Monthly Archives: April 2009

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Posted by Michael Alfaro on April 28, 2009

In Long Island, For $99 a Month, 100 Mbps Broadband Arrives

For those of us that have FIOS, we realize how important competition is between the cable companies and the phone companies. We don’t want either of these greedy businesses end up with a monopoly again!

Cablevision, the Bethpage, N.Y.-based cable and Internet service provider, has continued its tradition of being a cable industry innovator by introducing 100-megabits-per-second service in Long Island. The service, dubbed Optimum Online Ultra, utilizes DOCSIS 3.0 technology to deliver the ultra-broadband experience over cable’s wires and comes with ability to send data upstream at 15 Mbps. It starts at $99 a month, will be available starting May 11 and will be the fastest service from a cable provider anywhere in the U.S.”

Read whole article here


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Posted by Michael Alfaro on April 28, 2009

10 Dirty Little Web Development Tricks

“We all have them – little coding tricks and snippets of knowledge that we’ve picked up over years of experimentation and evolution of our processes, that are now part of our regular routine and save us time, gnashing of teeth and allow us to work quickly and efficiently. Here’s some of mine – perhaps you know a few of these already – I’d be interested in hearing yours in the comments.”

Read whole article here


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Posted by Michael Alfaro on April 28, 2009

Get Wireframing: The All-In-One Guide

“Wireframing is a great tool to incorporate into your projects as it allows for rapid prototyping and helps to pinpoint any potential problems. I personally find it invaluable on projects to have a visual representation of content, hierarchy and layout. Overall it’s an excellent step to incorporate into your project before the design process begins for both you and your clients.

I am continually intrigued about how other firms and individuals incorporate the wireframing stage into their process. I know i’m not the only one, so this list aims to group together some of the best techniques, tools and resources to help you create effective wireframes.”

Click here whole article


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Posted by Michael Alfaro on April 27, 2009

World’s Smallest Bodybuilder

Derrick’s boy from back in the day :)


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Posted by Michael Alfaro on April 27, 2009

Local Wisdom \\Share EP6:Time tracking through TSheets.com

Check out how to simplify your time tracking process with TSheets.com and save time that can be spent on more important business building objectives. We go through the signup process, employee setup, project setup, tracking time through various methods and finally reports. You’ll learn about all the different ways you can submit your time into the website that ranges from the web to twitter to the IPhone! Send requests for screencasts to share@localwisdom.com and follow us at twitter.com/localwisdom

Show Notes: TSheets.com. The BlackBaud labs article that shows how to implement the Windows based IPhone emulator here

Subscribe to on Itunes:
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Posted by Pinaki Kathiari on April 27, 2009

Brand Aid Author Praises Johnson & Johnson for Uniting Branding and Technology

ConsultingMag.com just did an interview with Allen Adamson, managing director of Landor Associates and author of Brand Aid.

His main theme focuses around uniting brand experts and technology experts. I whole heartedly agree and I’m looking forward to reading the book.

In his interview with consultingmag.com, he praises Johnson & Johnson and their baby care division:

Most marketers are finally getting up to speed. I think Johnson & Johnson is doing some of it very well, particularly for their baby division. They have known for years that moms talking to each other are a key vehicle to getting their brand message into that marketplace. They have the [YouTube] baby channel, and they really created a whole platform for new moms to talk to each other.


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Posted by Derrick Larane on April 23, 2009

The First Apple Mac Virus Rears its Ugly Head

IBotnet Virus: Apple’s First Worm

Researchers are reporting the first Macintosh-specific worm to be found “in the wild” on the Internet, the IBotnet Virus. The good news is that, as far as worms go, this one seems to be a weakling.

Symantec guesses that only a couple of thousand machines have been infected. That being the case, it likely won’t be of any practical value to cyber criminals, which are known to use networks of millions of PCs to perpetrate denial service attacks or send huge volumes of spam, for example.

The IBotnet virus is a Mac-specific Trojan Horse program that infects a machine only by downloading a pirated copy of iWork, the Apple productivity suite or Adobe Photoshop CS4. It does not spread from peer-to-peer on its own.

The finger is being pointed at BitTorrent, a popular site that enables users to share large files, as the avenue by which pirated copies were downloaded onto Mac computers.

Experts say iBotNet infects only a few thousand computers at most and is not a danger to the average Mac user. Some people won’t even notice the effect of it.

“Quite frankly there is no functionality in this ‘bot’ that we have not seen before,” Dave Marcus, head of research and communications at McAfee Avert Labs, said in a blog post. “The only thing of concern is that it affects the Mac platform, which certainly is fresh territory.”

In a statement, Apple said it is working to prevent security problems.

“Apple takes security very seriously and has a great track record of addressing potential vulnerabilities before they can affect users,” the statement says.

While the security experts probably won’t come out and say it, this whole scare appears to be an elaborate to provide “conceptual truth” –ie: hackers attempting to put perceived snooty Mac users in their place by highlighting the fact that their (news flash) operating system of choice isn’t so secure after all.


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Posted by Michael Alfaro on April 22, 2009

\\Share EP5:Loading XML through flash from another domain or website

We setup a flash swf on 2 websites and they both depend on a single XML feed. Learn why only the website that actually hosts the XML feed for the flash swf’s actually works and how to get the other website’s flash swf to be able to use the same XML feed. It’s all about Adobe flash XML security and how to properly setup the XML feed. Send requests for screencasts to share@localwisdom.com and follow us at twitter.com/localwisdom
Show Notes: Original post that the screencast was based on here

Subscribe to on Itunes:
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Posted by Derrick Larane on April 19, 2009

Typeface Inspired by Comic Books Has Become a Font of Ill Will

Vincent Connare designed the ubiquitous, bubbly Comic Sans typeface, but he sympathizes with the world-wide movement to ban it.

Mr. Connare has looked on, alternately amused and mortified, as Comic Sans has spread from a software project at Microsoft Corp. 15 years ago to grade-school fliers and holiday newsletters, Disney ads and Beanie Baby tags, business emails, street signs, Bibles, porn sites, gravestones and hospital posters about bowel cancer.

The font, a casual script designed to look like comic-book lettering, is the bane of graphic designers, other aesthetes and Internet geeks. It is a punch line: “Comic Sans walks into a bar, bartender says, ‘We don’t serve your type.’” On social-messaging site Twitter, complaints about the font pop up every minute or two. An online comic strip shows a gang kicking and swearing at Mr. Connare.

The jolly typeface has spawned the Ban Comic Sans movement, nearly a decade old but stronger now than ever, thanks to the Web. The mission: “to eradicate this font” and the “evil of typographical ignorance.”

“If you love it, you don’t know much about typography,” Mr. Connare says. But, he adds, “if you hate it, you really don’t know much about typography, either, and you should get another hobby.”

Typefaces convey meaning, typographers say. Helvetica is an industry standard, plain and reliable. Times New Roman is classic. Depending on your point of view, Comic Sans is fun, breezy, silly or vulgar and lazy. It can be “analogous to showing up for a black-tie event in a clown costume,” warns the Ban Comic Sans movement’s manifesto. The font’s original name was Comic Book, but Mr. Connare thought that didn’t sound like a font name. He used Sans (short for sans-serif) because most of the lettering, except for the uppercase I, doesn’t have serifs, the small features at the end of strokes.

Mr. Connare, 48 years old, now works at Dalton Maag, a typography studio in London, and finds his favorite creation — a sophisticated typeface called Magpie — eclipsed by Comic Sans. He cringes at the most improbable manifestations of his Frankenstein’s monster font and rarely uses it himself, but he says he tries to be polite when he meets people excited to be in the presence of the creator. Googling himself, he once found a Black Sabbath band fan site that used Comic Sans. The site’s creators even credited him. “You can’t regulate bad taste,” he says.

Still, he is tickled by — and trades on — his reputation. A picture signed by Mickey Mouse that was sent to Mr. Connare to thank him after Disney used the font in ads hangs in his house. His wife, Sue Rider, introduces him at parties as the father of Comic Sans. A friend of his claims to know someone who broke up with her boyfriend in a letter written in Comic Sans to soften the blow. But there certainly hasn’t been much money in it for Mr. Connare since Microsoft owns the font.

Of course, there would be no movement to ban Comic Sans if it weren’t so popular. “We’ve been using that font for years,” says Peter Phyo, a manager at O’Neals’ restaurant across the street from Lincoln Center in Manhattan. “That is just the procedure. I wouldn’t know the exact reasoning. It also looks nice on the menu.” Mr. Phyo says he hasn’t had any complaints.

The proliferation of Comic Sans is something of a fluke. In 1994, Mr. Connare was working on a team at Microsoft creating software that consumers eventually would use on home PCs. His designer’s sensibilities were shocked, he says, when, one afternoon, he opened a test version of a program called Microsoft Bob for children and new computer users. The welcome screen showed a cartoon dog named Rover speaking in a text bubble. The message appeared in the ever-so-sedate Times New Roman font.

Mr. Connare says he pulled out the two comic books he had in his office, “The Dark Knight Returns” and “Watchmen,” and got to work, inspired by the lettering and using his mouse to draw on a computer screen. Within a week, he had designed his legacy.

A product manager recognized the font’s appeal and included it as a standard typeface in the operating system for Microsoft Windows. As home computers became widespread, Comic Sans took on a goofy life of its own.

Out to crush that goofy life is Ban Comic Sans, whose weapons include disapproving stickers, to be slapped on inappropriate uses of the font wherever they are found.

Ban Comic Sans was conceived in the fall of 1999, when Holly Sliger was a senior at the Herron School of Art and Design in Indianapolis, studying typography and graphic design. Designing a museum gallery guide for a children’s hands-on artifact exhibit, Ms. Sliger says she was horrified when her bosses told her to use Comic Sans. She told them it was a cliché, and printed out a list of other typefaces she thought better suited the project. They insisted on Comic Sans.

“It was like hell for me,” she says. “It was everywhere, like an epidemic.”

In the midst of the project, she met her future husband, Dave Combs, at synagogue one Saturday. He was a recent college graduate working as a graphic designer, and she knew he would sympathize. “This is horrible,” he remembers saying. She says, “That’s when I knew he’s the guy I would marry.” The couple did wed a year later and continued to gripe about the font.

ing for his master’s degree in type design at the University of Reading in Berkshire, England. He got an email from Mr. Combs asking for permission to use his photo for stickers, T-shirts and coffee mugs to promote “typography awareness” for the movement to ban Comic Sans that he and his wife had founded. Busy and distracted, Mr. Connare said OK.

“It sounded a bit silly,” he says. He didn’t think it would amount to much.

But the Combses had global ambitions. A map hangs in their daughter’s bedroom, marked with little red flags to show the dozens of locations around the world from which people have requested their stickers. “They’re like parking tickets,” Mr. Combs says. As the movement grew, Mr. Connare’s image became the logo for Comic Sans bashing.

Mr. Connare eventually, in February 2004, asked the Combses to stop using his picture, and they did.

Today, Mr. Connare sometimes speaks at Internet conferences, using 41-page PowerPoint presentations written in you-know-what. He talks with the Combses about creating an “I Love/I Hate Comic Sans” picture book together.

The font has become so popular that it’s approaching retro chic. Design shop Veer is selling a T-shirt with a picture of human heart on it made entirely of tiny Comic Sans characters. Veer’s text: “Love it, love to hate it, or hate that you love it.”

Source Link: Wall Street Journal


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Posted by Michael Alfaro on April 19, 2009

Vertically justify column heights through JQuery

The Problem

Unequal column heights make CSS layouts difficult to manage when the height of content cannot be known in advance, particularly in scenarios where absolute positioning is in use. There are a variety of strategies to deal with this issue — here’s a jQuery based fix.

Read rest of the solution here, this is what we’re using:

http://michael.futreal.com/jquery/vjustify


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