An Interesting New Approach to Tag Browsing

The tag cloud appears to be the ubiquitous web 2.0 user interface control. When I first saw the cloud, I thought it was ugly. I did get used to it due largely to exposure. Despite its ugliness, the cloud packs a lot of useful information into a relatively small space and its fairly usable. However, I still think we need alternative design ideas for the function of the cloud. Here's one I came across which here is used to browse Flickr. You just type a tag word in, and you will get a 6x6 grid of thumbnails. When you move the mouse, you see a circle of related tags. Speed isn't its greatest feature but the idea is interesting especially the thumbnails in the center and the ability to drill down into them further within the control. The one addition I'd make is to make the circle of related tags illustrate relative relatedness by distance from the center. But still, some interesting user interface design work.

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Simplicity vs. Complexity

John Maeda of MIT has gone through an interesting transformation career-wise going from computer science to art. That transformation has now led him to interesting insights into simplicity and complexity. Here's a recent talk of his on this topic. What I found most interesting is the insight that there is a lot complexity and simplicity in the world and humans like both, but in the right context. It is figuring out which context you're designing for that is the trick to great design.

TED | Talks | John Maeda: Simplicity patterns (video)

Amazing 3D Street Designs

Do you normally think of graffiti as subversive art spray-painted illegally on the walls of a city? A number of arttists, including Edgar Mueller, Julian Beever and Kurt Wenner, defy that stereotype, painting and chalking openly on city streets and sidewalks. Check out these brief bios with 20 amazing images of their work from around the world! This stuff is truly amazing. I'd love to see it in real life.

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RIA Competitive Landscape - Silverlight

Rich Internet Application user interfaces are the new competitive areas of focus on the competitive landscape and Microsoft's new "Silverlight" looks like a formidable player. It lets Web developers and designers create "rich, engaging user experiences with 2-D graphics, animation, images, media, and video," to use Microsoft's own description. Silverlight competes in this arena with Adobe Flash and Flex, with OpenLaszlo and Curl, and with a variety of AJAX (Asynchronous JavaScript and XML) frameworks.

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Blasting the Myth of the Fold

Designing for the browser always brings up a discussion of designing above the fold. Well, this article sites some interesting research that questions the fixation many designers have on the fold. The author points out, "there is an astonishing amount of disbelief that the users of web pages have learned to scroll and that they do so regularly. Holding on to this disbelief – this myth that users won’t scroll to see anything below the fold – is doing everyone a great disservice, most of all our users". Select the article below to read more...

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UI Designers Learning from Animation Artists

Apple UI designers have learned how to grab the user's attention using a classic physical animation technique called squash and stretch. Think of a cartoon nose squishing exaggeratedly as it bumps into a wall, then going pop! as it pulls away—that’s squash and stretch. Animators have been using it for decades to give their drawn figures depth and weight As the newest Web 2.0 RIAs are getting more into what might be called cinematic, UI designers could do well to look to animation experts like apparently Apple has done. See the article below for more information.



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Active Involvement in Web 2.0 Still Low

New results show that a small percentage of users of so-called social computing or Web 2.0 sites get actively involved in directly contributing to the site. An article on vnunet.com summarizes the results. A key point that is made is that most of these sites, like YouTube, Flickr, and Wikipedia have huge numbers of people actually viewing them so if a relatively small percentage of them contribute, that still accounts for some significant contribution numbers. However, it is important for those building Web 2.0 capabilities into the projects and products to keep these percentages in mind when tracking both passive and active interactions.

Fashion and Technology Meet

I've been seeing a trend toward technology companies focusing more on great design - in fact fashionable design. Geeks of Doom has an article that points out that electronics giant Philips and crystal company Swarovski are collaborating on a line of fashionable tech accessories called Active Crystals. So far, the Active Crystals line has unveiled four sets of headphones of polished silver metal embedded with crystals: Space, Icon, Amazone (in-ear headphones), and Mirage is of the (ear hook headphones). See the "read more" link below for more information.

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Intelligent Designs: Edward Tufte Champions Truth and Beauty in Analytical Design

When information needs to be communicated, Edward Tufte demands both truth and beauty. He is the father of analytical design and a visionary in driving for optimal integration of purposefulness and aesthetics in design. Fran Smith has written a very good summary of Tufte's history, work, and influence. See the "read more" link below for the Stanford Magazine story.

 

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Everything you ever wanted to know about AJAX but were afraid to ask...

This aims to be the simplest possible AJAX example, using only static HTML files. Examples can be tried on the website, or downloaded and run locally. First, there is a (short) explanation on the DOM, then on the XML HTTP Request Object and finally the two are combined to make AJAX. A more useful example with a PHP-driven backend is also available.



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Palm Hires iPhone Designer

I find it interesting and heartening that designers are seen as critical and central to a company's future success. The article below reports that the key iPhone designer was hired by competitor Palm in the hopes that Palm may be able to come up with a design as good or perhaps better than the amazing iPhone one. Quite apart from the details of this particular story, it is interesting how important design has become.



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Adopting Web 2.0 Externally but not Internally

A couple of recent announcements from two large, very well-known organizations provides some interesting data points on how Web 2.0 is affecting the product designs and business processes of otherwise very traditional institutions. Both USA Today and the U.S. Patent and Trademark office have recently unveiled strategies for letting their users use two-way Web capabilities to contribute directly to the products and services they offer. And many other mainstream companies, such as Pepsi as well as GM and XM Radio have been exploring externally-facing Web 2.0 concepts in their products for a while now.


See the article for more: More organizations shift to Web 2.0 while IT departments remain wary

 

Visual Design Characteristics of Web 2.0

Web 2.0 is many things. In fact, some would argue that it is too many things and, as a result, people have a difficult time figuring out what it encompasses. I won't go into that here. However, one key element of Web 2.0 is its unique visual design trend. Reflections, clean, simple, and wordmarks without the final consonant. The link below includes a summary of over 65 tutorials, references, and related resources, which have been designed to help you to create graphics in Web 2.0-Look. Have a look and start Web 2.0izing your designs.

 

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Way to go Go Daddy and Google!


After a bit of back and forth with Go Daddy support and references back to the instructions on Blogger, I've managed to get this blog accessible from my new karelvredenburg.com domain. Its so cool when things like this work.

Its been my experience, by the way, that the new Web 2.0 companies like Digg.com, Google, and Go Daddy, are particularly good at support and also base ease of use. I had a problem with my Digg.com account, I resolved it in a matter of hours via multiple emails with their support staff each time getting a response within 30 to 60 minutes. I experienced the same with Go Daddy over the last few days. I even got an unsolicited phone call!

So, the site is up on the domain and I'm all set now to blog at a single location.

Moved to a new domain

I've created a new domain for all of my blog activity at karelvredenburg.com. This should simplify my blogging and simplify people finding my blog material. It wasn't immediately obvious how to do the various steps in setting up a new domain name and then getting my blog on that domain name. Let me describe it for anyone who wants to do the same.

Details to come...

Using Social Computing to Stay Sane!

I think the social computing aspects of Web 2.0 provide a mechanism for communication between people from across the globe to share ideas, strategies, personal experiences, and get advice. Web 2.0 also simply connects people so that nobody is ever alone again!

But then again, spending all your time online could prevent you from making actual human connections with other people.

I'd very much appreciate your thoughts on this by providing a comment to this blog entry.