"Community Responsibility" on Digital Web Magazine

Fri 30 Mar 2007

First off, I want to show my support for “Stop Cyberbullying Day”, today, 30 March 2007.

Technorati tag

Related to that, two days ago I posted a short “news” item on Digital Web with some of my thoughts on recent instances of the Internet’s “underbelly” rising up to shock the web-standards/blogger community. It took me a good long while to research and write, but I felt compelled to try to find some conclusions from the disparate events. Primarily, I wanted to look at the momentum added by the crappy events to the growing need to shape web-standard design/development into a solidly defined craft. During my research, I had the good fortune to chat with Kerri Hicks—an extremely talented fellow staff member at Digital Web—about the state of the industry. Kerri has a rich background and a very smart perspective about our industry, and its current state of waffling between what’s almost cults-of-personality and a real, defined industry.

The way I see it, we’re at a crossroads. Define it as a true discipline, like its sister industries, or risk leaving behind those of us who do web-standards web design/development in a corporate environment. To my perspective, the industry is led by the freelance/consultancy mentality—that’s the path to the comfort, good work and glory of web-standards. But considering the impact of the sub-group on the acceptance and business momentum for web-standards and progressive web ideas, the ignoring that segment seems dumb. But we do it, to some extent, in conference panel topics, blog posts, even articles in our community publications like Digital Web. How do we better address people on the fringes of web-standards at our conferences, events and in our day-to-day geek interactions?

I’m sure I’ll post more on this as the week and conversation continues.

geek-out | permalink | comments (0)


A Note about "Broadsheet" Style

Thu 29 Mar 2007

I’m far from coining a style, but I want to add a note about my new navigation style you can see just up above this post if you’re not reading this via RSS. I call it “broadsheet”, as an echo of the old “wild west” broadsheet newspapers, which featured hand-built printing equipment and sometimes hand-lettering for the really low-budget papers. I can’t find good examples on the Web—books are better—but some of the hand-detailing is gorgeous and brassy at the same time. I blame “Deadwood” entirely for the increase in my aesthetic fixation with the Wild West. That being said, I’ve always liked it, so maybe it was just gasoline-to-fire.

Since this site is my own toybox, I use these pages to tinker with new CSS effects until I think they’re ready to go into my professional UX work. One effect I have in development is borders on page elements and links, and how they work throughout different interactive states. Browser support for advanced border effects isn’t stellar, but it does graceful degrade down to IE6 and alt stylesheets can cover beyond that in business settings. Based on the accessibility/usability notion that one shouldn’t rely on color alone to convey interactivity, I added border density changes and background-color changes to emphasize each interactive state distinctly.

&One of the style goals of “broadsheet” is to mimic old wild-west typeface flourishes, best summed up in Larabee’s typefaceVanilla Whale”. Top and bottom borders comes pretty close, in my mind. Eventually, I’d love to either get CSS to create the signature diagonal linking words like “&”, but I might also just sIFR select pieces in Larabee’s typeface itself, because I love his work. Lastly on the aesthetic side, I have a “low class” design idea brewing, in response to B-movies and Christopher Fahey’s “class” panel at SXSW. Think of “broadsheet” as the first salvo.

Another goal for “broadsheet” was to pack my navigation elements full of links to things I want referenced/linked/crawled. I didn’t want it to distract too much from the major pieces, so I tried to use size to indicate main components and supplemental information or sub-categories. I tried to visually mark links that open external sites, but also collect them into meaningful groups. The end result is really a “sentence” style, with B-movie, tabloid wording, to boot. Final steps: I need to complete work on my “digital self” page, which is supposed to be an “about me” page, but I’m having trouble writing anything satisfactory, so for now it’s all external links.

Coincidentally around the same time as I started my little project, Jeffrey Zeldman posted about the redesign of Happy Cog, which uses “sentence” navigation. And another friend, Garrett Murray, recently redesigned his blog Maniacal Rage with a similar “sentence”-based style and a killer hover effect. Garrett, in turn, credits Megnut for his design, which also uses ellipses and begins to wrap back to my “broadsheet” derivative.

One happy, segmented circle of people experimenting with navigation.

geek-out, picayune | permalink | comments (0)


A Short Note About My First Visit to South-by-Southwest ‘07

Fri 16 Mar 2007

For a number of years, I’ve been a big fan of the idea of the SXSW (South by Southwest) Music Festival. As a world-class, indie music event throwing down each year—like your Sundance festival, mom—it takes the gumption of both Seattle’s own Bumbershoot music weekend and San Diego’s Street Scene, plus probably a few others, and combine them into one Super-Festival. But, being far away in Seattle, I have yet to attend. Only in the last year did I become aware of the two sibling festivals that occur just before SXSW Music, SXSW Interactive and SXSW Film.

In the middle of March of last year (2006), suddenly the blogs of most professional web designers, web developers and geeks were awash in breathless reviews of SXSW Interactive (hereafter SXSWi), enthusiasm and a “see ya next year” summer camp vibe. I didn’t really see the connection or over-aching theme, so I chalked it up to general geekiness and self-reference among blogs I read, and went on my merry feed-reading away.

This year, I had the great good fortune, due to my role as Prod Mgr with Digital Web Magazine, to attend the pre-meetup to SXSWi, Web Directions North (hereafter WDN; everybody loves acronyms—you do, don’t lie). WDN was absolutely fantastic, and truly a top-notch event in its own right. Two days of fabulous event organization, high-quality panels, meeting talented web geeks and lots of Wii, beer, food and fun. Add in two more days of geekery on the slopes of Whistler/Blackcomb—with Microsoft generously covering the bar tab in a real, hearty, beer-fueled embrace of the web-standards community—and I really can’t think of a more enjoyable career-related thing I’ve ever done. Or, even, if you count it among my vacations.

After WDN, my Dig-Web boss, Nick Finck, started pestering me about “Southby”, as it is called by some indeterminate number of geeks too lazy to say the whole name. After a sprint session to find out if my day job would cover any of it, I ended up taking vacation days to attend. (I hope it’s not a trend, but I’ll still do it every year if need be.) Blue Flavor kindly loaned bed space, and I moseyed into Austin, TX, with a set of quasi-ironic authentic cowboy boots…and absolutely NO idea of what would come.

I’m not going to review individual panels and events, since the are so thoroughly covered by just about every other blog I read. But I would like to comment on the character and quality of geeks at SXSWi. I’ve never met such a warm, engaging, outgoing group, and I’m thrilled to call them my peers. Every individual I met was sincere, eager to geek-out about any kind of topic, and genuinely stoked to be at SXSWi. I met more people than I could list (or spell), including most of the talented geeks who write the books, blogs and articles that get my through my day job. I tried my best to express my thanks as the festivities closed, but undoubtedly I missed a few hundred. To all—you goddamn rock, “see ya next year”.

The reason I wanted to comment comes from an observation, then a discussion I had with the ardent Jeremy Keith. I’m still taken aback by the number of people I met who blow apart the mold that geeks are introverted and flawed, socially. Most people I met were so strong of character, personality and elan* it was genuinely surprising. Which leaves me to wonder why. What is it about the public-facing side of the Web that attracts such a diverse group of people, with such similar senses of humor, geekery, passions and personality quirks? Sure, creative types are often strong on opinion, and even front-end programming has a strong creative element. And geeks are compelled by an internal need to join any nearby geekery, which is where SXSWi gets its heart.

But I wonder if we are shaped in personality by the inanity of the browser-wars? Slogging through W3C specs? Internalizing the cascading nature of CSS? Tabled designs, and the latter purging of? I don’t think blogs are the commonality—those also seem to me to be symptomatic of a similar strain in personalities, rather than the spark. I’m sure I’ll continue to think more on the matter, as the year continues. But, the net effect is SXSWi was such a massive confidence booster to me, as a person, as a geek and as a career woman, that I will always be grateful. I’d be remiss if I didn’t call out awe-inspiring conversations with Nick Finck, Andy Budd, Dan Rubin, Dave Shea, Derek Featherstone and Bokardo, aka Joshua Porter. All those gentlemen took moments out of their socializing to have frank discussions with me about the nature of this industry, and I’m proud take their advice to heart.

So, until next year, I will see you all online, and continually lament I don’t get to see you all in person nearly as often as I like. Which would be daily. really.

* arch-nemesis, look it up.

geek-out | permalink | comments (0)


Demographics Can Be Terrifying

Wed 14 Mar 2007

From the Big-Brother-benevolence of Claritas, via Hitwise:

“‘Young Digerati are the nation’s tech-savvy singles and couples living in fashionable neighborhoods on the urban fringe. Affluent, highly educated and ethnically mixed, Young Digerati communities are typically filled with trendy apartments and condos, fitness clubs and clothing boutiques, casual restaurants and all types of bars-from juice to coffee to microbrew.’

The lifestyle and media behaviors they are more likely than the general population to engage in, according to Claritas, are: shopping at Banana Republic, Amazon.com and Bloomingdale’s, going snowboarding and scuba diving, visiting spas, spending more than $3000 on foreign travel in the past year, watching IFC, Showtime and HBO, and driving an Audi A4. Sound familiar? There are even more statistics that can be gathered about the lifestyles of this segment, as shown here.”

It’s an S4, thank you very much.

picayune | permalink | comments (0)


Next Page »

+ - my current enthusiasm for this ui

© eightfold.net, tiffehr.com and tiffehr, a.k.a.Tiffany Fehr or Tiff Fehr. Thank you for your time and attention!