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Show DescriptionDave's putting together a platform for his presidential bid and workshops his policies, discussing vehicle options for a family in 2024, Chris and other authors get ownership of their A Book Apart books back, and the ramifications and reasoning behind Google killing a URL shortener. Listen on Website →Links Office Space (1999) directed by Mike Judge • Reviews, film + cast • Letterboxd 2024 Hyundai IONIQ 5: Electric SUV | Hyundai Canada R2 - Rivian Bronco® Sport | Build & Price | Shop.ford.ca A Book Apart Practical SVG by Chris Coyier Print-On-Demand I'm Mat. I make websites. Reacquired. Real Life News 587: Why Ethan Marcotte Thinks Tech Workers Deserve a Union – ShopTalk Google URL Shortener Netlify Astro Partnership SponsorsShopTalk PatreonSupport the show and help keep us on the air - AND get access to the super fun d-d-d-d-d-d-d-iscord with other Shopamaniacs.
Show DescriptionWe're chatting with Jason Grigsby about what a white-collar recession means, how the sources and methods of consuming news shape our perspectives, whether the current economic conditions represent a market correction and if a rebound is imminent. We explore the critical decision of whether to embrace AI advancements or risk being left behind. We also talk about AI-generated voices, large language models and ethics, and the impact of social media signals in an AI world. Listen on Website →GuestsJason GrigsbyGuest's Main URL • Guest's TwitterCo-Founder of Cloud Four. Author of Progressive Web Apps from A Book Apart. Links An Event Apart - Farewell Cloud Four – Responsive web design and development, progressive web apps Jason Grigsby – A resurrected blog on the Indie Web Jason Grigsby (@grigs) / X High-Salary Job Scarcity Code Tests AI Ethical Framework iPhone Personal Voice MacWhisper Progressive Web Apps Decoder Sponsors
Show some love for today's sponsor, MIRO. https://www.miro.com/podcast Hey Premium'ster! Thanks for supporting us and super happy to have you as a supporter of This is HCD! I'm delighted to have you with me for another cracking episode this time with Leon Barnard, co-author of the brand spanking new book on A Book Apart, called Wireframing for Everyone. Leon, Michael and Bill all work for one of my absolute favourite UX businesses, Balsamiq. A wire framing tool that when it came out in 2008, was revolutionary. It reduced the exclusivity around the capability of wire framing, and made it accessible overnight to teams and non-designers. It increased the quality of communication, it reduced meetings, it sped things up and enabled better outcomes for teams working in the product space. It wasn't perfect, it wasn't sexy, but it was powerful. In this conversation, we chat about the self-imposed restrictions on the product, still owned by the original founder, Giacomo (Peldi) Guilizzoni who I can vividly remember answering my support tickets in the early days of the business, and it's awesome to see and hear what the culture is like within the business. But onto the book, all three of the co-founders worked on parts of this book, and we speak at length with Leon about the approach, the mindset of wire framing and how it unlocks blockers within teams. This book I believe would make for great gifts for teams to pass around the organisation to try and improve the wire framing capability as you've probably heard many many times on this podcast, prototyping is one of the most incredible skills to have for any change-makers, and this book helps provide the keys to people. Book: https://abookapart.com/products/wireframing-for-everyone Watch on YouTube: https://youtu.be/8mKcwLC1HYE
Episode NotesKatel LeDû is the CEO of A Book Apart, where she helps passionate tech community members become successful authors. She's also a coach focused on helping folks cultivate creativity, develop social awareness in themselves and at work, and embody sensitivity and empathy as superpowers.We cover a lot, including:uncommon career pathsthe maturity of industriesegos and emailpauses before answerscapitalismpeople trusting themselveswork as saviorentrepreneurshipthe concepts of small as big, dangerous departuresConnect with Katel on LinkedIn and check out Katel's recent book, You Should Write a Book, here. And finally...Looking for new energy in your mentorships? Check out the Plucky Mentor Pack, an easy tool to inspire deep conversations about your path. https://abookapart.com/
How your values set your book apart | Creating a great lasting impressionYour book is not the only book on that topic. So, how do you set yourself apart to create a lasting impression? In this conversation with Deborah Reynolds, we will talk about the mindset you need for success as an author including:Your values,Your character,Leveraging the past to create a great future, andCreating a great lasting impression. Like this? Please like, comment and subscribe! ===============================================================
Our goal is to have conversations that inspire and to help move the dial forward for organisations to become more human-centred in their approach to solving complex business and societal problems. If you like what we do at This is HCD and want to help us - there are a few things you can do; Leave a review wherever you like to listen to the podcast it takes a couple of minutes, but it's one of the most important thing you can do to show support - every little helps. Become a Patron. You can get an ad-free stream of the podcast for as little as €1.66 per month and you also get a a shout out as thanks - there's other plans where you can get exclusive items too. All the money goes directly to editing, hosting and maintaining our website which is a repository for human centered design goodness - with over 220 episodes. In this episode I chat with one of the leaders in the Content Design space, Rachel McConnell. We chat about the work that they are doing in Flo Healthcare, and touch of some of the work that they did whilst at Deliveroo. We chat about the learnings at Flo, where the organisation is going through another iteration on how to connect the dots between Product Design, Content Design etc. Rachel now finds herself in such an exciting position as Design Director with Flo, that allows her to apply much of the knowledge within their second book titled ‘Leading Content Design' published by the wonderful people at A Book Apart. We chat about the work Rachel is also doing with Lead with Tempo Conference too. Rachel was such a wonderful guest, we had so much fun making this episode - I'm sure you'll enjoy it too! Become a Patron of This is HCD / https://www.thisishcd.com/become-a-patron Sign up to This is HCD Newsletter / https://www.thisishcd.com/community/stay-up-to-date-with-this-is-hcd Follow Gerry Scullion on Twitter / https://twitter.com/gerrycircus Follow This is HCD on Twitter / https://twitter.com/thisishcd Lead with Tempo / https://www.leadwithtempo.com/ Rachel on LinkedIn / https://www.linkedin.com/in/rachel-mcconnellme/?originalSubdomain=uk 'Leading Content Design' book / https://abookapart.com/products/leading-content-design 'Why you need a content design team' book / https://www.amazon.co.uk/Why-need-content-team-build/dp/1720128448 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Hello and welcome to This is HCD. Our goal is to have conversations that inspire and to help move the dial forward for organisations to become more human-centred in their approach to solving complex business and societal problems. If you like what we do at This is HCD and want to help us - there are a few things you can do; Leave a review wherever you like to listen to the podcast it takes a couple of minutes, but it's one of the most important thing you can do to show support - every little helps. Become a Patron. You can get an ad-free stream of the podcast for as little as €1.66 per month and you also get a a shout out as thanks - there's other plans where you can get exclusive items too. All the money goes directly to editing, hosting and maintaining our website which is a repository for human centered design goodness - with over 220 episodes. In this episode I chat with one of the leaders in the Content Design space, Rachel McConnell. We chat about the work that they are doing in Flo Healthcare, and touch of some of the work that they did whilst at Deliveroo. We chat about the learnings at Flo, where the organisation is going through another iteration on how to connect the dots between Product Design, Content Design etc. Rachel now finds herself in such an exciting position as Design Director with Flo, that allows her to apply much of the knowledge within their second book titled ‘Leading Content Design' published by the wonderful people at A Book Apart. We chat about the work Rachel is also doing with Lead with Tempo Conference too. Rachel was such a wonderful guest, we had so much fun making this episode - I'm sure you'll enjoy it too! Become a Patron of This is HCD / https://www.thisishcd.com/become-a-patron Sign up to This is HCD Newsletter / https://www.thisishcd.com/community/stay-up-to-date-with-this-is-hcd Follow Gerry Scullion on Twitter / https://twitter.com/gerrycircus Follow This is HCD on Twitter / https://twitter.com/thisishcd Lead with Tempo / https://www.leadwithtempo.com/ Rachel on LinkedIn / https://www.linkedin.com/in/rachel-mcconnellme/?originalSubdomain=uk 'Leading Content Design' book / https://abookapart.com/products/leading-content-design 'Why you need a content design team' book / https://www.amazon.co.uk/Why-need-content-team-build/dp/1720128448 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Laura Kalbag calls on businesses using people's data for profit to examine the ethics of that model, and talks practical inclusive design and digital accessibility. Highlights include: ⭐ How are accessibility and inclusive design different? ⭐ What does the inaccessible state of the web say about technologists? ⭐ What's wrong with companies profiting from our behavioural data? ⭐ Why have you gone to great lengths to live up to your values? ⭐ What can we do to help our organisations to make more ethical decisions? ====== Who is Laura Kalbag? Laura is a designer and developer, as well as the Co-Founder of the Small Technology Foundation, a two-person and one-husky, not-for-profit, that strives for a more ethical, more private, and more just technology industry. From 2016 until December 2021, the Small Technology Foundation made and supported Better, a digital privacy tool for Safari - across Apple's operating systems. Laura is also a passionate proponent for creating a web that is inclusive and accessible. In 2017 she published her first book, “Accessibility for Everyone”, through A Book Apart. The book is a guide to the accessibility landscape. Helping people to understand disability and impairment challenges; get a handle on important laws and guidelines; and to learn how to plan for, evaluate, and test accessible design. ====== Find Laura here: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/laurakalbag/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/LauraKalbag Website: https://laurakalbag.com/ Small Technology Foundation: Website: https://small-tech.org/ Email: hello@small-tech.org ====== Liked what you heard and want to hear more? Subscribe and support the show by leaving a review on Apple Podcasts (or wherever you listen). Follow us on our other social channels for more great Brave UX content! YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/TheSpaceInBetween/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-space-in-between/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thespaceinbetw__n/ ====== Hosted by Brendan Jarvis: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/brendanjarvis/ Website: https://thespaceinbetween.co.nz/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/brendanjarvis/
Vi pratar grön IT! För trettio år sedan hade det handlat om vad vi ska göra med e-soporna. Sedan svängde frågan mer mot virtualisering, tunna klienter och vidare till dagens klimateffektivisering. Vi pratade papperslöst samhälle, sen mindre egna serverhallar, men vad gör vi nu med vår feta bandbredd och all data i molnet? Jonas Hultenius arbetar med webb och mobilitet och ger oss en tydlig bild av hur mycket data vi skickar bara för att få fram en enkel webbsida. Vi öser på med bilder som tar bandbredd utan att tillföra särskilt mycket. Ofta använder vi felkomprimerade bilder eller fel filformat. Bildformaten har utvecklats från tunga BMP till JPG och PNG och nu AVIF och WebP. Utnyttja det! Kan en bild kosta 250 kb istället för 1 Mb gånger 100 000 besökare, så sker stora besparingar av bandbredd och därmed koldioxid. Om avsnittet: Målgrupp: alla, ledare, utvecklare, IT-avdelningen, webbdesigner Lär dig: green it, grön IT, framtidens webb, dark mode, koldioxidbesparing, miljövänlig it En grön webbplats är bra ur många perspektiv; SEO-ranking, snabbhet, tillgänglighet, utseende, användbarhet - och drar samtidigt mindre energi. Dark mode är en annan del av grön IT. Med de mörkare gränssnitten behöver inte alla lampor på skärmen tändas. Detta märker vi användare i form av längre batteritid, men i det stora hela också i sparad koldioxid. Många svenska webbar är tungrodda. Vi har glömt bort hur dyr bandbredd var förut! Som utvecklare kan du miljöbanta din sajt: Trimma bort allt du inte använder. Infomation som visas ofta kan cachas, sparas närmare användaren, istället för att grävas upp ur databasen om igen. Information som sammanfattas på en sida istället för tio sparar tio klick och tio sidladdningar. Använd dark mode. Använd färre bilder med mindre filstorlek. Behöver du ha hela Angular? Kanske testa ramverk som Svelte. Vi som bygger webbsajter kan tillsammans och var för sig ta tre steg mot mer grön IT: Kom till insikt. Använd verktyg för att analysera och inventera systemen. Vad kan vi spara på för oss, för användaren, för miljön?Gör en handlingsplan och plocka låghängande frukter och sen beta av att-göra-listanSkryt om hur bra webb vi har! Vi tänker på miljön! Sprid ordet. Jonas Hultenius, Jonas Jaani (21:56) Länkar / mer information: Videoversion av avsnittet: https://youtu.be/PjSZOdXffNM https://youtu.be/PjSZOdXffNM Boktips #1: Bildoptimering av Addy Osmani, en av chefsingenjörerna för Google Chrome, med huvudfokus på ett snabbt och effektivt internet.https://www.smashingmagazine.com/printed-books/image-optimization/ Boktips #2: Hållbar webb och webbteknik från A Book Apart.https://abookapart.com/products/sustainable-web-design För den som vill mäta sig mot sig själv eller andra rekommenderar: Website Carbon Calculator. Ett verktyg där man snabbt får en uppfattning över hur många sockerbitar eller för den delen Sumobrottare man släpper ut i koldioxidform.https://www.websitecarbon.com/ Alla avsnitt av digitaliseringens podcast Effekten: https://www.effekten.se/avsnitt Vi finns där du hittar dina övriga poddar: https://www.effekten.se/prenumerera/ Apple Podcasts: https://itunes.apple.com/se/podcast/effekten-digitalisering-kunskap/id1171229363 Google Podcasts: https://www.google.com/podcasts?feed=aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZWZmZWt0ZW4uc2UvZmVlZC9wb2RjYXN0Lw== Acast: https://www.acast.com/effekten Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5Z49zvPOisoSwhwojtUoCm https://open.spotify.com/show/5Z49zvPOisoSwhwojtUoCm
StevenRay (@stevenray) and Ray Hernandez (@Raydawg88) chat with Shara Rosenbalm (@shararosenbalm) and discuss creating and taking advantage of opportunities, her upcoming book, and learning to say no.Please leave us some feedback! You're amazing. ❤️––– Show Notes & Links –––Designing for Cognitive Bias - https://abookapart.com/products/desig...Shara's LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/shararose...Shara's Twitter - https://twitter.com/shararosenbalm
In this episode, we talk about tech publishing with Katel LeDû, CEO of A Book Apart. Show Notes Vultr (sponsor) DevNews (sponsor) CodeNewbie (sponsor) New Relic (sponsor) Microsoft 30 Days to Learn It (DevDiscuss) (sponsor) A Book Apart Responsible JavaScript Just Enough Research
In this episode, I spoke with Erika Hall. Co-founder of Mule Design, speaker, and author extraordinaire. We talked a lot about Erika's books, Just Enough Research and Conversational Design, computers, a new book in the works, and much more!. Intro/Outro music graciously given permission to use called, "Settle In" by Homer Gaines. Transcripts can be found at: https://toddl.dev/podcast/transcripts/hall Show Notes: https://muledesign.com - Mule Design https://twitter.com/mulegirl - Erika on Twitter https://www.linkedin.com/in/erikahall/ - Erika on LinkedIn https://medium.com/@mulegirl - Erika on Medium https://abookapart.com/products/just-enough-research - Just Enough Research on A Book Apart https://abookapart.com/products/conversational-design - Conversational Design on A Book Apart --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/frontendnerdery/support
In today's episode our host Harrison Wheeler is joined by David Dylan Thomas, speaker, filmmaker, and author of Designed for Cognitive Bias, to talk about the fascinating world of cognitive biases, how they influence our day-to-day lives, the importance of sticking to a growth mindset and how to deal with impostor syndrome. Googling and learning from Wikipedia will never make you an expert, but it will definitely open doors for you. You don't want to miss this conversation, so tune in now! Jump straight into: (01:33) - A cheerleader for inclusive design: Meet David Dylan Thomas. (04:57) - On David's passion for cognitive bias and the birth of the Cognitive Bias Podcast. (09:38) - The outward effects of cognitive biases on our day to day lives and the problem with binary thinking. (22:12) - Is a world without biases possible?: On thoughtful decision making and the importance of cultivating inclusion and collaboration. (25:33) - Design for Cognitive Bias: How David built an entire platform to share his work and expertise. (34:13) - The secret sauce: On David's experience design and the perspectives he brings to the table. (39:27) - What's next on David's agenda? Episode Resources: Connect with David through https://www.linkedin.com/in/daviddylanthomas1/ (LinkedIn) and https://twitter.com/movie_pundit (Twitter) Sign up for David's newsletter https://daviddylanthomas.us9.list-manage.com/subscribe?u=963fa6d62413a82c6778288fa&id=f1a876a0d7 (here) https://abookapart.com/products/design-for-cognitive-bias (Design for Cognitive Bias) by David Dylan Thomas https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-cognitive-bias-podcast/id1197648130 (The Cognitive Bias Podcast) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0KgevAOMHCA (Iris Bohnet | What Works: Gender Equality by Design) https://abookapart.com/ (A Book Apart) https://www.rebuildblackbusiness.com/ (Rebuild Black Business) https://automattic.com/ (Automattic) Support this podcast
Lisa Maria Marquis encourages us to be better designers by thinking more deeply about the decisions we're making and their potential for harm. Highlights include: - What shocking and harmful IA decision did a dead racist make? - Why is Information Architecture undervalued and under-practiced? - How do we actively build a safe and trusting relationship with users? - Why do non-binary gender categories cause some people to lose their minds? - Is it possible for us to completely avoid our work causing harm? ====== Who is Lisa Maria Marquis? Lisa is the Principal of “The Future is Like Pie”, an independent Information Architecture and Content Strategy consultancy that's on a mission to make it easier for people to find, understand, and act on information on the web. Through her consultancy, Lisa regularly works with well-known agencies, such as Happy Cog and Brain Traffic. She also works directly with organisations such as Autodesk, the University of California, and Egghead.io. Lisa is also the author of “Everyday Information Architecture”, an amazing book that shows you how to leverage the principles and practices of IA, and the Managing Editor of A Book Apart, a highly respected publisher of books for designers, developers and content creators. ====== Find Lisa here: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/redsesame/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/redsesame/ Website: https://thefutureislikepie.com/ Lisa's book: Everyday Information Architecture: https://abookapart.com/products/everyday-information-architecture ====== Liked what you heard and want to hear more? Subscribe and support the show by leaving a review on Apple Podcasts (or wherever you listen). Follow us on our other social channels for more great Brave UX content! YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/TheSpaceInBetween/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-space-in-between/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thespaceinbetw__n/ ====== Hosted by Brendan Jarvis: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/brendanjarvis/ Website: https://thespaceinbetween.co.nz/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/brendanjarvis/
Preston So Preston So is an expert in both omnichannel strategy and voice design, as well as a number of other digital business and design practices. As communications channels proliferate and the variety of digital devices grows, we need strategies to give our customers and users a consistent experience, no matter where they are or how they are consuming our content. Preston weaves together elements of omnichannel strategy, voice usability, and other modern digital practices into an "immersive content strategy" that can help you craft content programs that address these new challenges. We talked about: his new book, Voice Content and Usability, his product work at Oracle, and Decoupled Days, an event he organizes "immersive content strategy" - a way to deal with both channel explosion and the need for a central content repository to execute your omnichannel strategy the proliferation of devices and the implications for omnichannel strategy the importance of providing a consistent content experience across all devices and channels a pragmatic approach to single-sourcing content that arose in a project he did with the US state of Georgia the difference in mental models between content that is presented on a website vs. content that is delivered via a voice interface the implications of omnichannel delivery for your information architecture the benefits to analytics, benchmarking, and metrics of sourcing all of your content from a single CMS the use of "dialogue traversal testing" (DTT) in conversational design one of the huge differences between web and voice navigation: the lack of menus in voice interfaces the importance of a comprehensive omnichannel content audit that evaluates all of the possible contexts in which your content may be presented, and that also considers both the discoverability and the legibility of the content in each the generic navigational benefits of voice interfaces over web interfaces the opportunity that voice interfaces give us to return to more natural human communications methods the importance of "letting our users see themselves in the voice interfaces that we build and the content that we deliver to them" Preston's bio Preston So (he/him) is a product architect and strategist, digital experience futurist, innovation lead, designer/developer advocate, three-time SXSW speaker, and author of Voice Content and Usability (A Book Apart, 2021), Gatsby: The Definitive Guide (O'Reilly, 2021), and Decoupled Drupal in Practice (Apress, 2018). He has been a programmer since 1999, a web developer and designer since 2001, a creative professional since 2004, a CMS architect since 2007, and a voice designer since 2016. A product leader at Oracle, Preston has led product, design, engineering, and innovation teams since 2015 at Acquia, Time Inc., and Gatsby. Preston is an editor at A List Apart, a columnist at CMSWire, and a contributor to Smashing Magazine and has delivered keynotes around the world in three languages. He is based in New York City, where he can often be found immersing himself in languages that are endangered or underserved. Follow Preston online Preston.So Twitter LinkedIn email: preston dot so atsign oracle dot com Video Here's the video version of our conversation: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PTYy_kWVwpU Podcast intro transcript This is the Content Strategy Insights podcast, episode number 105. Our customers and users need content in many different settings, and they consume it on a constantly growing number of devices. Omnichannel strategy is the new business method for dealing with this growth of communications channels and content-consumption modes. Preston So is an expert in both omnichannel strategy and in voice interaction design, one of the new user experience practices that has arisen to address these content strategy challenges. Interview transcript Larry: Hi, everyone.
Tom is the Managing Director at Wholegrain Digital (a conversion focussed web design agency working exclusively with WordPress) This episode is about how Tom got about writing the book: "Sustainable Web Design" with A Book Apart. Thanks to Pavel Bavtra for editing this episode!
In today's episode, I talk about web development, climate change, and how we can be more sustainable in our work. Links Pacific Northwest Heatwave US Northeast Heatwave Jacobabad, Pakistan’s extreme heat and humidity World Wide Waste (book) Matthew Lewis’s tweet about wet bulb temperature Boston Globe on minorities and climate change Sustainable Web Manifesto Sustainable Web Design Website Carbon Calculator The Green Web Foundation ClimateAction.tech The Sustainable Web Design Book from A Book Apart
Welcome to Bringing Design Closer, the podcast focussed on discussing Designs role in tackling complex societal issues. Our goal is to have conversations that inspire and to help move the dial forward for organisations to become more human-centred in their approach to solving complex business and societal problems. In this episode we welcome Eva Penzeymoog back onto the show. For long time listeners you might remember Eva's episode in July 2019 about Designing Against Domestic Violence. Since then, Eva's been buy working through the pandemic, and complete her first book ‘Design for Safety' on A Book Apart. This episode may be trigger for some people, so if you are a survivor of domestic violence, or have suffered trauma - I wanted to let you know that we cover off topics such as gaslighting, domestic violence and abuse throughout this episode. Let's jump into the episode... https://abookapart.com/products/design-for-safety https://evapenzeymoog.com https://www.linkedin.com/in/evapenzeymoog/ See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Welcome to Bringing Design Closer, the podcast focussed on discussing Designs role in tackling complex societal issues. Our goal is to have conversations that inspire and to help move the dial forward for organisations to become more human-centred in their approach to solving complex business and societal problems. In this episode we welcome Eva Penzeymoog back onto the show. For long time listeners you might remember Eva's episode in July 2019 about Designing Against Domestic Violence. Since then, Eva's been buy working through the pandemic, and complete her first book ‘Design for Safety' on A Book Apart. This episode may be trigger for some people, so if you are a survivor of domestic violence, or have suffered trauma - I wanted to let you know that we cover off topics such as gaslighting, domestic violence and abuse throughout this episode. Let's jump into the episode... https://abookapart.com/products/design-for-safety https://evapenzeymoog.com https://www.linkedin.com/in/evapenzeymoog/ See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this episode, I spoke with Senior Director of Product Strategy at Oracle, developer advocate, speaker, and author, Preston So. We talked about Decoupled Days, a conference focused on headless CMS architectures, his new book from A Book Apart on Voice Content and Usability, and his other book on GatsbyJS coming out in the fall as well as a few other important topics in his new book. Intro/Outro music graciously given permission to use called, "Settle In" by Homer Gaines. Transcripts can be found at https://toddl.dev/podcast/transcripts/so/ Show Notes: https://preston.so - Preston's Personal Site https://twitter.com/prestonso - @prestonso on Twitter https://github.com/prestonso - Preston So on GitHub https://www.linkedin.com/prestonso - Preston So on LinkedIn https://abookapart.com/products/voice-content-and-usability - Voice Content & Usability https://preston.so/books/gatsby/ - Gatsby, The Definitive Guide https://decoupleddays.com/ - DecoupledDays 2021 https://www.apress.com/gp/book/9781484240717 - Decoupled Drupal In Practice https://georgia.gov/chat - AskGeorgiaGov --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/frontendnerdery/support
Join Gerry McGovern at the Doing Design Festival on June 18 / See http://www.doingdesignfestival.com The Website Carbon Calculator is a real go to tool for me when I want to find out how much CO2 a particular web page is creating. This, and many other great initiatives, comes from Wholegrain Digital, a company founded by Vineeta and Tom Greenwood in 2007. Tom has recently published an excellent book, Sustainable Web Design, from A Book Apart. I wanted to know how Vineeta and Tom got started so early in promoting a culture of sustainable web design. Website Carbon Calculator: https://www.websitecarbon.com/ Sustainable Web Design, Tom Greenwood :https://abookapart.com/products/sustainable-web-design Buy the book 'World Wide Waste by Gerry McGovern' See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Join Gerry McGovern at the Doing Design Festival on June 18 / See http://www.doingdesignfestival.com The Website Carbon Calculator is a real go to tool for me when I want to find out how much CO2 a particular web page is creating. This, and many other great initiatives, comes from Wholegrain Digital, a company founded by Vineeta and Tom Greenwood in 2007. Tom has recently published an excellent book, Sustainable Web Design, from A Book Apart. I wanted to know how Vineeta and Tom got started so early in promoting a culture of sustainable web design. Website Carbon Calculator: https://www.websitecarbon.com/ Sustainable Web Design, Tom Greenwood :https://abookapart.com/products/sustainable-web-design Buy the book 'World Wide Waste by Gerry McGovern' See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this episode, I talk with David Dylan Thomas, a User Experience expert, speaker, author, and filmmaker about bias and his book available at A Book Apart, "Design for Cognitive Bias". We talk about his book, some different kinds of bias, and what inclusive design is and how inclusive design is important. Intro/Outro music graciously given permission to use called, "Settle In" by Homer Gaines. Transcripts can be found at https://toddl.dev/podcast/transcripts/thomas/ Show Notes: https://www.daviddylanthomas.com/ - David's Personal Site https://abookapart.com/products/design-for-cognitive-bias - Design for Cognitive Bias @ A Book Apart You Are Not So Smart Podcast - https://youarenotsosmart.com/ Design Justice Network ten principles: https://designjustice.org/read-the-principles Rebuild Black Business: https://www.rebuildblackbusiness.com/ --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/frontendnerdery/support
L'inclusività passa anche attraverso l'utilizzo delle parole giuste per raccontarla e per metterla in atto. È un vero e proprio processo di cui ripercorriamo le tappe in questo nuovo episodio in compagnia di Alice Orrù, copywriter e traduttrice tecnica con il pallino per il linguaggio inclusivo e per i siti WordPress. Alice mi racconta il suo percorso professionale, dalla laurea in economia al marketing digitale, passando successivamente all'applicazione dello studio delle lingue per il supporto clienti di una clinica di riproduzione assistita spagnola e poi a livello tecnico per una startup che sviluppa plugin. Una storia lavorativa varia ma con un fil rouge che l'ha predisposta all'ascolto, al confronto e all'importanza dell'empatia, provando a immaginare sempre che cosa sentono le persone quando approcciano una determinata situazione, che sia un'esperienza o un prodotto. Nell'episodio 10 della seconda stagione capiremo insieme come scrivere e descrivere, come applicare la culturalizzazione, come abbattere le etichette e i nostri bias internalizzati, chiarendo cosa evitare per rendere il nostro linguaggio finalmente “rispettoso”. Buon ascolto con “Siamo inclusivi solo a parole?” cPanel – È uno strumento di controllo grafico per la gestione e l'amministrazione di siti internet e web hosting. Culturalizzazione – Unire il contenuto al contesto per estendere il più possibile il numero di persone da raggiungere. Il libro consigliato da Alice – “Cross cultural design” di Senongo Akpem, edito da A Book Apart. Senongo Akpem - Sito personale Inclusive Design – Microsoft Fabrizio Acanfora - Sito personale Chimamanda Adichie - Ted Talk Parlare civile - Il sito "Da vicino nessuno è normale" - Cit. Franco Basaglia --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/nois3/message
For the inaugural episode of the Front End Nerdery Podcast, I interviewed Jeffrey Zeldman. We talked about the web of yesterday, web standards, An Event Apart, A Book Apart, and much, much more that had to be done in two parts. Enjoy the first half of this very special two-part episode! Intro/Outro music graciously given permission to use called, "Settle In" by Homer Gaines. Transcripts can be found at https://toddl.dev/podcast/transcripts/zeldman1/ Shownotes https://zeldman.com - Jeffrey Zeldman Personal Site https://www.amazon.com/Designing-Web-Standards-Jeffrey-Zeldman/dp/0321616952 - Designing with Web Standards 3rd Edition https://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/21/technology/hillman-curtis-a-pioneer-in-web-design-dies-at-51.html - Hillman Curtis https://www.zeldman.com/2019/12/01/bluebeanieday2019/ - Blue Beanie Day article https://aneventapart.com - An Event Apart conference https://abookapart.com - Books for designers and developers https://alistapart.com - A List Apart resources and articles https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_List_Apart - A List Apart wiki --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/frontendnerdery/support
We're back to finish the inaugural episode of the Front End Nerdery Podcast with Jeffrey Zeldman. We talked about the web of yesterday, web standards, A Book Apart, what makes a good writer and conference speaker, and much more. Enjoy the second half of this very special two-part episode! Intro/Outro music graciously given permission to use called, "Settle In" by Homer Gaines. Transcripts can be found at https://toddl.dev/podcast/transcripts/zeldman2/ Shownotes https://zeldman.com - Jeffrey Zeldman Personal Site https://www.amazon.com/Designing-Web-Standards-Jeffrey-Zeldman/dp/0321616952 - Designing with Web Standards 3rd Edition https://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/21/technology/hillman-curtis-a-pioneer-in-web-design-dies-at-51.html - Hillman Curtis https://www.zeldman.com/2019/12/01/bluebeanieday2019/ - Blue Beanie Day article https://aneventapart.com - An Event Apart conference https://abookapart.com - Books for designers and developers https://alistapart.com - A List Apart resources and articles https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_List_Apart - A List Apart wiki --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/frontendnerdery/support
Settling into Season 2 of our podcast, we have the great Erika Hall joining us for an awesome episode, where we talk about the importance of research and how you can benefit from including it in your product business. We'll also be jumping into the Pack Delorean to take a leap back in time, to discuss how Erika got started in the design industry and what first got her interested in the subject of research. Erika is Co-founder and Director of Strategy at Mule, a consultancy which focuses on helping organisations make better, more evidence-based decisions.She is also a prolific writer and the author of Just Enough Research, now in its second edition, and Conversational Design, both from A Book Apart. She writes about topics that challenge the conventional wisdom of the field, which encourage designers to think more deeply about the implications of their work.Packed with practical advice + knowledge bombs aplenty…
David Dylan Thomas David Dylan Thomas can help you tame the unconscious biases that can undermine your design decision-making. These biases are strong. You may never conquer them all. But recognizing them and accounting for them in your content strategy and design work can mitigate the hazards they present. You need to be on your toes at every turn to account for these cognitive biases. They can affect the products and experiences you design, your collaborations with your team, and your own behavior. Dave's new book shows you how to deal with each of these challenges. Dave and I talked about: the importance of understanding how people make decisions and how much of that process is unconscious and irrational how his Cognitive Bias Podcast led to the insights that inform his book an example of using anonymized resumes to remove bias from hiring processes how to re-introduce friction into design processes to slow down your thinking so that you have chance to make less-biased decisions the importance of adopting design practices that check your biases - e.g., "Red Team, Blue Team" or speculative design the hazards of focusing on the positive outcomes of our design work and ignoring the many possible negatives outcome the story of Abraham Wald and how he brilliantly figured out where to put armor on warplanes, leading to insight about "survivorship bias" how cognitive biases manifest in general, in end-user designs, in internal design processes, and in your own personal behavior how the fear of loss is twice as powerful as the prospect of gain, illustrating the bias of "loss aversion" how the design of real-life and virtual spaces prime people for different behaviors the three key biases to consider when looking at your personal behavior: notational bias confirmation bias déformation professionnelle, the bias of seeing the world through the lens of your job Dave's Bio David Dylan Thomas, author of the book Design for Cognitive Bias from A Book Apart, serves as Content Strategy Advocate at Think Company and is the creator and host of the Cognitive Bias Podcast. He has developed digital strategies for major clients in entertainment, healthcare, publishing, finance, and retail. He has presented at TEDNYC, SXSW Interactive, Confab, LavaCon, UX Copenhagen, Artifact, IA Conference, Design and Content Conference, and the Wharton Web Conference on topics at the intersection of bias, design, and social justice. Follow Dave on the Web DavidDylanThomas.com Twitter Cognitive Bias Podcast Links Mentioned in the Podcast Design for Cognitive Bias book Design for Community, Derek Powazek Joyful: The Surprising Power of Ordinary Things to Create Extraordinary Happiness, Ingrid Fetell Lee Video Here's the video version of our conversation: https://youtu.be/KLEetglYvrc Podcast Intro Transcript We human beings like to think that we're rational creatures, carefully looking at an array of objective factors before we make a decision. In a professional setting like a content strategy or design practice, we may feel like we're at the pinnacle of this rationality. In fact, we're operating on auto-pilot about 95 percent of the time, making decisions based on biases that are hard-wired into our thinking. Dave Thomas can help you understand and tame these cognitive biases and make better design and business decisions. Interview Transcript Larry: Hi, everyone. Welcome to Episode Number 80 of the Content Strategy Insights Podcast. I'm really happy today to have with us Dave Thomas. Larry: David Dylan Thomas was with us two years ago, shortly after Confab 2018, where he and I talked. So welcome back, Dave, I'm excited to see your new book. It's called Design for Cognitive Bias. So tell us a little bit about the book, and what folks can expect from it. Dave: Sure. Well, first off, we're really happy to be back. I can't believe it's been two years.
The Iowa Idea: David Dylan Thomas “It's not about having more information. It's about having the right information.” In this episode of The Iowa Idea Podcast, I sit down with David Dylan Thomas. Dave is the author of the book Design for Cognitive Bias from A Book Apart, serves as Content Strategy Advocate at Think […]
You can read our story on Rachel and the work she is doing with the React community here.Nabors' is the author of Animation at Work, which you can find on A Book Apart.If you want to get a feel for an animated web project Rachel worked on, check out DevToolsChallenger, an interactive site she helped create for Mozilla. Nabors has digitized a lot of her work, signal boosting members of the React community at Reactjs.org/stories.
In this episode, Kristina speaks with Lisa Maria Martin, an independent consultant in information architecture and content strategy, and the managing editor at A Book Apart. Lisa Maria shares her insights on how to work collaboratively in a content vacuum, and about imposing order on content chaos through structure and audits.
Katel LeDu, Co-founder of the No, You Go podcast and CEO of A Book Apart, is Jeffrey Zeldman's guest. Topics include: Getting comfortable putting yourself out there when you're really more of a behind-the-scenes person. Starting a podcast. The life of a photo director at National Geographic. Asking for help. Community outreach—diversity and inclusion. What it's like to have your therapist as a guest on your podcast. Leading by example. Walking the walk. Finding new authors and new voices. Imposter anxiety and narcissism. Links for this episode:No, You Go – A weekly podcast about ambition, friendship, and feminism.Posts – No, You GoA Book Apart, Brief books for people who design, write, and code.Katel LeDû (@theledu) | TwitterNo, You Go (@noyougoshow) | TwitterBrought to you by: .TECH Domains (Visit the link and use the code TBWS to get 90% off on 1 & 5 year registrations). Linode (Visit the link and get $20 credit when you use promo code 'bigweb2018').
When Gmail says, “It seems like you forgot to attach a file,” that precise phrasing is the result of careful deliberation by a design team. It's one example Erika Hall gives in her book Conversational Design. She explains her work as “designing with words” rather than literary writing, and asserts that collaboration by designers, writers, and engineers is required for meaningful user experiences. Listener questions address previous episodes about Duplex and, our favorite scapegoat, blockchain. Show Notes Welcome (0:12) Purchase Conversational Design by Erika Hall on A Book Apart (0:30) Purchase Conversational Design by Erika Hall on Amazon (0:30) Netflix's company culture (0:37) Patty McCord's slide deck: “You should try to build a great company to be from.” Discussion with Erika Hall (2:41) Erika Hall, cofounder of Mule Design Studio The importance of non-verbal signs in communication (12:54) Lightweight prototyping of communication interaction as part of design process and concept of minimal viable conversation (17:18) How does reading poetry help someone become a conversational designer? (19:08) William Carlos Williams: The Red Wheelbarrow (19:21) Should it ever be ok for a computer to pretend to be a human? (21:49) All the ways to interact with Amazon: “Amazon's Quest for Global Domination” (video, Wall Street Journal) (24:33) Rev. Walter Ong, Jesuit teacher and scholar of language (New York Times) (26:11) Listener questions (28:47) You came out strongly against Duplex. Can you explain why for someone who would like to be sympathetic to your viewpoint? I feel like I missed chapter 1-5 on what is so wrong with what they did. (29:03) Episode 29 of the All Turtles Podcast featured a discussion on Duplex. (29:03) I don't understand the reference to blockchain in episode 28. Can you explain? (31:00) Episode 28 of the All Turtles Podcast featured the taxonomy discussion (31:03) We want to hear from you Please send us your comments, suggested topics, and questions for future episodes: Email: hello@all-turtles.com Twitter: @allturtlesco with hashtag #askAT For more from All Turtles, follow us on Twitter, and subscribe to our newsletter on our website.
Creative director, advisor, designer, developer, author (Pricing Design), speaker, mentor, musician, and entrepreneur (SuperFriendly, SuperBooked) Dan Mall is Jeffrey Zeldman's guest. Running a studio, pitching, value pricing, the apprentice program, “Make Grunt do it,” how to start a startup, “the most exciting design systems are boring,” walking away from big pitches, launching a service to help you find work. Links for this episode:A Book Apart, Pricing Design“How to Scope Work,” an article by Dan MallSuperBookedDan Mall (@danmall) | TwitterBrought to you by: Squarespace (Visit Squarespace.com to get a free trial and use the offer code BIGWEBSHOW for 10% off your first purchase).
Sara Wachter-Boettcher talks about structuring content, and - more importantly - how to help people and organizations create and manage it. Sara Wachter-Boettcher runs Rare Union, a Philly-based content strategy and user experience consultancy. She is the author of Content Everywhere (2012, Rosenfeld Media) and the co-author, with Eric Meyer, of Design for Real Life (2016, A Book Apart). Her latest book is Technically Wrong: Sexist Apps, Biased Algorithms, and Other Threats of Toxic Tech (W.W. Norton, 2017). Content Strategy Interviews are hosted by Larry Swanson of Elless Media.
Rachel Andrew returns! Rachel is a sought out expert on web design layout technologies like CSS Grid and Flexbox, an invited expert to CSS Working Group, and author of several books. Her latest book, The New CSS Layout, is out now from A Book Apart.
Host Jeffrey Zeldman interviews Bram Stein, Typekit's director of web fonts and author of the Webfont Handbook (A Book Apart, 2017). The two designers discuss creating great font stacks, optimizing web font performance, FOUT versus FOIT, the horror of fallback fonts, and new technology including variable fonts and font-display: FOUT or FOIT. Links for this episode:Bram Stein (@bramstein) | TwitterIndra Kupferschmid (@kupfers) | TwitterA Book Apart, Webfont HandbookVariable Fonts for Responsive Design · An A List Apart Blog PostFonts In Use – Type at work in the real world.Font Face Observer — fast and simple web font loadingTypographicaAlphabettesThe Typekit Blog | Variable fonts, a new kind of font for flexible designIntroducing OpenType Variable Fonts – John Hudson – Mediumfont-display - CSS | MDNBrought to you by: ZipRecrutier (Visit the link to post jobs on ZipRecruiter for FREE). HelloFresh (For $30 off your first week of HelloFresh, visit HelloFresh.com and enter BWS30). Videoblocks (Go to Videoblocks.com/bigwebshow to get all the stock footage, audio, and images you can imagine for just $149).
Rachel Nabors, author of Animation at Work (A Book Apart, 2017) stops by The Big Web Show to discuss how animation can help ease cognitive load in UX; creating the illusion of life; developing data to make the case for animation; pattern libraries; prototyping; and the link between animation and music. Rachel Nabors has been an award-winning cartoonist and graphic novelist, who parlayed her storytelling skills into a web design and development career. She has done projects with Mozilla, been an invited expert to the W3C, and currently works at Microsoft. Rachel tends the web animation community via the Animation at Work Slack and her web animation newsletter. Links for this episode:Rachel Nabors: Award-winning cartoonist turned digital storyteller. - Rachel Nabors, award-winning cartoonist turned digital storyteller.Rachel Nabors (@rachelnabors) | TwitterA Book Apart, Animation at WorkInvite userWeb Animation WeeklyLightning Design SystemRachel Nabors - WikiwandBarba.jsDevTools ChallengerDesigning Safer Web Animation For Motion Sensitivity · An A List Apart ArticleBrought to you by: ZipRecrutier (Visit the link to post jobs on ZipRecruiter for FREE). BlueApron (Check out this week's menu and get your first three meals FREE—with FREE SHIPPING—by going to BlueApron.com/bigwebshow.
Laura Kalbag is a designer from the UK. She's one-third of Ind.ie, a tiny social enterprise working for social justice in the digital age. At Ind.ie, Laura works on a web privacy tool called Better. Her first book, Accessibility for Everyone, is published by A Book Apart.
Illustrator, designer, and author Geri Coady (@hellogeri) is @zeldman's guest. The two designers discuss blogging, learning graphic design, transitioning to web design, color accessibility tips and strategies, book writing, and the upcoming travel blog, Geri Draws Japan. Links for this episode:Geri Coady | Canadian Designer & Illustrator in Nottingham, UKA Book Apart, Color Accessibility WorkflowsResponsive Web Design · An A List Apart ArticleGeri Coady on Twitter: @hellogeriBrought to you by: ZipRecrutier (Visit the link to post jobs on ZipRecruiter for FREE). User Interviews (Find participants for user research studies today! Visit userinterviews.com/bigwebshow and they will waive the sourcing fee for your first 5 interviews). SendPro from Pitney Bowes (Visit pb.com/bigwebshow to learn more, and when you sign up you'll get SendPro FREE for 90 days, you'll get a free 10-pound scale, and when your free trial is over, you'll get SendPro for only $5 a month).
Dan Mall returns! Dan is the director of SuperFriendly, a design collaborative, and author of a new book about the approaches professionals can take to valuing their project rates called Pricing Design, which published by A Book Apart.
Dan Brown is co-founder of EightShapes, a UX design discovery shop that serves clients in healthcare, education, not-for-profit and high-tech. He's recently written a book called, Practical Design Discovery, published by A Book Apart.
CSS Grid Layout is in Firefox and Chrome, and coming to Safari. Jeffrey Zeldman talks about the new spec with one of its foremost advocates, Rachel Andrew – a web developer, writer, and public speaker from Bristol, UK. Rachel is a member of the CSS Working Group, a Google Developer Expert, the co-founder of the Perch CMS, the publisher of CSS Layout News (a weekly collection of tutorials, news, and information on all things CSS layout), and the author or co-author of countless articles and 30 books, including Get Ready for CSS Grid Layout, A Pocket Guide to CSS Modules, The Profitable Side Project Handbook, and HTML 5 For Web Designers, 2nd Edition. Links for this episode:this is rachelandrew.co.uk - the website of web developer, writer and public speaker Rachel AndrewRachel Andrew (@rachelandrew) | TwitterCSS Grid Guides on MDNA Book Apart, Get Ready for CSS Grid LayoutCSS Layout NewsPublished books authored and co-authored by Rachel AndrewPerch - The really little content management system (CMS)CSS Grid lands in Firefox 52Podcast episodes featuring Rachel AndrewThree years with CSS Grid LayoutGrid LayoutMy presentations - subjects I speak about and links to resources, video and slidesBrought to you by: Incapsula (Just visit Incapsula.com/BigWebShow and enter the code BIGWEBSHOW to get one month free). FreshBooks (To claim your month long unrestricted free trial, go to FreshBooks.com/bigwebshow and enter BIG WEB SHOW in the “How Did You Hear About Us?” section). Wix (Just go to Wix.com and create your stunning website today.)
Mat Marquis is Chair of the Responsive Issues Community Group, technical editor at A List Apart, a former member of the jQuery Mobile team, and editor of the W3C HTML5 specification. His book, JavaScript for Web Designers, was recently published by A Book Apart.
In this episode, Christopher Schmitt is joined again by Chris Coyier. Publisher of the CSS Tricks community site, Coyier recently authored Practical SVG from A Book Apart.
Eric Meyer (@meyerweb), co-author of Design For Real Life, is Jeffrey Zeldman's guest. Edge cases versus stress cases, identifying your assumptions, design pre-mortems, QA'ing for emotion, and more. Links for this episode:A Book Apart, Brief books for people who make websites.Welcome | Voice and ToneA List Apart: For People Who Make WebsitesAirline Tickets and Flights to Worldwide Destinations : Delta Air LinesBrought to you by: Braintree (To learn more visit BraintreePayments.com/BigWebShow)
Web designer and author, Jeffrey Zeldman, publishes A List Apart Magazine, A Book Apart, co-produces An Event Apart, and hosts the Big Web Show. He writes at his blog, Zeldman.com.
Author (“Sass For Web Designers”), designer, and Dribbble co-founder Dan Cederholm (@simplebits) sits down with Jeffrey Zeldman to discuss using tools and templates versus rolling your own design and code, whether web design was really simpler in the good old days, his favorite Dribbble features, community-building, empire-building, freelancing in the early days of Happy Cog, and the joys of the fretless banjo. Links for this episode:SimpleBitsDribbble - Show and tell for designersA Book Apart, Sass for Web DesignersSimple Books – SimpleBitsDan Cederholm on The Great Discontent (TGD)Hello. – SimpleBitsSponsored by Thinkful (Visit the link to get 10% off) and Flywheel (Visit the link and use the code BIGWEBSHOW for 20% off).
Jason Santa Maria of Vox Media & A Book Apart discusses his new book, On Web Typography, with host Jeffrey Zeldman. The two designers discuss writing on trains, placing objects and playing with type, the new web designer, designing the Typekit logo, editorial design and Vox Media, three years and two editors, heavenly italics, type classification systems, Dieter Rams and "touch-ability," design as strategy, hitting it with the pretty stick, and more. Links for this episode:jasonsantamaria.comA Book ApartOn Web TypographyTypedia (a "'wikipedia' for typography" by JSM and friends)TypekitVox Media blogabout Vox Media (Wikipedia)The Verge (a Wikipedia content property)AmtrakMark Simonson's type siteAbout Dieter Rams (Wikipedia)About Good Design (Dieter Rams)On the Typekit logoFonts by type designer Joshua DardenEllen LuptonAmazon.com
With the return of the Big Web Show, this week Jeffrey Zeldman speaks with web pioneer Derek Powazek, Founder and CEO of Cute-Fight, the online game for real-life pets and the people who love them Links for this episode:http://powazek.comhttp://powazek.com/about/https://twitter.com/fraying/http://cute-fight.comhttp://www.zeldman.com/2012/09/06/powazek/http://fertilemedium.comhttp://www.zeldman.com/15/derekf.htmlhttp://www.flickr.com/photos/fraying/Sponsored by A Book Apart
Jeffrey speaks with Josh Williams, co-founder of Gowalla. Sponsored by Happy Cog Hosting, A Book Apart, and Sponsor 5by5.
Jeffrey Zeldman and Dan Benjamin talk about lost offices, working from home, A Space Apart, A Book Apart's new books: Designing for Emotion and Mobile First, future friendly, police sirens, Steve Buscemi, and more. Links for this episode:Fred Jones (Scooby-Doo) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaScrappy-Doo - Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaScooby-Doo, Where Are You! - TV.comA Book Apart, WelcomeA Book Apart, Designing for EmotionA Book Apart, Mobile FirstBreaking Development 2012: Orlando: Web Design and Development for Mobile DevicesFuture FriendlyCognition: The blog of web design & development firm Happy CogJared Spool: The Cognition Interview - Cognition: The blog of web design & development firm Happy CogSponsored by Sourcebits, Handelabra Studio, and Shopify.
Mandy Brown joins Jeffrey Zeldman and Dan Benjamin to discuss the value of support, the future of type on the web, font choice on reader platforms, what print publishers can learn from web publishers, why you've got to write, and why the future belongs to editors. Links for this episode:this is a working libraryMandy Brown (aworkinglibrary) on TwitterTypekitA List ApartA Book Apart, WelcomeTypedia: A Shared Encyclopedia of TypefacesType rendering: review, and fonts that render well « The Typekit BlogSponsored by MailChimp.
We're mixing it up for today's episode of The Big Web Show. Instead of interviewing one or more amazing web innovators per our standard practice, Dan Benjamin and Jeffrey Zeldman interview each other. Links for this episode:HivelogicDan Benjamin (danbenjamin) on TwitterHappy CogHappy Cog Studios (happycog) on TwitterJeffrey Zeldman (zeldman) on TwitterA List ApartA List Apart (alistapart) on Twitter5 by 5 Studios (5by5studios) on TwitterA Book Apart, WelcomeA Book Apart (abookapart) on TwitterAn Event Apart: The Design Conference For People Who Make Web SitesAn Event Apart (aneventapart) on TwitterstopdesignDoug Bowman (stop) on TwitterJason Santa MariaJason Santa Maria (jasonsantamaria) on Twittermeyerweb.comEric A. Meyer (meyerweb) on TwitterAdactio: Jeremy KeithJeremy Keith (adactio) on Twitter