This industry moves fast — really fast! If you’re not careful, you’ll be left in its dust. So, if you’re feeling a bit overwhelmed with the coming changes/updates in HTML5, use this as a primer of the things you must know.
Archive for the webtoday Category
Web Design In Poland - Posted 2010年07月17日
Vodka, pickled cucumbers and Pope John Paul II might spring to mind when someone mentions Poland. Obviously there’s more to Poland than that. On the world map of design, Poland is marked by creative agencies that produce high-level design and employ some of the best programmers in the world. There’s also a crowd of freelancers and visionaries who have received worldwide recognition.
For the people I interviewed, Web design is life. The art directors and freelancers highlighted here work in all sorts of environments, and they answer questions related to our field. You’ll have the opportunity to see Polish Web design from a number of perspectives — and to form your own opinion while browsing selected productions.
Create Snook-Style Navigation Using MooTools - Posted 2010年06月26日
Jonathan Snook debuted a great tutorial last September detailing how you can use an image and a few jQuery techniques to create a slick mouseover effect. I revisited his article and ported its two most impressive effects to MooTools.
The Images
Lightbox + PhotoNav = LightNav - Posted
If you’ve been around the web for a while, you might have heard of Lightbox. And if you used it, you might also know the limitations.
One of those limitations is of course the fact that an image wider than your screen goes out of bounds. Very annoying! And it creates ugly scrolbars.
Bringing the Magazine to the Web - Posted
The rise of blogs on the web has brought a quick and easy way for anyone to publish their thoughts online without having to get down and dirty with HTML. Just write your content, hit ‘Publish,’ and your thoughts are instantly available for the masses to read.
For all the good that blogs have done, they’ve made the internet look predictable when compared to articles printed in a magazine which look completely unique, each with their own art style and layout. As Greg Storey pointed out in a blog post from 2006, “before there were blogs we had websites. Beautiful, random websites that felt more like a zine – one page looking nothing like the one before or after it”.
Most larger blogs may have a unique theme, but each blog post looks the same. Most posts we read everyday share the same common layout: