acturbo | 12 years ago | on: Show HN: A site using zero images – any feedback on the UI?
acturbo's comments
acturbo | 12 years ago | on: Rebuilding a simplified Firefox logo
acturbo | 12 years ago | on: Rebuilding a simplified Firefox logo
acturbo | 12 years ago | on: Windows 8.1 Preview
acturbo | 12 years ago | on: Intel App Framework 2.0 released (JavaScript library for mobile)
acturbo | 13 years ago | on: The Interview about flat design that wasn’t cool enough for the media
acturbo | 13 years ago | on: The 800 Pound Gorilla Amazon Tried to Kill is Google's Trojan Horse
i stopped reading after that.
acturbo | 13 years ago | on: Would you use PhoneGap again?
acturbo | 13 years ago | on: Would you use PhoneGap again?
I use jqMobi, now called Intel App Framework, to build a mobile website that targets all major mobile browsers. The jqMobi framework includes ~70 icons from icomoon embedded into its ui CSS. I needed a few more, so I initially tried to extend that by making another font file called icomoon-extra, uploading it to http://www.motobit.com/util/base64-decoder-encoder.asp to produce the base64 string and adding another @font-face to the jqMobi CSS. That didn't work for me, so i simply created a new icomoon-ac file that includes most of the original icons from the jqMobi icomoon selection, plus another ~30 or so icons that i needed. Now, i just use my icomoon-ac font in the framework and it works.
Regarding jqMobi, I absolutely love this framework. Much like the author of the original article, i looked at a bunch of frameworks. jQuery Mobile was my initial "no brainer" choice but it quickly lost favor with me because it was very difficult to customize. They really screwed it up, IMO. I looked at wink, joApp, dhtmlx, unify, uranium, embedjs, enyo, lungo, the-m-project, mobl, barleyjs, limejs, joshfire, lavaca, xui, zepto, chocolatechip, jQT, iUI. I ended up standardizing on jqMobi because it was based on a stripped down version of jQuery and it added a very logical and flexible framework for building mobile websites.
acturbo | 13 years ago | on: Show HN: Bookmarklet to show a website to someone without screencapturetool
I can see this working well with online presentation services such as http://www.rvl.io/, https://presentate.com/, https://speakerdeck.com/, https://www.lucidchart.com/, http://www.slid.us/ etc. Or build-your-own tools like http://jmpressjs.github.io/customize/, http://flowtime-js.marcolago.com/, http://imakewebthings.com/deck.js/, etc.
acturbo | 13 years ago | on: Changes to "key" parts of Windows 8 are coming
acturbo | 13 years ago | on: Changes to "key" parts of Windows 8 are coming
acturbo | 13 years ago | on: Changes to "key" parts of Windows 8 are coming
acturbo | 13 years ago | on: Changes to "key" parts of Windows 8 are coming
Also, selling 100 million units of Windows 8 is considered a failure at MS.
acturbo | 13 years ago | on: Changes to "key" parts of Windows 8 are coming
acturbo | 13 years ago | on: The Startup Side Project Bubble
Other people have already made great comments here. I just wanted to point out that side projects are how people learn new things and new technologies. Most side projects are never finished, nor do they make it to market. However, the process of working on the project was in itself beneficial as a learning tool. New technologies and new techniques get explored and tested, all during off hours. And guess who benefits from that?
Employers could consider these options ... - hire people that find the day time work to be interesting enough (i.e. don't hire superstars thinking they will bring sparkle to boring work) - provide good incentives to keep people focused on their day job - openly support side projects, people will respect that and give back to you (don't make people stress about working on a side project) - get involved with side projects and offer whatever you can to help - partner with people in their ventures, their idea may be better than yours - directly sponsor internal side projects that people can work on and vent their need to create/explore etc.
acturbo | 13 years ago | on: Lenovo unveils new ThinkPad design
I'm utterly fed up with the consumerization of power notebooks at the expense of the needs of productivity workers.
The last few years have been an outright de-evolution of screen resolutions for laptops ... i'm still waiting for a clear upgrade path.
I'm a technology marketing specialist. I design graphics and develop software and websites using Adobe Creative Suite, Visual Studio, and various other apps that require lots of screen real estate. It seems like computer companies think everyone buys notebooks to watch movies.
There are a millions of power users that require high resolution notebooks including engineers, CAD/CAM designers, architects, graphic designers, developers, etc. These groups form the best litmus test for determining quality wrt high-end technology.
And these groups are being alienated by technology companies -- both software and hardware. This includes the latest Windows 8 craptaculous dr. jekyll mr. hyde release, along with the numerous laptop vendors all trying to shove consumer-focused technology down the throats of power users that primarily use technology to PRODUCE THINGS.
The most insulting and infuriating thing is that the ThinkPad brand in particular grew famous from the loyalty of power-users like me. And instead of listening to us and delivering products that meet and exceed our needs, Lenovo (and other manufacturers) blindly chase after new consumer oriented customers at our expense.
The marketing morons at these companies (i know their "work" very well) are focused on generating growth and chasing after new markets -- at all costs. That's fine. Create a new brand to do that.
My advise to manufacturers of high-end products for long-term success:
- Create new brands to enter new markets
- Deliver high-end products that meet/exceed the needs of your most demanding customers
- Evolve core brands CAREFULLY
- If you don't use the product as your demanding customers do, then you don't understand the product, so you should not make drastic decisions that affect it
ac
acturbo | 13 years ago | on: The New Facebook News Feed: A UX Breakdown