You Arent Gonna Need It is a great way of avoiding feature creep.
“Always implement things when you actually need them, never when you just foresee that you need them.”
Worksheet server isn’t cheap, but imagine being able to create an excel spreadsheet and do a “Save As…” to a PHP enabled server. Blam! You’ve got a web application with all the features of your spreadsheet, but globally accessible for data entry and analysis.
Mozilla Thunderbird 0.4 Released
It just keeps getting better. This time with much better default icons and copy/pasting of images – and a ton of small fixes and improvements.
Josh Porter (of UIE), in Testing the Three-Click Rule, determines that the long-standing and almost thoughtlessly accepted rule of no more than three clicks to any content is not necessarily supportable by real user testing. Good, I never really liked that “rule” anyway.
Joseph Neubauer article on building enduring client relationships.
Surrounding Yourself with Good People Investing in Your People Listening to Your People Aligning Culture and Mission Through Leadership Development Keeping Your Commitments
An important distinction between usable and useful. They’re not the same things.
Fundamentally, a site is not effective if it doesnÂ’t provide the information and tools that users need, regardless of how well structured and implemented it is.
This morning I spotted a an article on the resurgence of classic video games and sent it over to Steve. Didn’t notice that Bryan had scooped me. 8 years and we’re sometimes still on the same page.
Okay, not really, but if the Digilux 2 is any indication of where Leica is going, I just may want to try “analog digital photography.” Just add interchangable lenses, an optical viewfinder and a little bigger sensor. Maybe the next rev will be the one.
This list of MySQL Gotchas can come in handy. It also points out some interesting design decisions by the MySQL folks. Some of which are quite annoying.
Since buying a 300D, I spend a lot of time reading the Canon forums at dpreview.com. To save everyone the trouble of reading all 100,277 messages, I’ll sum it up for you…
Spend around $1,600 on a long lens so you can take pictures of ducks. Lots of them. Spend around $1,600 on a wide lens so you can take pictures of flowers – really close-up. Argue endlessly that the Canon 300D is a “professional” camera – or that it’s not.