Mar
30
2007
The Genesis Group website was relaunched today. This was a complete visual makeover and IA streamline project. I am very happy with the site and some of the coding features I used, including:
- sIFR 3.0 Worked like a charm. much easier to tweak than previous versions
- Nifty Corners I know, there are a lot of other methods for applying rounded corners to a site. I like this one best. For now.
Comments and questions, as always, are appreciated.
Dec
23
2006
After months of waiting for new features and better plugins, I am ending my relationship with Bloglines. It’s not as though I have been disappointed in Bloglines. I have often recommended it to colleagues, friends, and complete strangers. I find it to be a completely capable feed reader.
I have been very busy lately and haven’t been able to keep up on my blog subscriptions. When I could I would check into my Bloglines account, only to be interrupted and taken away to another website. Upon returning to Bloglines, I would have to start over…often times forgetting where I had left off. Herein lies the one simple feature that has forced me to change feed readers: Google Reader saves my state. It allows me to pick up where I left off. This is very important to me.
Now if I can only get the good folks at google to allow me to search within my subscriptions…
Nov
28
2006
It seems that new stock photography sites are cropping up again. Links to stock photo sites are passed along to me all the time. usually the sites are defunct by the time I pull them up. Read the rest of this entry »
Nov
6
2006
37signals have made Getting Real available online for free. It is in HTML format, but you can still buy a PDF. This excellent book covers how to build successful web applications the “smarter, faster, easier way”. They even throw in a short chapter on interface design. A must must read.
Oct
20
2006
CSS is the new black.
Actually, it is the new #000. Unless you have been under a web design boulder for the last few years, you should have noticed that slicing and dicing images and cramming everything into a table is quickly emerging as the predominant skill set among underemployed web designers.
Tables are becoming a thing of the past. CSS is quickly becoming the standard for both typographical and layout control in websites. As browsers support more and more CSS properties, designers are more and more inclined to use CSS to its fullest intent. Why are they making the switch to CSS? Sites designed with CSS are generally more accessible, more flexible, and more usable than their table-based counterparts.
But this isn’t about the virtues of Cascading Style Sheets. It is about making the switch with as little headache as possible. Obtaining a ticket for the CSS bandwagon comes at a price. Designing a website without tables, or even using CSS for text effects or typographical control can often be a daunting task. First there is actually learning the syntax for CSS. Then, there is predicting how your CSS will behave in various browsers. Not to mention breaking all of the bad habits developed while using tables for layout and design.
Enter TopStyle
TopStyle is to CSS what Dreamweaver is to html. TopStyle is a fully-featured CSS editor developed by Nick Bradbury. Sound familiar? He should. He developed a very famous HTML editor known as HomeSite. There are two versions of TopStyle, a free ‘lite’ version and a pro version with many perks for advanced CSS design.
TopStyle Lite is a free download with no equal. It has all of the standard features found in the CSS editors built into other programs–code hints, color-coding, style inspectors, etc. In addition to these features, TopStyle Lite adds a live preview of the entire style sheet, tight integration with Dreamweaver, and alphabetized class lists. One great feature is the ability to choose harmonious and complimentary colors from TopStyle’s ingenious Color Picker dialog box. As you choose colors for properties in your CSS, TopStyle auto-magically suggests harmonious and complimentary colors that would work with your current color selection. All of this, and much more, for the low price of nothing.
TopStyle Pro
TopStyle Pro, available for $79.95, is the Winnebago of CSS editors. It seems to have every conceivable option ever needed in a CSS editor. It even has a deep-freezer. In addition to all of the features found in the grossly under-priced TopStyle Lite, TopStyle Pro includes built in W3C validators, a Bobby checker, and a browser checker that displays browser support for any given CSS property. TopStyle Pro also includes a handy Selector Wizard that is extremely helpful for complex CSS. (I.e. contextual, child, sibling, and other advanced selectors). As if that wasn’t enough, one can find CSS tutorials and a powerful CSS Color Palette editor.
In fact, with all of the features included with TopStyle Pro, one can easily get lost. Fortunately, all of the panels and toolbars are customizable to fit the needs of any particular designer. So whether you are new to CSS and trying to get a grip on all of it’s intricacies, or a CSS veteran looking for an easier way to push those intricacies to the limit, TopStyle Lite and TopStyle Pro are definitely a must have in your designers toolbox.
TopStyle is available at http://www.bradsoft.com/topstyle/