Category Archives: Tech

From Dell Phones ORG

Dell has confirmed that their first smartphone sporting the free mobile OS from Google; the Mini 3, will be landing to AT&T. As you might remember, the Mini 3 Android handset was officially announced to go to China Mobile and Brazil’s Claro back in November.

AT&T had announced already their intentions to release 5 different Android-based devices on 1H 2010 with devices from Motorola, HTC and Dell. The Mini 3 will be Dell’s offering in the wireless carrier network, but there’s no word on the release date just yet.

Dell is not giving any information on the full specs of the Mini 3, but is only logical to assume that it will be similar to the Chinese Mini. What do you think folks, will you buy the Dell Mini 3 from AT&T? Or you don’t like the handset or AT&T’s service enough to jump ship?

Press Release:

DELL ANNOUNCES U.S. SMART PHONE DEAL WITH AT&T

· AT&T joins Dell’s growing list of leading smart phone carriers, including China Mobile and Claro Brazil
· Dell and AT&T collaborate on one of the first Android-based smart phones to run on AT&T and the nation’s fastest 3G network
· The Mini 3 smart phone reflects Dell’s continued focus on developing smart mobile products that answer the needs of today’s consumers

LAS VEGAS, JAN. 6, 2010 – Dell today announced that U.S.-based AT&T will become the next mobile operator to offer a smart phone from the Mini 3 Android-based lineup. Over the past two months, Dell has established smart phone arrangements with leading mobile operators including the world’s largest, China Mobile, Claro in Brazil, and now AT&T with the nation’s fastest 3G network.

Mini 3 smart phones create an easy-to-use mobile Internet experience. The Android-based platform gives the Mini 3 optimal power, flexibility and customization opportunities for both users and operators. Collaboration between Dell and AT&T combines the very best in performance and style. And, with AT&T’s largest Wi-Fi hotspot network, and fastest 3G network, Dell and AT&T will provide today’s social media mavens with the ability to simultaneously Tweet friends, post Facebook updates, share pictures and browse the Web.

Today’s announcement builds upon Dell’s mobile strategy of delivering communications solutions for wireless operators and their dedicated customers. Dell works with select operators around the world to make the most of their customers’ mobile experiences – on any network and using any application.

The arrangement with AT&T is part of Dell’s continued focus on developing smart mobile products and services through value-added relationships with leading operators. Dell has existing arrangements with other leading global telecom providers, including Vodafone in Europe, Australia and New Zealand; AT&T in the United States; M1 and Starhub in Singapore; Maxis in Malaysia; China Mobile in China; and Claro in Brazil – each creating more opportunities to meet the needs of the connected lifestyle.

Dell has contact with and listens to the requirements of millions of customers. In addition, a recent Dell-sponsored study of more than 1,500 people provides keen insight to what makes for the best smart phone and mobile experience. Study highlights include:
· Eighty-two percent of those who own smart phones said they would not leave home without them;
· Eighty-six percent of survey respondents under age 35 say that personalized software and features on smart phones are important;
· More than half say they wish there were more smart phone options available in the marketplace;
· Seventy-six percent say they would consider new smart phone devices from a well-known technology brand; and
· Nearly 90 percent say they would consider purchasing a smart phone from a highly regarded technology company as an alternative to leading smart phone manufacturers.

“Smart phones are an extension of Dell’s strategy to develop intelligent and more mobile products that meet the needs of operators and customers,” said Ron Garriques, president, Dell Communication Solutions. “The Mini 3 is a result of listening to customers and creating products that allow people to do the things they want, whenever and wherever they want to do them.”

“As the leader in smart phones, AT&T makes a great match with Dell to introduce the next Mini 3,” said David Christopher, chief marketing officer, AT&T Mobility and Consumer Markets. “We offer our customers what no one else can, the nation’s fastest 3G network, the nation’s largest Wi-Fi network and now, Dell’s first smart phone in the U.S.”

Details about Dell’s Mini 3 will be announced by AT&T closer to device availability expected during the first half of 2010.

[Via SlashGear]

ServerWatch has a nice article about Dell, its market position, and an in-depth look at the 11th generation of servers.  The article details the entire PowerEdge line of servers, comparing target deployments, processors, operating systems, and pricing.

The Register discusses Dell’s “other server business” earlier this month by digging into the OEM Solutions Group at Dell. The Data Center Solutions (DCS) group within Dell is responsible for custom solutions sold to hyperscale data centers such as Yahoo, Amazon and Microsoft. The OEM Solutions group is apparently twice the size of DCS, according to Dell’s Rich Froehlich. Citing OEM deals such as medical equipment, kiosks, embedded controllers and various appliances, the OEM group has 1,300 customers in over 40 countries and leverages 6,000 engineers to work on design and six world-wide factories to deliver the finished goods. 

Dell won the Google search appliance deal and there was a “container system in the works” reported in May 2008.  That container data center was later confirmed to be used in the Microsoft Chicago container farm.

Tough server market
In tough economic times and and an even tougher server market, Dell has held its own.  Gartner reportedin September 2009 that second quarter worldwide server shipments dropped 28 percent year-on-year, while revenue fell 29.4 percentage points year-on-year.  Gartner lists IBM with a 32.5 percent share, HP at 28.9 percent and Dell with 13.3 percent of second quarter server revenue estimates.

For server vendor shipment estimates Gartner puts Dell second, with 23.9 percent, behind HP’s 31 percent. Data from IDC shows third quarter server sales taking a steep decline.  IDC market share numbers put Dell in third place as well with a 13.5% market share. Sun was listed in fourth but it was also noted that both IBM and Dell were taking market share away due to the prolonged delay in its takeover by Oracle.

Converged data center offering
Dell spent much of 2009 building partnerships and growing all facets of its business.  Partnerships were inked with Brocade and Juniper and in September Dell acquired Perot Systems for $3.9 billion. Recently Ross Perot Jr. joined the Dell Board of Directors. 

Dell also maintains 16 spots on the top500 list for November 2009.  Dell maintains a partnership with Cisco, but also does not see the value in their Unified Computing System.  Dell’s Praveen Asthana was quoted in The Register as saying that “there’s a difference between a proprietary stack and a reference architecture.  Our approach is to offer reference architectures, but we don’t restrict you to buying everything from Dell.”

Social networking saves the day
Slate’s The Big Money site had an article last week explaining how “How Dell Got Out of Hell”.  Dell has made great strides from former customer relations and support issues and now has been very active in social networking. The article explains how Dell has recorded $6.5 million of sales using Twitter, using more than 100 employees tweeting through 35 Twitter feeds. The LinkedIn page for a company is always interesting to read.  Dell’s shows that career paths for employees before, came from HP and IBM, and after, went to Microsoft and HP.  Dell employees are most connected to Equallogic, Microsoft, CSC and Oracle.

The server side of the business will have a little bit of that spotlight taken away though, as Dell is rumored to unveil an Android based tablet at CES and last month confirmed its smart phone plans.

Dell unleashed a deluge of products and information upon us today. First up is some clarification on Dell’s Mini 3 smartphone. Though Dell announced its Android-powered Mini 3 handset and AT&T announced that it was getting a Dell handset yesterday, neither company confirmed the obvious — that the Dell Mini 3 is headed for AT&T. Thankfully, Dell came to its senses and confirmed today that the Mini 3 is indeed coming to AT&T. Dell also confirmed that it is working on a prototype 5 inch tablet, which looks curiously similar to the previously leaked Dell Streak. Rounding things out, Dell refreshed its PC and notebook lineup by redesigning its Inspiron series of PCs, introducing the sweet new Alienware M11x — a netbook-sized gaming machine, debuting an updated version of its Studio 14 notebook, and replacing the older Core 2 Duo with Intel’s latest Core i3, i5, and i7 processors. Hit the jump for the full press release and a few press photos of the prototype tablet and the new Alienware M11x.

At CES Dell Unveils First “All Powerful” Ultra Mobile Gaming System, Next Generation Smart Phones, Tablet Concepts and a New Line of Design Inspired Laptops

  • Provides sneak peek of Mini 3 smart phone and a 5-inch tablet concept
  • Unveils Dell’s first ultra-mobile gaming laptop with the Alienware M11x
  • Announces AT&T to be next mobile operator offering the Mini 3 Android-based smart phones
  • Launches redesigned Inspiron, refreshed Alienware and Studio laptops featuring Intel Core i3, i5, and i7 processors

LAS VEGAS–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Dell is responding to people’s desire to have mobile products that help them stay connected and leverage the latest tools and services for immersive digital experiences on the go.

Today at CES 2010, Dell showcased a broad range of new products including its first ultra-mobile gaming laptop. Additionally the company provided a peek at new products, including a 5-inch tablet concept and an Android-based smart phone for AT&T, both slated for launch in 2010. Dell also refreshed its Inspiron, Studio and Alienware systems incorporating the new Intel Core i3, i5, and i7 processors.

From a suite at the Palms Casino Resort, Dell gave bloggers, journalists and partners an early look at the upcoming devices, further illustrating how the company is using its unique relationships with people around the world to innovate consumer electronics to be more mobile, convenient and powerful.

“We are focused on technology and solutions that help people connect and share content virtually anytime and anyplace,” said Michael Tatelman, vice president of sales and marketing for Dell’s global consumer business. “Consumers are demanding enhanced mobility in high-quality devices, and want to know they have made smart choices with their purchases.”

Dell is expanding the personal-computing space with new products to respond to and best meet the expressed needs of consumers. The new products include:

  • The Alienware M11x, the most powerful 11-inch gaming laptop in the universe — as easy to carry as it is powerful, making high-performance gaming accessible to all.
  • A refreshed Studio 14 laptop for individuals who create and consume digital content, combining powerful technology with features that deliver a rich multi-media experience like enhanced audio solutions and high performance high definition displays.
  • New versions of the popular Inspiron PC line continue to deliver on value and personalization while incorporating Intel’s new Core i5 processors and its “smart” features such as Turbo Boost technology.
  • Dell expanded on Wednesday’s announcement saying that U.S. based AT&T will become the next mobile operator to offer the Mini 3 Android-based smart phone.

Dell shared interesting results from a study of more than 1,500 people about their smart phone experiences. Among highlights: 82 percent of those who own smart phones said they would not leave home without them, while more than half of those surveyed said they wanted to choose from a wider variety of smart phones options from additional providers. For more information on the survey highlights visit Dell Official Flickr page.

The News

Alienware M11x
The Alienware M11x demonstrates the graphics power of a 15-inch laptop in an 11-inch form factor
Play all of your games and media, whether at home or away, at HD 720p resolution
With the Alienware M11x, gamers can enjoy the feel of the gaming without compromise anywhere they go

Alienware OptX™ AW2310 23″ 3D Full HD Widescreen Monitor
The 23″ Alienware OptX™ AW2310 provides an immersive stereoscopic 3D experience that takes gamers to a whole new level of extreme, ultrarealistic game play*
Enable intense stereoscopic 3D effects on hundreds of PC game titles with NVIDIA® 3D Vision™ technology
Price for monitor is $499 (NVIDIA 3D Vision Kit not included)

Alienware M17x, M15x
The most powerful 17-inch and 15-inch Alienware gaming laptops ever created
The M17x, the most powerful 17-inch gaming laptop in the universe, now offers Intel Core i7 processors combined with dual graphics to deliver extreme frame rates at HD resolutions while maxing out game settings.
The M15x delivers exceptional HD video and audio editing, 3D animation and high-end PC gaming
M17x start at $1,799 and the M15x start at $1,399

Inspiron 14, 15, 17
Redesigned Inspiron laptops full-featured and ideal for on-the-go media consumption
Now with new, thinner chassis, 16:9 aspect HD displays, SRS Premium Sound™
Available today with new turbo-charged Intel® Core™ i5 processors starting at $849.
Systems featuring the Intel Core i3 processor will be available later this month, starting at $569.

Inspiron 580, 580s
Ideal for consumers looking for great, high-value desktop computers
Best-selling desktop line gets a boost from new processors, and many models may be personalized with color choices. Prices start at $269.

Studio 14, 15, 17
Refreshed Studio laptops feature Intel Core i5 and i7 processors and are perfect for sharing photos, music and videos with friends and family.
Portable Studio 14 available in North America later this month with prices starting at $699.
Studio 15 has high-definition, 15.6-inch LED widescreen design and is rich with multimedia technology, like True HD resolutions that show off content crisply, starting at $849
Studio 17 features beautiful 17.3-inch display, with unbelievably realistic audio. Prices start at $949

Studio XPS 8100
Knock-out features for families seeking a high-performance, multi-purpose desktop computer
Replaces Studio XPS 8000 with juiced-up Intel Core i5 processor technology, new theater-quality THX® TruStudio PC™ sound and cutting-edge design. Prices start at $749

About Dell
People worldwide can buy Dell online, by phone and through more than 50,000 outlets.

*Stereoscopic 3D requires optional NVIDIA® 3D Vision™ Kit and a desktop system with Dual-Link DVI Ports and a compatible NVIDIA graphics solution. For a full list of system requirements please visit: http://www.nvidia.com/object/GeForce_3D_Vision_Requirements.html.


Tags: Alienware, AT&T, Dell, Inspiron, Mini 3, Studio

Yesterday, we saw Dell's Slate concept for the first time. Today, we got to actually play with it. And it's called the Mini 5.

Dell Mini 5 Hands-ON

(Btw, if you want to read yesterday's stories on the slate, check here.) Specs that we know: custom Android, SIM (it makes calls), Wi-Fi, Bluetooth. And the 5-inch screen supports full multitouch. In your hand, it's very light and comfortable to use. The screen is responsive, and Dell's icon interface makes for intuitive presentation of Android. It feels a bit more like plastic than, say, the iPod touch. But it was perfectly solid from what we could tell. Making a phone call turns the Mini 5 into a gigantic phone, almost like a handset out of a Carrot Top routine, but Dell expects most consumers will opt to use a headset. The unexpectedly awesome feature? The 5MP camera. The Dell Mini 5 has a 5-inch screen, and your subject fills the entire frame. It's an oddly satisfying implementation of a camera, in a super sizing kind of way. My model wasn't connected to the web, so I didn't get to test the browser. And my hands-on time was more than limited (and frankly, a bit frantic), so I can't really speak sincerely on much else. But let me say this: I like the Mini 5. And I dare say that Dell's software—their version of Android onboard—may be equally or more impressive than the hardware itself. I'm not sure I have a need for this or any 5-inch tablet, but you know what? I'm going to give em a shot all the same.

Google takes REcaptcha

Google acquires reCAPTCHA for book scans

Teaching computers to read, Google hopes to bolster Google Books and the Google News Archive

Technology trends and news by Dan Spelzmann
September 16, 2009 | Comments (0)
Short URL: http://vator.tv/n/aa8

16340

Google has acquired reCAPTCHA, the company known by most users as a provider of those (slightly annoying) tests where you have to type out the squiggly, morphed words displayed to sign in to a site. The idea is to prevent bots from buying all the tickets for a show in the first 10 seconds of the sale or signing up for every available email address.

reCAPTCHA

Google says reCAPTCHA currently guards over 100,000 Web sites from such spam attacks.

The service has much broader applications, though.

reCAPTCHA is aiding the massive task of digitizing books, newspapers and old time radio shows. For physical books, it’s a two-step process: scan a page, then transform into text using “Optical Character Recognition” (OCR).

Unfortunately, even the most sophisticated OCR program cannot easily transcribe just any scanned image of a page of text, for example, because in some older books, either time has taken its toll on the paper and ink or the font is just plain weird. But humans can probably figure out what it means.

fail

According to reCAPTCHA’s Web site:

About 200 million CAPTCHAs are solved by humans around the world every day. In each case, roughly ten seconds of human time are being spent. Individually, that's not a lot of time, but in aggregate these little puzzles consume more than 150,000 hours of work each day.

reCAPTCHA gives users two words. The first is a word reCAPTCHA knows. The second is the word from that ancient or damaged text that the computer is trying to transcribe. If a user gets the first word right, then reCAPTCHA assumes it’s dealing with a human, and accepts the user’s input for the second word. After many run-throughs with many different users, reCAPTCHA pools all the inputs for the second word and assumes the majority answer is probably what the word actually is.

In this way, reCAPTCHA can continually utilize the crowd to correct and improve its OCR.

Google’s acquisition of the company makes a lot of sense, considering that they are currently invested in two large-scale digitization projects: Google Books and the Google News Archive.

When is the best time to use a 301?

301

Moving a Website to a New Domain but Keep the Page Rank

Google Page Rank is important to a lot of people, and many base their decisions around it. There is now no excuse to stay with an underperforming or useless domain name if you can move it and keep the rank.

There are many reasons why you might want to move domain names. Two have already been mentioned. Usefulness is a big factor, one that most of the webmasters out there are keen to compete on. Underperforming is something else entirely. Some domain names just work, they do. They are either perfectly descriptive, niche names or you got there before everyone else did. If you have a page that appears high on the SERP, you may put up with bad ones in order to retain the result. Well no longer do you have to.

I have tried this one myself, which is why I’m writing about it now. I moved a site from a .com domain to a .org a little over three months ago. It had a Page Rank of four before the move, and I was a little apprehensive that all my good work would have been for naught. However, the new site is now back at four, right where we started from!

So here is what I did.

Firstly, and obviously I did a 301 redirect on the old domain and pointed it to the new one. Then I pointed the new .org domain to the website directory. Within that directory I created a folder called “com-site.” The name could have been anything but the descriptive title would remind me what it was if I was having a blonde day.

Within the “com-site” directory I created a new .htaccess file in order to tell browsers, and search engines what to do. The code I used was:

Options +FollowSymLinks
RewriteEngine on
RewriteRule (.*) http://www.websitename.org/$1

Then I tested from every browser that typing in the old .com address it redirected to the .org one. It may have been overkill, trying each browser, but it’s a habit I got into when first starting out in web design.

Then I pointed the old domain to the “com-site” directory and tested again with each browser. It didn’t work at first, but after a couple of hours it got picked up and started working properly. My patience was tested, as I was ready to take action and undo it all, but luckily I was interrupted by some work, and by the time I went back it was working.

I then updated the sitemap.xml file to reflect the new domain name and deleted the sitemap from Google. I replaced it with a new one and sat back to wait. Approximately three months later, after many days with the Google toolbar, it showed PR4 again. Not trusting the toolbar on its own, I went to Webmaster Central, and lo and behold, I was PR4 again!

I’m sure most of you out there already know this one, but I was so pleased it worked that I just had to share.

Bloomberg Buys Energy News Publisher | paidContent

A week after closing its purchase of BusinessWeek, it has bought New Energy Finance, a UK-based publisher of news covering the carbon and clean power markets. Terms were not disclosed. Peter Grauer, Bloomberg's chairman, recently hinted …

Organizing for America | Cloe Axelson's Blog: Morning News

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Coldplay LP5 News – Stereogum

Grab your Revolutionary War garb, Coldplay's “holed up in a dilapidated north London church” working on a new album for release next year. Brian Eno's back, but to avoid being a “huge stadium act” (?), they're going in “a stripped-down, …

What the heck is a “canonical URL?”  It sounds vaguely like a website the Pope would decree as required reading.  At least in Biblical terms.  But in computer terms, “canonical” simply means “the normal way stuff is.”  It comes from mathematics, where a standard format for writing equations is important, but it’s rarely used that way anymore.  And who really cares anyway?

For our use, a “canonical URL” is simply a standard URL for accessing your web site.  In search engine optimization it means that no matter how a user gets to your web site, it displays the exact same page with the exact same URL so that search engines know the page is a single page, no matter how many URLs point to it.  A basic example:

www.foo.bar and foo.bar are the same site.  You and I can tell that, because both URLs bring up the same page.  And everyone knows that the “www” host name can be dropped from a URL and still get to the site, right?  After all, your business card doesn’t include the www, and neither does your phone book listing.  That’s the normal way this stuff works.  The canonical way.  Except they are two different pages.

Computers don’t make leaps of faith and assume that whether or not a www precedes a URL makes no difference.  To a computer, they are two separate URLs, one with the www and one without.  You and I know they’re really the same thing, but computers are stubborn.  And picky.  And for SEO, stubborn and picky are not the best attributes because SEO is for people, some of whom may be stubborn and picky (these ones are often referred to as “ex-girlfriends”) but most of whom are not.  At least to the totally anal extent of a computer.  So we fix this by providing canonical URLs, ones that, to a computer, are exactly the same.  In simple terms, we convert any request for foo.bar into www.foo.bar (or vice-versa) before we let the search engine see it.  That way, a search engine sees one page even though there are two URLs that can reach it.  Instead of splitting the popularity of the page into two separate pages, the combined popularity score reflects what happens in real life.

And an easy way to do this is with the URL Rewrite module for IIS 7.  We’re not going to run through the setup and use of this module, you can find that information at Microsoft’s IIS web site, just a quick listing of the rewrite rule you enter in your web.config file.  Which would look something like this:

<rule name=”Redirect URL to WWW version”
        stopProcessing=”true”>
  <match url=”.*” />
    <conditions>
      <add input=”{HTTP_HOST}” pattern=”^foo.bar$” />
    </conditions>
  <action type=”Redirect” url=”http://www.foo.bar/{R:0}”
        redirectType=”Permanent” />
</rule>

Some quick notes:

stopProcessing=”true” — This stops processing any rewrite rules after this one is triggered.  Normally you would want to do this, but if you have further rules that need processing, like changing a query string to a friendly URL, set this to false.

redirectType=”Permanent” — This provides a 301 HTTP response to the requesting client, indicating that the foo.bar URL has been permanently redirected, or moved, to the www.foo.bar URL.  Search engine spiders are smart enough to make this a permanent change in their search results, in essence they correct older search links that didn’t have the www in the URL.

Canonical URLs will help your page ranking in search results, but this is not the only SEO technique that can be handled with the URL Rewrite module.  But it is a simple function you can configure once for the site and never worry about again.  To find other possibilities for SEO use of the IIS 7 URL Rewrite module, be sure to check Carlos Aguilar’s blog and the URL Rewrite Module forum at www.iis.net.

Disclaimer

SEO is not rocket science and it’s hard to screw up using the IIS 7 Rewrite module when you follow the documentation, but if you do it’s not our fault.  If you’re an offended ex-girlfriend who is angry at this post, might we suggest counseling to get past the anger and hurt and move on with your life.  There are plenty of guys out there who aren’t dirt bags…  Well, aren’t usually dirt bags.  After all, we’re guys.  And by definition we’re pretty much scum one way or the other.  And unfortunately, we stopped maturing in our early teens, though many of us hide our immaturity well enough to hold stable relationships.  At least until we do something stupid again.  That’s why florists and jewelers make such a good living.

Server rules should work
You should be able to set what files are interpreted as php so you could do something like
mysite.com/your.name/FILENAME
If you have Linix/Unix server you can create .htaccess file to interpret .name files with this declaration
AddType application/x-httpd-php .name
Here is a tutorialhttp://www.translatum.gr/forum/index.php…
If you are on a virtual server or shared host you may or may not be able to do this
Another way to do it is as a rewrite rule:
RewriteEngine on
RewriteRule ^name/.+$ /name.php?filename=$1
for something like
mysite.com/name/FILENAME
will be taken to
mysite.com/name.php? filename=FILENAME

Déplacement d'un site vers un nouveau domaine mais garder le Page Rank Google Page Rank est important pour beaucoup de gens, et la base de beaucoup de leurs décisions autour d'elle. Il n'ya maintenant aucune excuse pour rester avec un sous-performants ou nom de domaine inutile si vous pouvez le déplacer et à maintenir le rang. Il ya plusieurs raisons pour lesquelles vous pouvez renommer les noms de domaine. Deux ont déjà été mentionnées. L'utilité est un facteur important, celui que la plupart des webmasters là-bas sont désireux de concourir sur. Sous-performant est tout autre chose. Certains noms de domaine de travail juste, ils le font. Ils sont soit parfaitement descriptive, les noms de niche ou vous y êtes arrivé avant tout le monde fait. Si vous avez une page qui semble élevé sur les SERP, vous mai mis en place avec les mauvaises, afin de conserver le résultat. Eh bien non plus le faire vous devez.

Straight out of college Jeremy Khan wanted to start a nationwide business. The greatest weapon a young entrepreneur like him has is the web. But it takes more than a simple text website to get attention. If design is how companies create brands, then web design is how new brands get noticed.

As the plans for Khan's company Oral Fixation, a hip mint outfit, moved forward he knew it needed a website that would make his mints stand out among all the rest.

Luckily his schoolmate Jonathan Harris was an accomplished web designer, who eventually went on to create 10 by 10 an artistic alternative to Google News. When Khan brought Harris on board as a partner, he knew his website would be top notch and competitive.

“I wanted to create a website that people would repeatedly come back to and get sucked into,” said Khan. “That's very much what happened with this website.” Today Oral Fixation is up, running and selling on both coasts.

So what's the lesson here? Not all of us are lucky enough to have web designer friends, who go around winning design awards and their own news profiles. But that doesn't mean we can't own a website that is just as high in quality as Oral Fixations.

Web designers are in abundance, especially since the dot com bust. Some freelance their work, others join larger design companies, but all have their price. And while that price can sometimes burn your pocket, a smart business owner knows that a good website is an investment. The rate of return for a sleek website is almost always worth the initial hurt. A good designer creates a clean interface, high search optimization and gives your clients a way to find information they need about your business. If you don't think a bad website can hurt your image, check out the old website for the 90's hip hop group Kriss Kross.

Of course expensive web design isn't an absolute necessity. If you run a small business you can rely on eBay or simply start a blog, making web design a point and click procedure. But don't expect your product or service to get recognized. For that you need someone to give your business character and that takes design. You can always try to learn web editing software like

Dreamweaver yourself, but beware the risk of spending time reading a Dreamweavor for Idiots book and creating a website that just doesn't make the cut.

Making the Choice

If you do decide to hire a designer, make sure you know what you are getting. Don't settle for the first person knocking on your email mentioning they know HTML. If you have the money to spend, ask for credentials. Serious web designers went to school to receive a degree and would appreciate that you are looking for someone who knows the business. Check out their past clients and get a feel for their style. If the sites you visit have broken links, aren't easy to navigate, hard to read and difficult to spot relevant information, you probably won't want to hire that designer.

As alluded, finding a web designer isn't hard. A simple Google search using “web designer” will bring up more hits than you'll ever want to scroll through. And you aren't limited by location. If you are comfortable, designers can work via email just as well as in your office, so don't limit yourself.

So how do you narrow it down to find the right web guru for you? First decide if you want a freelancer or a larger company. Larger firms seem more impressive, but don't forget that they have an entire network dedicated to giving you that impression. Freelancers are the lone wolfs of design, but the right one can be dedicated and give your site the special attention you want. Larger firms are a safer bet. If you don't want to worry about a potential mishap or unprofessional situations, a company is the way to go. But, depending on the size of the design firm, after the initial meeting and discussion of your site's needs, you might feel shuffled along through the whole process.

Whichever you choose, expect to pay a price related to the level of education and experience of the designer(s) you're snagging coupled with your site's needs. If you don't have high expectations for your site, don't get an expensive designer. But if you want a full site with archives, message boards, routine check ups and redesigns, you will have to shell out more money. In the end you are going to get what you pay for. You won't be able to find a bargain like you do for shoes; web design is a service not a product. When was the last time you heard of an electrician or a lawyer “on sale?”

Getting to the Gritty

After comparing different prices you are comfortable with and styles you find appealing, narrow the research down to a few solid choices. Once at that stage make sure you can get specifics from your designer. See if they can lay out a timeframe. Make sure this is the kind of project they have experience with. Larger firms will probably have someone who is an expert in every skill and technology, while a freelancer might take extra time to learn new programming languages. Ask for referrals from past clients and check up on them. Finally, don't agree to anything until you look at a contract.

A professional designer should have a standard contract waiting to be sent. You want to make sure that your interests are included in that contract. The last thing you want is to be tied to a contract that doesn't assure you will get what you are paying for. The contract should include what work is going to get done, when work will start, an estimate for a date of completion, a specific pay timeline (it's not uncommon for a deposit, midpoint payment and completion payment depending on the size of the job), and who has the right to the site's final design. If you are trying to create an initial logo using the web this is something that can't be overlooked!

There you have It

Design is everywhere and like it or not, it affects what you do and how you do it. Everything from where the men's shoes are placed in Macy's to the clean cut design of Apple computers designs are consciously created to get the results intended by the company. The web has created an entirely new medium for design and a new caste of designers itching to do just that, get you the results you want. Whether you are just starting out or trying to update a fortune 500, you need to be on the web, but only if your presence will reflect the positive attributes of your business.

 

The world of Web Design and Graphic Design

graphicdesignThe world of web and graphic design is an ever changing landscape where the inhabitants have to continually strive to learn and perfect new skills as new technology evolves.  Much of it we can learn in-house or from vendors, but much of it we have to figure out for ourselves.

What follows is a list of some of the sources we use to keep up with developments and learn new skills.  Some of them teaches us something new, while others reinforce what we already know.  We don’t know everything, as much as we might like to believe we do.  Each website in this list offers us something, and they are included in this list in case they can help you too.

One of the most popular resources on the net for graphic design is Smashing Magazine, (www.smashingmagazine.com).  This is a well established site with a regular audience of web developers and graphic designers.  It has imparted knowledge since it began and continues that trend to this day with plentiful tutorials on web design, Photoshop and all the other toys we get to play with during the day.  The forum is remarkably quiet for a site so lively, but the information it contains is sound.

Next up is tuts+, (www.tutsplus.com).  This is another high quality site and one we use here in our office in Naples.  Graphic design at its best with high quality tutorials written by experts.  It is the hub for all of the Tuts+ sites and is great place to start when searching for information or inspiration.  The site is aimed at beginners and pro’s alike, but is more geared towards advanced users.  It leads off to subordinate sites like psdtuts, for Photoshop, aetuts for Adobe After Effects and so on.

Another useful site is called CreativePro, (www.creativepro.com).  This is another resource site aimed at existing graphic designers.  There are more categories and tutorials on that site than any sane person could read.  There is literally something for everyone here.  Beginners may find things a little hard going as most of the content is for advanced users, but who said design was easy?

Sitepoint is the last site we are going to mention here, (www.sitepoint.com).  This is another site aimed at experienced graphic designers or web developers, but has a lot of information and resources for the newcomer too.  Often there are other tips, like how to run the business side of things, or practical advice for clients and that kind of thing.  Sitepoint has been around a few years, just like Smashing and has built up a loyal and vocal fan base.  The marketplace is an excellent place to go if you have spare templates, JavaScripts or other stuff to sell too.

Those are just four of what I am sure are thousands of sites out there.  They each offer something different and are lively enough to keep us going back every week.  Hopefully they will give other Naples graphic design enthusiasts a hand up as they have done to us.

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The design for your website plays a crucial in role in its success. The human mind seeks harmony and when a visitor to your site finds that the website design, content and development go hand in hand, they are pleased.

Website design should be both pleasing to the eye and a reflection of your business. So if yours is a business associated with fun such as that of a party planner its design would be rather different from the website design for a law firm. Every website design should be distinct and in keeping with its purpose and audience. This is what our website designers use as a blueprint to base a design on. Please have a look at our website design portfolio for a better understanding of our quality of work.

Our designers have the experience of working on website designs for an array of industries. This provides them the expertise to ensure that every website design is apt and focused. From the basics of design to ensuring the website design reflects the mood of the content and facilitates good navigation, our website designers keep it all in mind when creating your website design.

Contact us today for more details on our website design services.

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10 CSS Tips for Website Design

A good website design must have aesthetic sense with subtle designing tweaks here and there. The source code must also be neat with limited amount of code or jargon. The website should be designed in a way so that it is also optimized for search engines. In a nutshell, an effective website design must involve Cascading Style Sheet (CSS) to ensure that all the requisites of a top website have been integrated in it. Let us check out what important CSS tips and tricks you need to know to make sure you have the best website design.

Color Enhancements

When using HTML, Blockquotes are used for editing colors. This was quite common before the onset of CSS. But, CSS code does not take space like Blockquotes and it also gives the website designer the freedom to provide color enhancements, such as background color. These aspects could not have been achieved with great success using HTML codes.

Image Editing

Images in a website design have greatly evolved today with CSS codes. The images include not only illustrations or photographs but also animations and videos. The best way to use these elements is to integrate CSS codes in them. Moreover, editing can be done quickly and easily through CSS.

Roll-over Color Changes

Previously, JavaScripts were used to enhance the roll-over colors of the buttons. But, JavaScript with its long coding sequences, did not appeal the search engines. As a result, an alternative was suggested in the form of CSS code.

Creating Aesthetic Tables

Many websites use tables, forms, rows and columns to demarcate categories, thoughts, paragraphs, etc. Using these formats were laborious and involved too much of HTML code. However, things are much different now with CSS coding. Further, corners of a table or a box can be smoothened to give an aesthetic touch to them.

Forms & Interactivity

For interactive elements, such as forms, the best way to integrate them into a website design is through CSS as it much faster and easier. With the introduction of colors, nothing seems classier than using CSS for these elements.

Editing Global Elements

Not only is the code streamlined, it is also easy to edit a table and reflect the change in all pages. This is typically used to change colors or images for top and bottom band of the website or logos and buttons.

Working with hCards

The effective way to create hCards is through CSS. With its growing importance, more website owners are purchasing CSS-enabled “hCard Creator” software.

Printing through Stylesheets

Often, users want to take a printout of a page or an article. With CSS codes, this can be easily done with just a click of a button. No blank spaces or images are printed through this method.

Linking External Documents & Designing a Sleek Website

Using CSS code, external documents can be attached with ease and without any errors. Additionally, dotted lines etc can also be removed through this language.

So, why not settle for CSS as it can give you a better yield with less space.

As designers, we all know that a minimalist design can achieve beautiful results.

Still, many designers have trouble creating one; either they have a hard time making a page with so few elements look good or the final result just doesn’t look “complete.”

There are many articles on the Web about minimalism and this article aims to help you achieve a minimalist design that is beautiful but not bare.

To top it off, we’ll present a small showcase of minimalist designs, so that you can analyze why some designs work and others don’t. class='ads-block'> id="more-13704">

What Is Minimalist Design?

Minimalist design has been described as design at its most basic, stripped of superfluous elements, colors, shapes and textures.

Its purpose is to make the content stand out and be the focal point. From a visual standpoint, minimalist design is meant to be calming and to bring the mind down to the basics.

The design movement began in Switzerland and was then applied to a variety of media: graphic design, architecture, music, literature, painting and, more recently, web design.

Although minimalist design took off decades ago, the early days of the Internet did not show it. Even without the rotating logos, marquees and bright colors, website designs were cluttered and overbearing.

We’ll go over the basic principles of minimalist design. But even if you choose not to pursue a minimalist aesthetic, the lessons here can help you simplify your design, whatever your style.

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Less Is More

As mentioned, minimalism brings the most important content to the forefront and minimizes distractions for the user. If a page has too many elements, the viewer will be confused about where to look or misinterpret the priority of each element. A minimalist design puts the focus squarely on the content.

Any splash of color on a black-and-white design, for example, is sure to get the user’s attention. The color itself becomes the focal point. Let’s look at a specific example:

You’ve probably seen this kind of design before: plain white background, one block of content and one graphic element.

The graphic element brings color, texture and shape. It is clearly the most important element on the page, and it defines the designer’s brand and identity.

With the complexity of this particular graphic element, more content on this page would have made it less noticeable, and less important. Keeping the content to a minimum, the designer has achieved the perfect balance.

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How to Minimize Content

The first step to creating a minimalist design, or just simplifying a layout, is not simply to cut out most of the graphics, but rather to rethink the content and strip it to the bare requirements. Only then will the most important elements on the page achieve their intended effect.

Just as you would plan any website, write down what content you need: logo, introduction, navigation, etc. Cut out anything else that is not essential. Throw out as much as possible.

Below are some elements you probably do not need. Keep in mind that this is just a guide. Your exact requirements will depend on your particular design. Some of the items below may not be required for your website.

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  • Icons or graphics for social media, or a social media section at all
  • Taglines and supplementary descriptions or introductions
  • “Featured,” “Popular” and “Recent” lists (including Twitter and RSS feed lists)
  • Pages with more than three major sections (e.g. “Introduction,” “About” and “Services”)
  • Secondary navigation pages.
  • The point here is not to make the website less functional, but rather to cut out unnecessary elements (and thus highlight the necessary ones) or to combine sections into a simpler layout (for example, by incorporating your social media links into the “About” or introductory section).

    You could also divide content into separate pages, giving each piece of content more attention.

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    How to Simplify the Design

    Now it’s time to simplify the design as much as possible.

    Minimalist designs should have little texture, color, shape, lines, content or type. Go too bare, though, and the design will be boring. Rather than dumping everything out, give the design appeal by making just one important feature the focal point.

    Choose what that focus will be, and keep the tips below in mind as you work through your design.

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    Use a Great Wireframe

    In browsing the showcase section below, we see that some designers have added visual interest with subtle bursts of color, unique typography or interesting shapes. Perhaps the most important element they have all relied on, though, is a unique wireframe.

    Creating a wireframe for such a bare page requires a bit of extra attention. With the correct wireframe, you can achieve the right hierarchy and organization and create visual interest.

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    To come up with a wireframe, follow these steps:

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    1. Decide on what content you absolutely need
    2. In a list, prioritize the content
    3. Sketch a few wireframes based on your list to experiment with the best visual hierarchy.
      1. When working out the wireframe, consider placement but also visual treatment. For example, if your logo has a color that you do not reuse elsewhere in the design, you have to account for that.

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        White Space

        White space is practically synonymous with minimalism.

        No matter how creative you are with it, a minimalist design without plenty of white space is not really minimalist at all. So, be sure to add more white space around elements than you normally would.

        The space is needed to balance the few elements that will appear on the page.

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        Balance, Alignment, Contrast

        While much of the load can be carried by white space and a good wireframe, special care should be taken with the fundamentals of design. The three biggest related to minimalism are balance, alignment and contrast.

        Be sure that your design adheres to these principles and that it does not need supplementary visual aids to look “finished.”

        Keep other basic design principles in mind, too. Review them and experiment with different options to achieve the best result. Check out “The Principles of Design” for more ideas.

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        When Over-Designing Becomes a Habit

        Over-designing sometimes becomes a habit. No matter how hard you try to keep a design simple, it comes out messy and complex. To fix this, we must form new habits.

        Try reviewing the tips above before each project to keep them in mind during the process. Focus on developing one habit at a time. For example, work on reducing and simplifying the content before moving on to white space.

        If you find yourself in a tough spot thinking, “Something’s missing,” first try taking something out, rather than putting something new in.

        Every aspect of minimalism requires a different talent. Your designs will become simpler the more you put these principles into practice.

        Taking it further, once you have applied the techniques discussed here, look at the finished product and see if you can find ways to simplify the result even further.

        You could focus on areas that you were unsure of during the design process, and you could ask other designers to point out elements you may have missed.

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        Minimalist Showcase

        Below is a brief showcase of minimalist designs. See how each of these implements the principles we have discussed. Also see which ones break our guidelines, and think of why they still work.

        1. James Day Photo

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        2. Killswitch Collective

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        3. Lonely

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        4. DBushell

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        5. XPD.no

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        6. Toy NY

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        7. Joshua Serbus

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        8. Ah-Studio

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        9. Symour Powell

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        10. Icon Werk

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        11. Neil Wilson Architects

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        12. Non-Format

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        13. Zaum

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        14. Checkland Kindlysides

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        15. Blumenthal

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        16. Tink London

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        17. Proud Creative

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        18. Kimag

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        19. Bernat Fortet

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        20. All Day

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        Some Trends

        As you can see, minimalist web design has some clear trends. Being aware of these trends helps us improve our designs in a number of ways.

        Not only are we able to take inspiration from the layouts that other designers have worked so hard on, but we can consciously break from these trends to forge our own innovative path.

        Let’s discuss a few of these trends in further detail.

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        Black and White

        One of the most noticeable trends is extensive use of black and white. This is obvious enough: color should be simplified along with texture, shape and content. But it can be overdone these days and look a little boring.

        Look at a few websites that have defined colors in the showcase above, and see how they stand out from other minimalist designs. Also, think of how they manage to stay minimalist even with such strong use of color. Here’s one example:

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        Interesting Typography

        Typography-based Web design is closely tied to minimalism.

        When designers have very little else to excite the user, they often seize on interesting typography. You could even go so far as to use typography as the sole visual element.

        This is a daring technique but still a trend in itself. Look for ways to make typography enhance the design while remaining unique.

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        Flash

        A surprising number of minimalist web designs are Flash-based. With so little else for visual stimulation, a design could benefit from subtle animation (such as text fading in and out) without being overpowering.

        Also, Flash removes certain limitations in the design process. Unconventional wireframes, typography and other elements can be easier to achieve with Flash than by traditional methods.

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        Wrapping Up

        Minimalist design comes in many forms, and yet we too often see the same form repeated. Trends can become overbearing, and we must fight the urge to imitate while understanding what it is about a trend that makes sense.

        In any case, minimalism can be beautiful and will be around for years to come, so learning some of its techniques can be incredibly beneficial, whether for your clients or for your own projects.

        And even if you’re not interested in the minimalist style, the lessons and principles involved can help you simplify your designs, which is always a good thing.

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        Written exclusively for Webdesigner Depot by Kayla Knight.

        So, what makes minimalist design so effective, and when should we avoid it?  Please share your comments below…

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