Migrating from a conventional Facebook account to a public figure (“fan”) page – a report from the trenches
Design editorial experience facebook findability glamorous industry Information_architecture interface Layout Marketing privacy Products Scripting social_networking software State_of_the_Web The_Essentials This_never_happens_to_Gruber Usability User_Experience UX Web_Design_History Websites work Working Zeldman
march 2011 by cloudseer
Design editorial experience facebook findability glamorous industry Information_architecture interface Layout Marketing privacy Products Scripting social_networking software State_of_the_Web The_Essentials This_never_happens_to_Gruber Usability User_Experience UX Web_Design_History Websites work Working Zeldman
march 2011 by cloudseer
Own Your Data
january 2011 by cloudseer
Captured from Twitter, here is Tom Henrich’s partial reconstruction of my conversation with Tantek Çelik, Glenda Bautista, Andy Rutledge and others on the merits of self-hosting social content and publishing to various sites rather than aggregating locally from external sources.
via Own Your Data / technophilia
Best_practices
Community
Design
Standards
State_of_the_Web
Tools
UX
Usability
User_Experience
apps
content
social_networking
software
shared
from google
via Own Your Data / technophilia
january 2011 by cloudseer
Responsive design is the new black
june 2010 by cloudseer
The blog of Mr Simon Collison, retooled as responsive web design. The wide version.
The blog of Mr Simon Collison, retooled as responsive web design. The narrow version.
See more versions in Mr Collison’s “Media Query Layouts” set on Flickr.
Read the article that started it all. Coming soon as a book by Mr Ethan Marcotte from A Book Apart. (The current A Book Apart book, Mr Jeremy Keith’s HTML5 For Web Designers, ships Friday. Mr Ethan Marcotte will be our guest this Thursday, June 24, on The Big Web Show. Synchronicity. It’s not just an LP by The Police. Kids, ask your parents.)
The beauty of responsive web design becomes obvious when you see your site in smart phones, tablets, and widescreen desktop browsers. It’s as if your site was redesigned to perfectly fit that specific environment. And yet there is but one actual design—a somewhat plastic design, if you will. An extensible design, if you prefer. It’s what some of us were going for with “liquid” web design back in the 1990s, only it doesn’t suck. Powered by CSS media queries, it’s the resurrection of a Dao of Web Design and a spiffy new best practice. All the kids are doing it.
Well, anyway, some of the cool ones are. See also the newly retooled-per-responsive-design Journal by Mr Hicks. Hat tip: Mr Stocks. I obviously have some work to do on this site. And you may on yours.
Seen any good responsive redesigns lately?
A_Book_Apart
A_List_Apart
Accessibility
Best_practices
Blogs_and_Blogging
Design
Ideas
The_Essentials
UX
Usability
User_Experience
Web_Design
Web_Design_History
Web_Standards
books
responsive
retooled
collison
narrow
simon
resurrection
spiffy
shared
from google
The blog of Mr Simon Collison, retooled as responsive web design. The narrow version.
See more versions in Mr Collison’s “Media Query Layouts” set on Flickr.
Read the article that started it all. Coming soon as a book by Mr Ethan Marcotte from A Book Apart. (The current A Book Apart book, Mr Jeremy Keith’s HTML5 For Web Designers, ships Friday. Mr Ethan Marcotte will be our guest this Thursday, June 24, on The Big Web Show. Synchronicity. It’s not just an LP by The Police. Kids, ask your parents.)
The beauty of responsive web design becomes obvious when you see your site in smart phones, tablets, and widescreen desktop browsers. It’s as if your site was redesigned to perfectly fit that specific environment. And yet there is but one actual design—a somewhat plastic design, if you will. An extensible design, if you prefer. It’s what some of us were going for with “liquid” web design back in the 1990s, only it doesn’t suck. Powered by CSS media queries, it’s the resurrection of a Dao of Web Design and a spiffy new best practice. All the kids are doing it.
Well, anyway, some of the cool ones are. See also the newly retooled-per-responsive-design Journal by Mr Hicks. Hat tip: Mr Stocks. I obviously have some work to do on this site. And you may on yours.
Seen any good responsive redesigns lately?
june 2010 by cloudseer
Search Party
september 2009 by cloudseer
Triple Issue No. 292 of A List Apart, for people who make websites, is all about search.
Testing Search for Relevancy and Precision
by JOHN FERRARA
Despite the fact that site search often receives the most traffic, it’s also the place where the user experience designer bears the least influence. Few tools exist to appraise the quality of the search experience, much less strategize ways to improve it. But relevancy testing and precision testing offer hope. These are two tools you can use to analyze and improve the search user experience.
Internal Site Search Analysis: Simple, Effective, Life Altering!
by AVINASH KAUSHIK
Your search and clickstream data is missing a key ingredient: customer intent. You have all the clicks, the pages people viewed, and where they bailed, but not why they came to the site. Your internal site-search data contains that missing ingredient: intent. Learn five ways to analyze your internal site-search data—data that’s easy to get, to understand, and to act on.
Beyond Goals: Site Search Analytics from the Bottom Up
by LOU ROSENFELD
Top-down analytics are great for creating measurable goals you can use to benchmark and evaluate the performance of your content and designs. But bottom-up analysis teaches you something new and unexpected about your customers—something goal-driven analysis can’t show you. Discover the kinds of information users want, and identify your site’s most urgent mistakes.
Illustration by Kevin Cornell.
A_List_Apart
Publications
Publishing
Search
UX
Web_Design
shared
from google
Testing Search for Relevancy and Precision
by JOHN FERRARA
Despite the fact that site search often receives the most traffic, it’s also the place where the user experience designer bears the least influence. Few tools exist to appraise the quality of the search experience, much less strategize ways to improve it. But relevancy testing and precision testing offer hope. These are two tools you can use to analyze and improve the search user experience.
Internal Site Search Analysis: Simple, Effective, Life Altering!
by AVINASH KAUSHIK
Your search and clickstream data is missing a key ingredient: customer intent. You have all the clicks, the pages people viewed, and where they bailed, but not why they came to the site. Your internal site-search data contains that missing ingredient: intent. Learn five ways to analyze your internal site-search data—data that’s easy to get, to understand, and to act on.
Beyond Goals: Site Search Analytics from the Bottom Up
by LOU ROSENFELD
Top-down analytics are great for creating measurable goals you can use to benchmark and evaluate the performance of your content and designs. But bottom-up analysis teaches you something new and unexpected about your customers—something goal-driven analysis can’t show you. Discover the kinds of information users want, and identify your site’s most urgent mistakes.
Illustration by Kevin Cornell.
september 2009 by cloudseer
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