febrero 27, 2010

43 of the best logos of January and February

Designers have been busy in the last two months with creating interesting logos. Zabransky, for example, did it again with an intelligent logo, brilliant actually, or should I call it Genius? Yeah, you know what I mean. Don’t be fooled by my appreciation for Jan, the other 42 logos are also incredible, cause that’s why they’re in this article. I’m gonna let them do the talking.

Aqua

aqua logo
Author: Pavel Stepanov

Awesome Industries

Awesome Industries logo
Author: Pavel Stepanov

Badava

Badava logo
Author: Shtef Sokolovich

Bamboo eatery

Bamboo eatery logo
Author: Siege

Beast media

Beast media logo
Author: Alex Tass

Big eat

Big eat logo
Author: nido

Cafe Expresso

Cafe Expresso logo
Author: constanc10

Chart Monster

Chart Monster logo
Author: Jerron Ames

CO2

co2 logo
Author: Michael Spitz

Colourfruit

colourfruit logo
Author: almosh82

Crazy Croc

Crazy Croc logo
Author: James Strange

Dandelion

dandelion logo
Author: Breno Bitencourt

Danzk

danzk logo
Author: Pete Lacey

Dmitriev Sommelier

Dmitriev Sommelier logo
Author: Anton Gridz

Downtown Lounge

Downtown Lounge logo
Author: rui.pombares

Frankenstein Films

Frankenstein Films logo
Author: Josiah Jost

Genius

genius logo
Author: Jan Zabransky

Get organized

Get organized logo
Author: Srdjan Kirtic

Golf lessons

Golf lessons logo
Author: Dennis Thomsen

GPQ

Get organized logo
Author: Tiago Pompeu

Haircutime

Haircutime logo
Author: Srdjan Kirtic

Handmade Coffee

Handmade Coffee logo
Author: Sergey Shapiro

Hoppenia

hoppenia logo
Author: Sergey Babenko

Lapsha

lapsha logo
Author: Logoped

Magnify Agency

Magnify Agency logo
Author: Magnify Agency

Maritime Law

Maritime Law logo
Author: Rich Scott

Michael Spitz

Michael Spitz logo
Author: Michael Spitz

Mouse House

Mouse House logo
Author: Andrei Gadoiu

Nautilus

nautilus logo
Author: Dan Slupskiy

Pakuy

pakuy logo
Author: Muamer Adilovic

Paper Cups

Paper Cups logo
Author: Katharine Y.

Polish National Hockey Team

Polish National Hockey Team logo
Author: Wojtek Polak

Quantum

quantum logo
Author: Denis Ignatov

Rock It

Rock It logo
Author: Arnas Goldbergas

Spartan

spartan logo
Author: LexLogo

Surf Index

Surf Index logo
Author: Roy Smith

The Health Alliance of North California

The Health Alliance of North California logo
Author: Sean Heisler

Thinktank

Thinktank logo
Author: Alexander Jones

Totem Media

Totem logo
Author: Oana Olaru-Zainescu

Tusker

Tusker logo
Author: Sergey Babenko

WildSugar

WildSugar logo
Author: c3

Zharnitsky

zharnitsky logo
Author: Kirill Demidenko

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43 of the best logos of January and February

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febrero 24, 2010

Palermo Valley empieza el 2010 con todo: estrenamos diseño!

El sitio de palermovalley.com recibió esta mañana una merecida renovación para ponerlo al día con todo lo que creció el movimiento desde su nacimiento hace ya 2 años.

El nuevo diseño pone el acento, tanto en las novedades de Palermo Valley, como en las de los demás Valleys y empresas de la comunidad.

En los próximos días seguirán viendo updates en el sitio, integrando el nuevo diseño en la base de Personas y Eventos de PV, mejorando la búsqueda y lectura de posts y categorías y dándole a los demás Valleys de Argentina el lugar que se merecen.

Y esto no es todo! Ya estamos en la etapa final del desarrollo de la Base de Empresas, algo que le va a dar mucho valor agregado a la comunidad, y muy pronto habrá más sorpresas y novedades.

Gracias y felicitaciones al equipo que viene trabajando en este rediseño desde el año pasado: Fernando Maclen (diseño original), Pablo Arribas, Juan Melano (integración inicial con WordPress) y Guido Durazzo de GFDD Group (ajustes de integración con WordPress y CSS).

Podés ayudarnos dándonos tu feedback sobre el nuevo diseño:

  • Qué es lo que más te gusta del nuevo site?
  • Qué te parece que falta o qué mejorarías?
  • Qué extrañás del sitio anterior?

Dejanos tus comentarios en este post o envianos un mail a website@palermovalley.com. Muchas gracias!

febrero 11, 2010

Why Brands are Becoming Media

at globe imageBrian Solis is a principal at new media agency FutureWorks, and author of the upcoming book, Engage. You can connect with him on Twitter or Facebook.

One of the greatest challenges I encounter today is not the willingness of a brand to engage, but its ability to create. When blueprinting a social media strategy, enthusiasm and support typically derails when examining the resources and commitment required to produce regular content.

Indeed, we are programing the social web around our brand hub, which requires a consistent flow of engaging and relevant social objects. Social objects are the catalysts for conversations — online and in real life — and they affect behavior within their respective societies.

They are our tweets, our Flickr photos, YouTube videos, Facebook updates and events, Delicious links, FourSquare check-ins, and blog posts.

But once we introduce a social object, we must be ready to back it up with additional relevant content, and create a publishing calendar programmed specifically for each network on which we maintain a presence.


Brands Become Their Media

laptop megaphone imageThere’s a saying in theater: A big part of acting is reacting. This is especially true when we consider how many individuals, brands, and organizations engage on the web today. Instead of seeking inspiration and direction from those around us however, we simply react to activity, which may or may not benefit us in the long run.

The democratization of publishing and the equalization of influence allows us to create and connect with a wider reach. Everything starts with a mission, and is fortified by the content we create.

Among the most valuable resources we procure through dedicated publishing is good will, social capital, and influence. It comes at a price however: The cost of production, distribution, and support. In the end, you get out what you put in. The investment represents time, money, creativity, and passion.

Thus, we not only become our media — through production and engagement, we can become influential.


Productive Social Media Must Be Earned

While establishing a presence is elementary, captivating audiences is artful. In the near future, brands and organizations will create new or augment existing roles for editors and publishers to create timely, relevant, and captivating content on all social media channels. This work is in addition to the other reactive and proactive social media campaigns that are already in progress. A strategic editorial calendar should blend video, audio, imagery, text, updates, and other social objects and networks to reach, inspire, and galvanize communities.


Earned, Paid, and Owned Media

In media, there are several channels that populate and shape perception — earned, paid, and owned media. Each requires a dedicated management system that actively creates, monitors and stimulates strategic movement.

Recently, Sean Corcoran, an analyst at Forrester Research, published a detailed post that describes the differences between earned, paid and owned. He clarifies the roles for brands who undertake the responsibility of embracing new media. Dave Fleet, a thought leader in new media and public relations, also visualized Corcoran’s thoughts through a series of graphics that represent the social media ecosystem.

As Corcoran points out in his recent report:

“Increasingly, interactive marketers are being asked to manage a wide range of paid and unpaid marketing communication —- despite the fact that many marketing departments are still organized around traditional paid marketing channels. All types of online media (whether ‘earned,’ ‘owned,’ or ‘paid’) can play specific roles in meeting marketers’ objectives —- especially when seamlessly working together. To find the right balance between these types of media, marketers should take stock of their resources, listen for the impact of earned media, look for opportunities to shift short-term paid media to the role of catalyst, and begin to build out a solar system of long-term owned media touchpoints.”

In other words, paid, earned and owned media require thoughtful programming and targeted distribution and must be linked to a systematic review of behavior and activity that surrounds each object. And, the analysis of activity and ultimately the end result should play a monumental role in the creation of future publishing and social activation.

Corcoran uses the word “touchpoint,” which by standard definition, refers to any point of contact between a buyer and a seller. Touchpoint is part of the greater opportunity here. But more importantly, these touchpoints require direction and the establishment of a path that offers a complete experience — a beginning, a middle, an end, and a reward.

These experiences are definable by paid, earned, and owned media.

New media necessitates a collaboration between all teams involved in creating and distributing content, including advertising, interactive, communications, brand, and marketing — with an editorial role connecting the dots. We are competing for attention and our success is dependent on our ability to not compete against each other. Producing content and lobbing it over the firewall to an “audience” will only confuse communities. Therefore, we are obligated to build pipelines that carry strategic communications, each with calculated intents, targets and outcomes.

If we examine the differences between earned, owned, and paid, we can visualize necessary programming and dedicated channels for each.

Owned media is essentially that which we control. If we designed the object, we own the content within the object. Most likely, we also own (or lease) the distribution channels that present these objects to our target communities. We do not however, control the impression and perception of our objects. We lose that control at the point of distribution.

For example, in addition to standard web pages, social media presences contribute to our portfolio of owned media including Twitter accounts, Facebook Fan Pages, Blogs, YouTube channels, etc. By creating presences in the communities where our customers, prospects, partners, and influencers congregate and collaborate, we can lay the foundation to contribute “earned” social objects of value.

Social hubs are also gaining prominence in social media plans as brands weigh options for directing traffic. The creation of strategic landing pages can extend the rich, interactive experience within social networks (channels which we partially own) to pages we do own. This shapes the experience in a way that maintains interactivity and targeted options for action. I’m not necessarily recommending the creation of microsites, unless it’s warranted in the overall program. But a bridge that connects the social experience to a valuable destination is important.

Forrester’s Corcoran recommends that brands create a “solar system” of owned media. However, I suggest that brands instead create a focused ecosystem of media that establishes presences where their communities are already active — a brand or organization-specific social media ecosystem. This requires research. In the process, we uncover not only locations that require our engagement, but also how, where, when and to what extent to participate. We just may find that the given locations for social profiles represent only part of the many opportunities rife within the Conversation Prism.

Paid media represents the visibility we purchase, such as display ads, paid search, and sponsorships. When paired with owned and earned media programs, paid media can complement, reinforce, and polish a brand’s voice, directives, mission, and stature. While many argue over the future and fate of advertising, what’s clear is that online paid presences can benefit initiatives where action and experiences are defined and promoted through the click path. Current trends reflect a shift away from branding programs and place emphasis on sparking desired activity, empowering viewers and their social graph to share in the experience all in ways that measure the cost per action.

Earned media is the result of our owned, paid, and participatory media programs and is reflected in the blog posts, tweets, status updates, comments, and ultimately actions of our consumers, peers, and influencers. Earned media is linked to owned media campaigns as well as proactive initiatives that attempt to incite viral and word-of-mouth activity. Garnered visibility is also tied to communications and public relations programs as they continually seek to gain the attention of reporters, bloggers, analysts, and influencers who can drive awareness and behavior.

This isn’t a one way street however. Success is absolutely conditional on the techniques and methodologies that inspire dedicated programs focused on outreach, relations, and hopefully the engendering of productive and mutually beneficial relationships. Crowd-powered visibility also merits an official and devoted listening and response initiative to ensure that each respective community aligns with the mission.

Participatory media is an extension of earned and owned media. It takes the shape of a hosted hub where brand representatives and our communities can interact and collaborate. Good examples of this are Dell’s IdeaStorm and Starbucks’ “My Idea” network, which resemble branded wikis designed to elicit responses and establish community-focused governances. Participatory media equalizes the balance of power, providing a dedicated platform the gives voice to the consumer and a channel for their ideas.

Sponsored media is a new category that fuses owned, paid, and earned media. Sponsored media is championed by companies like Izea, Ad.ly, and Twittad, among others, and is creating a new medium for packaging messages through trusted voices within highly visible and social channels. Sponsored media can take the form of paid tweets, blog posts, appearances, and featured objects on targeted profiles. And, whether you agree or disagree with the idea, the reality is that it works, and seems to benefit all parties involved, from the brand, to the paid affiliates, to their communities. In fact, Forrester’s Josh Bernoff and Sean Corcoran shared their thoughts on why sponsored media is worthy of consideration.

Sponsored objects fuse earned, paid, and owned media, as technically: 1) The messages are owned; 2) The voices are paid, and; 3) With more thoughtful approaches, the responses within targeted communities can inspire a positive wave of earned media.

Disclosure: My company works with Ted Murphy, Founder/CEO of izea.com.


Influence

at globe imageAs media, brands earn prominence and hopefully influence as rewards for contributing meaningful content. On Twitter, brands can earn legions of loyal and responsive followers, who in turn become brand advocates and ambassadors, extending the messages, mission and purpose of the brand to their followers as well. On Facebook, brands can cultivate vibrant and dedicated communities where interaction inspires increased responses — each reverberating across new social graphs. On Ustream and YouTube, we can earn global audiences of viewers who tune in to watch our programming and interact with brand representatives in a live community that spills over other social networks. And of course, our blog is more important than we may realize. Through our posts, we can establish a strong alliance of subscribers who hope to learn new things and participate in the discussion of a brand’s future.

As Tom Foremski points out, we have the ability to earn noteworthy, equal, and in some cases, greater influence than those authorities whom we’ve relied on over the years to help us reach greater audiences and communities. As influence is equalized, our ability to earn presence and relationships is derived from how we program, manage, and participate in all forms of media. And, it is through a balance of media and engagement that we also establish the foundation for affinity. People align with movements they can believe in, and it is the human, intellectual, and financial investment in genuine content that defines experiences, and hopefully one day earns the significance your brand deserves.


More business resources from Mashable:


- The Maturation of Social Media ROI
The 10 Stages of Social Media Business Integration
HOW TO: Use Social Media to Connect with Other Entrepreneurs
HOW TO: Implement a Social Media Business Strategy
9 Great Document Collaboration Tools for Teams
HOW TO: Choose a News Reader for Keeping Tabs on Your Industry
5 Advanced Social Media Marketing Strategies for Small Businesses

Images courtesy of iStockphoto, cogal, YanC, Juanmonino


Reviews: Delicious, Facebook, Flickr, Foursquare, Twitter, YouTube, iStockphoto, ustream

Tags: blog, blogging, brand, branding, business, facebook, List, Lists, MARKETING, small business, social media, social media marketing, social networking, twitter, ustream, youtube

febrero 11, 2010

5 Ways to Avoid Sabotaging Your Personal Brand Online

me keys imageDan Schawbel is the bestselling author of Me 2.0: Build a Powerful Brand to Achieve Career Success, an award winning blogger at Personal Branding Blog, a national speaker and consultant on branding and a BusinessWeek columnist.

There have been countless incidents in which professionals have lost their jobs, been evicted, or even been arrested for things they’ve done on social networks. There has never been a more important time to discuss the many ways you can sabotage your personal brand, and how you can prevent these mistakes before it’s too late.

A new report by Microsoft states that 64% of HR managers think it is appropriate to look at online profiles of candidates and 41% have rejected people as a result. Your online presence — which may consist of both content that you provide (on your LinkedIn profile for instance), as well as what’s written about you by people you may or may not know — is slowly becoming part of the formal recruitment process. It’s also where first impressions occur before in-person handshakes are made, so you have to make sure you are managing your brand online, before someone else does it for you.  The following are five ways to avoid sabotaging your personal brand.


1. Don’t Ignore Brand Mentions

tweet image58% of Americans don’t even Google themselves, but employers and potential customers certainly will. It’s safe to say that people are already talking about you, either online or offline.

As you create your personal brand on a variety of platforms, your name will start popping up in search engines and on social networks. This can be both beneficial to your brand or harmful depending on the context. The viral nature of social networks, as well as their new ubiquity, should encourage you to start listening in on what people are saying about you.

Negative mentions will spread fast unless you keep your ear close to the web, so I recommend you setup a Google alert for your name, your company’s name, key competitors, partners, and industry buzz terms. There are many other free tools that can help you monitor your brand. You can also try Social Mention for a more complete solution to brand mentions on social networks.


2. Don’t Spread Yourself Too Thin


social networks clutter imageA future problem, which some might say is a current problem, is the volume of social networks and the amount of status updates and messages you receive each day. If you’re active on each and every social network that launches, you will start to spread yourself too thin, which can really hurt your brand. You won’t possibly be able to update all of your social profiles, as well as keep track of pictures, profile information, groups, etc. In general, you should only join the largest social networks (Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn), as well as those networks in your industry.

As I noted in a previous Mashable post, you should reserve your full name on as many of the popular social networks as possible by using a service such as namechk.com, before someone who shares your name claims them and you’re locked out for life. But just because you have claimed your name everywhere doesn’t mean you should expend valuable time and energy maintaining a presence on every social network.

There are some websites that allow you to scale your social feeds so that one status update can automatically spread to other networks, without manually publishing content. You can use hellotxt.com or ping.fm to spread your status message to many social networks at once, including Twitter, Facebook, MySpace and Bebo. You can also go to your LinkedIn profile and syndicate your tweets for your LinkedIn status update automatically or by using “#in” for each tweet (if you want to be selective). There is also a Facebook application for Twitter so you can syndicate your tweets through your Facebook profile.


3. Know Your Audience


audience imageIt’s really easy to forgot who you’re connected with on social networks as they grow. You might start out with high school, college, and summer camp friends, and then add some co-workers when you start a new job. There will be a point where you’re going to have to make a strategic decision, who you accept and who you don’t. The second you add your manager or colleagues is the time when you have to rethink what you publish or what you syndicate from other social networks. One mistake could cause you trouble.

On Facebook, you may want to have a profile page for your inner circle of friends and family members and then a Facebook Fan Page for your professional image. This way, you can make your profile private and hide it from search, while having a fan page that you can point your coworkers to. They will know that you are hiding your profile but should respect your privacy, especially since you’re giving them the option to follow your fan page.


4. Limit Self-Promotion

me imageCertainly, self-promotion is an extremely important part of building your brand because if no one knows of your achievements or the company you work for, then how are they going to do business with you? Yet, I’ve noticed that people often over-promote themselves in various ways across the web.

Successful self-promotion only works in moderation, because if you’re constantly only promoting yourself, many people will unfollow, unfriend, or block you from their network. The best way to build a strong personal brand is to promote other people, which creates goodwill and a connection, as well as distributing value based on what you have to offer: Your expertise. If you’re helping people 80 or 90% of the time, then people will be much more accepting of your self-promotional messages the other 10%. You will also start to notice that other people will promote you — and their endorsement is even stronger than your own proclamations.


5. Be Consistent

Consistency is extremely important when it comes to any kind of branding, from personal to corporate.

Selecting a unified “picture” and spreading it across all your social media — your website, your blog, your presentations, your press kits, your business cards, etc. — will build image recognition in the mind of your audience. Consistency is significant for pictures, your name, as well as the fonts, the colors and the overall message that you communicate through your online properties.

There is no question that you already have a personal brand — whether you built it yourself or not. The way to differentiate it from everyone else is through management. By paying attention to mentions of your name online, not spreading yourself too thin, knowing your audience, offering more value than self-promotion, and being consistent, you can be very successful.


More business resources from Mashable:

- Social Media Marketing: How Pepsi Got It Right
How Social Media Helps One Small Business Connect with Fans
5 Ways Small Businesses Can Avoid Social Media Panic
HOW TO: Implement a Social Media Business Strategy
The 10 Stages of Social Media Business Integration
HOW TO: Use Social Media to Connect with Other Entrepreneurs

Images courtesy of iStockphoto, drflet, titaniumdoughnut


Reviews: Bebo, Facebook, LinkedIn, MySpace, Ping.Fm, ResuWe Facebook Application, Twitter, iStockphoto

Tags: brand, branding, brands, business, facebook, linkedin, List, Lists, personal brand, personal branding, small business, twitter

febrero 10, 2010

14 Fantastic Free WordPress Themes

 

Whether you’re a web developer whose clients need a great look and feel for their blogs, or just someone eager to bring a fresh new look to your own web site, there are literally hundreds if not thousands of free WordPress themes out there to consider. A number of those themes have been built by professional designers and talented amateurs, and are as easy on the eyes as they are easy on the wallet.

Whether you need a great photoblog layout, personal lifestream, or more business-oriented design, there’s almost surely an existing theme out there worth checking out for your next blog or blog upgrade. And if you’re already a developer or are willing to acquire a small set of template editing skills, you can always modify an existing theme to taste.

Have a look at some of our picks for great themes to either drop in as is or use as a starting point for your own tweaking and twiddling. Keep in mind this is only the tip of the iceberg — be sure to let us know about your other favorite themes in the comments!


1. Irresistible



For a unique personal blog look and feel, check out the free Irresistible theme from the folks at Woo Themes. It features dedicated spots for your photos, videos, and events lifestream along with your typical blog content. Featuring a nice, clean layout, this theme offers something a bit different from your typical 3-column blog design.


2. Demet



For a more magazine-style theme, check out the free premium Demet theme. This 3-column layout is fixed width and banner-ready for 125×125 and 468×60 pixel ad units.


3. P2



The P2 theme was inspired by Twitter, and was designed around allowing a group of bloggers to post short updates. It’s a great option for a cohesive group blog as well as for sites that do frequent liveblogging. Featuring dynamic page updates, threaded comment display, live tag suggestion, real-time notifications, and in-line editing for posts and comments, P2 is a powerhouse for blogs where real-time updates are critical.


4. WPESP Portfolio



WPESP Portfolio is a minimalist theme designed primarily for artists, photographers, designers, and others who need more of a portfolio showcase for their work. It combines the benefits of easy and frequent updates with the layout and user interface conducive to browsing visual works.


5. DarkHive



For an alternative magazine-esque style in two columns, have a look at DarkHive from the folks at MagPress. It sports a featured content slider for up front promotion of hot stories, auto-generated thumbnails for front page display, an Adsense ready loop between posts and on individual post pages, a 125×125-ready block in the sidebar and more.


6. Google Chrome



Here’s an interesting lightweight theme great for a geek-oriented blog, or a site that just wants a nice and clean two column look and feel. Inspired by the browser of the same name, Google Chrome is widget and gravatar ready plus XHTML and CSS validated.


7. Gallery



The showcase-style WordPress theme Gallery is built on the Thematic framework and was designed specifically for Smashing Magazine readers. Another great theme for a portfolio or other visual showcase, Gallery is a highly flexible and customizable theme that supports widescreen video embedding with the installation of a free plug-in.


8. Selecta



Another very visually-oriented theme, Selecta is great for videoblogs or other sites where video needs to be prominent. With a featured post slider carousel up top to promote your best content, threaded comments, and interest jQuery effects on board, Selecta also comes with six different color schemes to choose from.


9. BlackPower



A widget ready theme from the folks at SkinPress, the BlackPower theme features prominent Twitter integration, with your latest tweet appearing in the header. The two column theme also features easy on the eyes typography and a pastel color scheme with black wood effect on a translucent background.


10. Scarlett



The Scarlett theme features another great featured content carousel area up top and a real-time scrolling update area in the right-hand sidebar. It also includes a built-in javascript navigation menu, Adsense ready units, threaded comments display and more.


11. Freemium



The Freemium theme is a slickly-designed “premium” theme being given away for free thanks to the folks at FreebiesDock. Featuring two widget ready sidebars, a jQuery-based menu, 125×125 ad ready area and more, Freemium is a compelling design at a great “price.”


12. iBusiness



A great theme or starting point for a more professional business presence, iBusiness is a modern theme designed to showcase the About section right up front with a prominent image and company blurb or motto. This two column layout is widget ready, SEO optimized and 125×125 banner ready.


13. Meganews



Another great option for a magazine or news site, Meganews features a clean story-lead display in four columns plus a right-hand sidebar. It also supports an animated tag cloud and featured content slideshow.


14. Snapshot



A great theme for shutterbugs and photoblogs, Snapshot from Woo Themes can also be put to use as a portfolio or design gallery. It also comes with three unique color schemes to choose from as well as options for switching between photoblog and portfolio use.


Series supported by Rackspace


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Rackspace is the better way to do hosting. No more worrying about web hosting uptime. No more spending your time, energy and resources trying to stay on top of things like patching, updating, monitoring, backing up data and the like. Learn why.


More WordPress Resources from Mashable:


-10 WordPress Plugins to Help Build Community
- HOW TO: Build a More Beautiful Blog
- Top 10 WordPress Plugins to Promote Your Social Media Profiles
- Top 10 Tips for WordPress Plugin Developers
- Embeddable Waves: The Google Wave WordPress Plugin


Reviews: Google Chrome, Twitter, WordPress

Tags: blogging, BLOGS, design, free, Lists, Web Development, web development series, WordPress, wordpress themes

febrero 9, 2010

100 Resources for WordPress Theme Developers

One of the great things about working with WordPress and developing your own themes is the community and all of the resources that are available. If you’re not sure how to do something or looking to see what solutions other theme designers and developers are using, you can find plenty of infomation and tutorials to help.

diciembre 22, 2009

Firefox 4.0: New Design Changes Revealed [IMAGES]Mashable!

The release of Firefox 4.0 may still be nearly a year away, but the excitement for the new version is already growing. In July, we revealed the first images of Firefox 4.0. Now one of the designers behind the browser has shared on his blog updated mock-ups of the new design.

While a lot of the original concepts from the July images are still intact (e.g. a combo stop/refresh/go button, color changes based on your actions), there are some new details revealed by designer and Mozilla contributor Stephen Horlander.

Here are the new mock-ups of Firefox 4.0, along with an explanation of what’s new in this iteration:


The New Design Changes


As we’ve previously noted, the Menu Bar has changed from version 3.5 to 4.0. The biggest change was that the stop, refresh and go buttons have been combined into one color-changing button. But in these new mock-ups, there is a new button: the App Button.


According to Stephen, the app button works a lot like the Windows 7 and Office 2010 menu button, which condenses a lot of those options into a single location. Instead of having File, Edit and all of those options take up space at the time, there would only be a single “Firefox” button at the top of the browser.

The look of this button, though, is still up for debate. In fact, there are multiple proposals for how it should look. See for yourself:


While the App Button may be the biggest change, it’s not the only one: the toolbar button is getting touched up to be more visible on multiple backgrounds, and the location bar is now recessed (rather than floating). Finally, the bookmarks toolbar is getting some new functionality — if it hasn’t been modified by the user, it will not appear by default.

Here are some more images for you to gawk at. Let us know what you think of the new changes in the comments:


Firefox 4.0: Even More Images


Firefox 4.0 with bookmarks toolbar:


Firefox 4.0 with tabs under the navigation bar:


Firefox 4.0 with bookmark bar between tabs and navigation bar:


Comparison of Firefox 4.0 and Firefox 3.5


[via Chromatic Pixel]


Reviews: Firefox

Tags: Firefox, Firefox 4.0, mozilla

noviembre 9, 2009

The Future of Web Design – New York City 2009

Next week the famous Carsonified Event “Future of Web Design” takes place in New York City and here you will see what to expect from this great event. The best web designers in the world will take place to talk about different topics that will bring up your web game to the next level. Check it out!

First you need to visit the event page http://events.carsonified.com/ to get a good felling of what’s going on.

This year FOWD will take place in NYC on November 16th and 17th.

To Find out about Event Location and Schedule visit http://events.carsonified.com/fowd/2009/nyc

On November 16th you can choose from 8 different workshops to attend, here is what’s on the list.

Open Web Standards for the Rich Web – Molly Holzschalag

Real World Accessibility for Web Designers – Derek Featherstone

WordPress Theme Development for Web Designers – Elliot Jay Stocks

How to Design Effective Web Content – Kristina Halvorson

How to build a HTML5/CSS3 Website Today – Steve Smith

Design Secrets of digg.com’s User Interface – Daniel Burka

How to use JQuery to Enhance your Web Design – Karl Swedberg

Best Practices in Web Typography – Dan Rubin

On November 17th, the Conference will take place and this is what will go on:

Progressive Enrichment with CSS3 – Dan Cederhom

Feedback informing design: Listening, really listening, to your users – Daniel Burka

3 Dimensional thinking for web designers – Mike Kus

Accessibility in a Web 2.0 World – Derek Featherstone

Stop Worrying & Get On With It: Tips and Tricks for designing for the Modern Web – Elliot Jay Stocks

Partner Presentation – Bill Buxton

New York Shorts: Vimeo – Blake Whiteman

Familiar Futures: Making Mars Feel Like Home – Kyle Sollenberger

The Long and Short of It: Panel Discussion – Liz Danzico, Jason Santa Maria, Paul Ford, and Kristina Halvorson.

HTML5 Killed XHTML2: And the Mysterious Future of Markup – Molly Hozschlag

FOWD Keynote: “Space: What does it mean?” Joshua Davis

Meet the Speakers

We’ve got some awesome speakers lined up for you this year at FOWD. Here’s who we’ve got lined up so far. Don’t forget to check back for updates to the speaker list. Click here to check the list.

For all the abduzeedo users, I will be attending the event and would like to meet up with all our users that are going, leave a comment and will set it up.

Last year FOWD was in New York as well and here you can watch all the content:

Dan Mall

The Experience Layer: Using Flash, JavaScript, and other technologies to engage users.

Derek Powazek

The future of community and crowd-sourced design

Hillman Curtis

Then minutes of Design Inspiration

Mike Kus

Whatever happened to the Art in Design?

Nicholas Felton

Charting Daily Data

Nick La

Finding Inspiration from your Environment

Patrick Haney

Web Design Fundamentals: Learning from the past to the better future

Paul Boag

Educating clients to say yes

About the author

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Hi! I’m Paulo Canabarro and I’m here to post some really cool stuff for you, if you have any ideas or any requests please get @ me – paul0v2@abduzeedo.com you can also Follow me on twitter!

noviembre 9, 2009

55+ Striking Website Headers That You Must See

unique-transportation

1

greentent

2

felicetre

3

twigkit

4

thepeachdesign

5

sebastianlaube

6

taptapas

7

cajanavarra

8

msn (Latest version)

9

dougneiner

10

greaterthings.lhc

11

droidweek

12

alby

13

synchmedia

14

semseocompany

15

bandthemer

16

karijobe

17

sebastiankrull

18

pressboxstl

19

tiendalasirena

20

puma

21

bythepond

22

marciweiche

23

dogonomachiya

24

worldinmylens

25

jovenescontralaviolencia

26

hipseat

27

headred

28

holtedesign

29

incrediblend

30

en.casino-lemonade

31

inizziativa

32

championsound

33

cssdharma

34

webtek

35

mobilemysite

36

cmyk08

37

cadwebsitedesign

38

annabelwilliams

39

batcetera

40

newstreamdesign

41

wewanttraffic

42

ableyachtins

43

space.carrotmedialtd

44

024zone

45

nudefoodmovers

46

uandersena

47

luiztiago

48

somoslaperalimonera

49

franfernandez

50

pepperkoffee

51

how-to-web

52

eldoradopalace

53

attilaacs

54

maurivan

55

trippingwords

56

noviembre 9, 2009

Best of the web – week #46

Design

Development

Blogging

Freelance