I was randomly browsing the archives of Trent Walton’s blog and came across this hilarious and brilliant post comparing characters from the Big Lebowski (my all-time favorite flick) with the characters we encounter every day as web designers.
Determine who the point person really is and you’ll be able to handle all the extra ins, outs and what-have-yous.
Check out this useful checklist for web designers/developers to test their work as they prepare to launch a website. It includes a great list of QA questions, plus you can easily add your own.
It’s great for your own internal testing, but you can also have the “report” sent to your client or co-worker’s email address. Clever idea, great design, great execution.
A must-click for those who want to be truly inspired by the design possibilities of today’s and tomorrow’s web: Lost World’s Fairs is an impressive showcase of the design (particularly typographic) possibilities in Internet Explorer 9.
Internet Explorer 9 now supports WOFF, and the Friends of Mighty have joined forces to explore typographic possibilities on the web.
This link has been making the rounds on the twitterwebs and it’s truly worth your five minutes to immerse yourself in what I think is one of the coolest displays of cutting edge web design technology. It’s best viewed on Google Chrome.
For many self-employed professionals, particularly in the field of web design, these two phrases can often be interchangeable depending on who you’re speaking to and what you’re speaking about. I often become hesitant about which angle I should use when talking to clients. Why the confusion about what it is I (we?) do?
Lets start with a few basic facts:
I am a self-employed individual. This means I don’t have a steady paycheck, I pay my own estimated taxes, I pay for my own benefits (health, vacation, bonuses, sick days). I work in my home-office, almost always alone (unless I take temporarily relocate my office to Starbucks).
I don’t employ full-time staff. I don’t keep a regular payroll. I don’t have employees who work solely for my business.
I do hire sub-contractors. I find that when taking on larger, more complex projects, it’s best to bring in talented specialists to deliver certain pieces of the projects. For example, I might hire a designer to do the site mockups and a developer to handle the CMS integration, while I do project management and fill in the gaps in the workload. Some projects I handle all of the work myself. Others, I assemble a mini-team.
It’s fair to say that my business can be defined as a Freelance/Agency hybrid model. Read More
I’ve been meaning to pick up this book in hardcover for a while. But now that it’s available as a free PDF and (not free) iPad App, I’ll have lots to chew on until I do