Confined to sex, we pressed against
The limits of the sea:
I saw there were no oceans left
For scavengers like me.
I made it to the forward deck.
I blessed our remnant fleet –
And then consented to be wrecked,
A Thousand Kisses Deep.
—Leonard Cohen
podLob, a collection of Flash and DHTML GUI tricks and treats that look great and work very well. Trouble is, with the exception of maybe one or two, using any of these on a “real” site would drive the average person nuts after about 30 seconds.
InfoWorld: How rich is the rich GUI? continues discussion on the pull to return to “rich” GUIs rather than boring old HTML.
When we eschew the utilitarian Web-style interface in favor of something richer, let’s make sure it’s really valuable.
While it’s true that the browser needs an infusion of GUI richness, the reverse is also true. The GUI needs to learn a thing or two from the browser.
The FisheyeMenuDemo is a good argument for just giving up on creating a new “Rich” interface experience. Whether in Flash or using CSS, it’s a bad idea.
A reminder that if you have been thinking or troubled about something for a period of time, and you only get a brief, passing moment to talk about it, resist the urge to just blurt it out. Not really very effective.
A new Boxes and Arrows piece discussing De Facto Standards on the Web
At what point is a design practice so dominant that varying from it degrades the usability of a site? Are users expectations set when 90% of sites do something a certain way? Or does it require less frequency (80%, 70%, or even 60%)?
After a sequence of events that I’d rather not go into here, I recently bought the Canon Digital Rebel.
I’ve got a 6.3 Megapixel SLR with 35-zone AF Point-Linked Evaluative Metering
I’ve got a really nice Canon EF28-135 USM lens with image stabilization.
I’ve got all the post-production software I could ever need.
Now if I could just take an interesting picture.