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Dan Rubin's SuperfluousBanter

Suffering from chronic idiocy since 1977

Archive for March, 2004

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Dan, You Need to Post!

Friday, March 19th, 2004

Dan is a busy man. Yet I tell him to care more about his blog. He has valu­able
stuff to say. I have near spir­i­tual con­ver­sa­tions with him on a daily basis
(such as “Dude, that client is such an $%^#@*!&
and “Tables? Who said tables? Did he just say tables?” You know,
the real stuff.) He’s a smart guy — his design and CSS skills elec­trify
me every day. One word: fuck­ing impres­sive (ermmm, that’s two).

So today is now offi­cialy “Dan-needs-to-post-day”. Show him your
love. Tell him you miss him. What­ever, make sure he posts some­thing —
any­thing. Here is what we will do: post com­ments and let your voice be heard! He needs to know you care about him (he is a sen­si­ble guy and has feel­ings
too, really!) So, make this hap­pen! I trust you.

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Weekend Reading (12)

Friday, March 19th, 2004

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Shaken, Not Stirred

Friday, March 19th, 2004

Bond, James Bond

Girl: “Do you want to check my
fig­ures?” Bond: “Oh,
I’m sure they’re per­fectly rounded.”

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Ridiculously Cool Comment Tools

Thursday, March 18th, 2004

The blo­gos­phere is being all inno­v­a­tive. Way to go! I’ve observed some
very cool com­ment tools and fea­tures over the last cou­ple of days. I’m
sup­posed to study hard for my last ever exam in my mas­ter degree. Oh well, you
know how that goes. Thus it was new blog check­ing time (so much for effec­tive
time man­age­ment).

Com­ment Preview

This is a very use­ful tool not only because it’s user friendly but also
because it’s just plain smart. Less server requests, less load and best
of all — less bull­shit. I spot­ted this cool fea­ture on blogs by Jon
Hicks
and Shaun Inman.

Live comment preview

These two exam­ples just look so damn lick­able™ and are smartly imple­mented.
You can read how
Jon put this nifty fea­ture on his blog
by check­ing his entry about the whole
process and the code behind it.

Com­ment Textarea

Aren’t tiny textar­eas a pain in the butt? What­ever, I think they are.
I hate scrolling all the time to see what I typed or make adjust­ments. But fear
no more, some­one thought of a solu­tion. I spot­ted this new (atleast to me) fea­ture
on Binary Bon­sai — blog of a scan­di­na­vian
fel­low by the name of Michael Heile­mann. By the way his web­site is worth a visit
— not only does he have good taste, his con­tent is worth­while too!

Change comment textarea size

Pretty cool stuff, eh? I think both these tools dra­mat­i­cally increase user
expe­ri­ence on blogs and make adding com­ments a breeze. Have you spot­ted other
cool new fea­tures? If so, let me know in the com­ments.

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Websites Have Two Layers

Thursday, March 18th, 2004

To keep this post focused and sim­ple I will assume that web­sites have two lay­ers:
design (UI/presentation) and code (technology/mark-up). Which layer is most
impor­tant in build­ing a suc­ces­ful web­site? Both you will say. But in the end
the web is about inter­ac­tion. Jason
Fried at 37signals on the topic
:

There’s way too much talk about CSS and XHTML and Stan­dards and
Acces­si­bil­ity and not enough talk about peo­ple. CSS and Stan­dards Com­pli­ant
Code are just tools — you have to know what to build with these tools.”

Peo­ple, peo­ple, peo­ple! Web design is a bit like a car —
the engine (tech­nol­ogy) and every­thing else that makes using it bear­able (inter­face).
Over at the won­der­fully designed Airbag, thoughts
of Greg Storey
fol­low a sim­i­lar pattern:

Now I’m all for a good con­ver­sa­tion and exhi­bi­tion of great design work
but enough is enough. Web stan­dards and style sheets are here to stay (ya hooray!).
It’s time to move on. So let’s talk about money and metrics.”

So? Is the fuzz about XHTML, CSS and other new excit­ing tech­nolo­gies over?
Can we move on? If you buy a car you assume its engine will func­tion. Nowa­days
there are no shame­lessly bad engine man­u­fac­tur­ers left. What really dif­fer­en­ti­ates
brands such as Ford, BMW and Volk­swa­gen is the expe­ri­ence they sell. The auto­mo­bile
indus­try is a mature indus­try. The web is not — yet. Look around. Do we
see stan­dard com­pli­ant code every­where? Can we assume web­sites have solid mark-up?

Per­son­ally I agree with both Jason and Greg. Yet I think they’re look­ing
in the wrong places. The blo­gos­phere tends to talk about code. Yadi yada val­i­da­tion
yada yadi stan­dards yada yada. We are part of a small group that cares and knows
about good mark-up. But there’s more hap­pen­ing around us. SxSW
is not solely a user expe­ri­ence con­fer­ence, nor is it purely a design event.
SxSW just hap­pens to attract a lot of peo­ple talk­ing about CSS. Leave the coders
do the talk­ing about what they know best: clean mark-up. They should not stop
inno­vat­ing or spread­ing the word — on the contrary.

If I want to dis­cuss all things user expe­ri­ence I post a mes­sage to CHI-WEB,
check the lat­est news at Infor­ma­tion
Design
and have a good laugh with the folks from OK/Cancel.
Oh, and maybe even read what Jakob Nielsen
has to say. It’s not a mat­ter of “or”, it’s a mat­ter
of “and”. We need both. I focus on design, not code — it’s
what I do and talk about. If you want to change the indus­try put your money
where your mouth is, but don’t tell peo­ple to stop doing what they love.

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