design, do not let your personal preference ruin your logo.
  5. Trust your designer!  You are paying them to do your design.  Trust their expertise, otherwise why did you hire them?

Designed and used effectively, your logo can become a symbol that, when viewed, sets up a whole series of associations in the mind of the viewer and constantly reinforces your brand in the public eye.

Making a Site iProduct Friendly

Tuesday, May 4th, 2010

In the process of creating the new Ribit web site-as well as my own personal site-I had occasion to test the site out on an iPad. Browsing on an iPhone/Pad/Pod (hereafter referred to as an iProduct) is very intuitive and easy, but also very different from what we are used to on a desktop or laptop PC. Contrary to what some might think, the iProduct multi-touch interface does not merely substitute touching for clicking, and our usual instinct of viewing a page and vertically scrolling to the next page or section of content doesn’t always serve us well. Viewing a web page on an iProduct is more akin to looking at a menu of items available for perusal. When you first visit a site, you see the entire front page. If this page has a lot of stuff on it, you will see a tall vertical strip of content, all of which is far too small to actually be read or viewed effectively. Tapping an area automatically zooms the screen to that area of content, bringing it into focus and making it readable. Tapping again zooms back out to the full page, touching and sweeping your fingers around allows you to freely pan (I don’t like to call it scrolling, it doesn’t feel anything like scrolling on a normal PC) in any direction. All very intuitive and very, very cool, but as I discovered, this and other aspects of the multi-touch interface have some consequences for web design.

First if all, there is navigation of pages. We are used to point and click; an iProduct gives us touch. Easy enough, but when designing, one has to remember that a human finger is not as precise and pointy as a mouse cursor. Navigation elements on a site need to be large, and have more space between them, to make browsing your site on an iProduct a good experience. Another thing to remember is that there is no such thing as mouse-hover or mouseover on an iProduct. The cursor does not exist when the screen is not touched, and so many of the event handlers web designers use to highlight things like navigation buttons simply won’t work. With this in mind, navigation needs to be made very clear. A link, whether it be text or a graphic button, needs to very obviously be a link. Along with rollover states for navigation, drop down menus are problematic on an iProduct. Apple has given us the functionality by invoking the normal mouse-over event when touching on a navigation element that triggers a drop down, but unless your site is extremely large I would highly recommend doing away with hierarchical drop downs in your site menus. One touch per step to the destination should be the rule, as far as it is possible.

Another interesting thing I discovered is that certain CSS properties that work perfectly fine in Safari on a desktop computer are ignored on an iProduct. The most important of these I found are fixed elements such as DIV tags with a position:fixed attribute, or background images using the  background-attachment:fixed property.  The reason for this is simple, and makes sense once you think about it.  On an iProduct, in order to accommodate large amounts of page content on the smaller screens, the user has to be able to pan around the page, and unlike a desktop environment, you don’t get the ever-present cursor and scroll bar with its handy buttons, to say nothing of having a mouse with a scroll wheel.  The result of this is that a touch and drag on an iProduct screen has to pan the page around on all directions, and fixed elements will not behave properly in that environment.  Accordingly, Safari on the iProducts ignores the fixed property items and moves them around with the page as a whole.  It might be helpful to think of a web page on an iProduct as akin to looking at a static printed document that has active areas that allow you to bring up other, related, documents.

The easy solution to all this is simply to make your navigation really big and chunky, which I hate; and to avoid the use of fixed properties in your CSS, but frankly the cool things you can do with them in the desktop environment make that an unattractive choice.  You might notice I have used them here.

Can we have our cake and eat it, too?

The answer is yes.

We have a couple of options we can use to accomplish this.  WordPress makes this very easy as it has some built in functionality that smooths the process along.  If you are not using WordPress, similar results can be achieved using CSS Browser Selector.  For WordPress users, check out this excellent article by Nathan Rice on using the WordPress body_class function to detect if your user is on an iProduct and serve them altered CSS instructions to make your site iProduct Friendly.

I’ll let you read the article to get the full scoop, but what is happening is essentially that if someone on an iProduct comes to your site, alternative CSS instructions can be used for any elements that might be problematic in the small-screen multi-touch environment.  I was able to use this to remove the fixed properties from various site elements, and best of all, I was able to increase both the size and spacing of text and graphic navigation elements.  For the user the changes are totally transparent, and I as the designer don’t have to compromise on my desktop design in order to have a usable site on an iProduct.

With millions of iProducts flying out of Apple’s warehouses, I think iProduct prep is going to become a vital step in delivery of web sites.

Welcome to our New ribit Web Site

Monday, April 19th, 2010

Yes, we are the cobbler’s child. At least every five years we totally redo our web site. Trash the old one and start over from scratch.

This time we decided to leave the old content management system we used (short tutorial – a content management system is a database driven system that allows us to build you a web site where the content of the pages is separate from the design and structure of the web site. This allows us to be able to give the web site owner a user name and password that will allow them to update the content on the pages without changing the design or structure of the web site, using a content editor that is “similar” to editing in your basic word document editing software package.) and switch to WordPress.

WordPress offered a lot of advantages, ease of use being first and foremost. WordPress also has a huge community building Plugins, small applications that add functionality to the “base” program. You want more SEO (search engine optimization – what you need to get higher in the Google rankings) than you get out of the “box” from WordPress, there is a plugin for that. You want a Captcha field (those annoying squiggly letters that automated programs can’t generate to “steal” the form) to go with your contact form, there is a plugin for that. You want it, someone has probably already made a plugin for it.

So why didn’t we “switch” sooner. We at ribit pride ourselves on not only creating sites that work, that incorporate the SEO you need, that connect you to the Social Media, that have a blog, but we create sites that have unique designs that reflect the owner of the web site – that will help them reach their marketing goals and objects. Whenever we looked at WordPress sites, well, they looked like WordPress sites.

The challenge for us was how to make a WordPress site that doesn’t look like a WordPress site. This is what we came up with, different frog paintings on each page, the blog (okay the blog looks like a WordPress blog), a portfolio that is very clean and highlights just a smattering of our work.

We are going to be added to the site in the coming weeks, keep coming back to see how the site progresses. And welcome to our new site!

Redesigning Your Web Site

Thursday, July 26th, 2007

Before beginning the web design process, determine why you are doing a web design and what are your goals and objectives for your new web site. Do you want to move your site to the next level, make it a call to action? This can be done by allowing visitors to subscribe to a monthly newsletter or having an e-commerce section on your web site. Remember if you have people sign up for a newsletter, you will have to produce a newsletter. A simple HTML newsletter can be created as a part of many content management systems.

Is your site redesign being used as a way to bring visitors back to your site, if so you might consider switching to a content management-based web site. Content management systems allow you to easily update your web site yourself. No need to know HTML, if you can type you can update your web site. This will keep the site current and allow your visitors to see something new each time they visit your site. (more…)