Hmm sorry, a typo. The second example should be:
~http://www.nva-amersfoort.nl
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Posted from the new ixda.org
http://www.ixda.org/discuss?post=34162
Welcome to the
Fixed menus do make sense in terms of usability.
Two examples with a menu fixed on the left:
~ http://www.designbyfire.nl
~ http://www.nva-amserfoort.nl
Both work in Internet Explorer 6 as well.
I use the same technique (as described in
http://tagsoup.com/cookbook/css/fixed/) for making sure the
http://cmap.ihmc.us/ is one of the best i ever use ( though the
interface is a bit ugly)
Cheers,
-- Jarod
On Sat, Sep 6, 2008 at 5:31 AM, Dennis Morrow <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi Lauren,
>
> Have you looked at PersonalBrain http://www.thebrain.com/#-47 from The
> Brain
>
> Hope this help
>
>
Also, And I'm so sorry about double-posting about this but it is
important and should be said.
Even IF you can't get it working in all browsers, you can make it
degrade well and turn into a header or right/left column nav that
isn't fixed.
Lack of support in one browser is never a reason to force
Not a problem.
http://tagsoup.com/cookbook/css/fixed/
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Posted from the new ixda.org
http://www.ixda.org/discuss?post=34162
Welcome to the Interaction Design Assoc
I agree with Will when he says that "yFILES is not great", but one
impression that I have of all the "off-the-shelf" data
visualization packages (yFILES, IBM's Many Eyes, etc...) is that --
without the ability to tweak with the code to suit specific
visualization needs -- it's difficult to get the
We are looking to hire a UX designer as part of the initial small core team
at Mixer Labs. Mixer Labs was started by two former Googlers, is backed by
some of the top investors in the Bay Area, and is focused on a massive,
swing for the fences opportunity.
We consider the UX role to be a cornerst
uh? The first part is easy. W/o a doubt Silverlight and C# work much
more tightly. You can do all your code in C# (no scripting languages
required) and work in Visual Studio or other C# IDEs for all the UI
Integration points.
As for what is better for a UI person. Which type of UI Person? A UI
Dev
On Oct 13, 2008, at 4:50 PM, William Brall wrote:
I think it is a great idea, although you need to be frugal with the
space it takes up, since the user can do nothing to regain that
space, and at a low resolution it could make the page unusable.
I really don't understand why it isn't used more.
Frames are not a problem design-wise, they just cause orphan pages,
that is, a search engine might index the pages being framed and not
the frame-set and a user may come to the page without a menu and be
lost.
CSS fixed elements are arranged based on the window itself, and so
they stay wherever yo
Hey All,
I'm doing a bit of research on Silverlight. Are there references out there
that compare Flash's capabilities to Silverlight? I'm specifically looking
to know which integrates better with a C# app, but also which one is easier
for a UI person to work in.
Any help would be greatly appreci
Found time to release v1.0 of my OS X widget library for Axure.
It's been placed under the creative commons license and can be
downloaded here:
http://www.archive.org/details/AriFeldmanArisOSXAxureRPWidgetLibrary
You can also download it from the AxureLib Google Group:
http://groups.google.com/
The end result of a fixed menu seems quite similar to a menu in a frame.
I'm always hearing that frames should be avoided, so what's the difference
here? Is it all in the technical implementation of frames vs CSS rather
than being a design issue?
On Sat, Oct 11, 2008 at 12:24 PM, William Brall <[
I hear what you guys are saying. NASA is somewhat of a duality. When
it comes to real science, they have the best in the world at their
disposal. Unfortunately, when you are a web developer for something
like Code 300 at Goddard, you spend all your time making databases
and static websites.
True,
You should also check out Orgnet.com
Janet
Will Evans wrote:
I test drove yworks - but here is the deal - not great. When I was designing
a social network analytics diagramming application (thick client C#) and we
need semantically correct nodes for linking, cross-linking, sets, clusterin
Jared - Maybe if Facebook folks weren't hammered in Cyprus - they might have
a business plan already :-)
http://www.techcrunch.com/2008/10/10/team-cyprus-move-to-undo-the-video/
On Sat, Oct 11, 2008 at 5:05 PM, Josh Seiden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hey folks,
>
> Just a reminder here to pleas
I test drove yworks - but here is the deal - not great. When I was designing
a social network analytics diagramming application (thick client C#) and we
need semantically correct nodes for linking, cross-linking, sets, clustering
and calculations like degrees of correlation/degrees of separation -
Hi
To better respond, can u tell us what types of products you want to
test?
I might assume it's web-based since u mentioned mouse tracking, but
not am not sure. I've designed and setup a pretty Decent and flexible
lab in the past. But when it comes down to it, you can always get by
w
For our October event, IxDA Los Angeles invites you to a design contest of
sorts. In other words, we're having a Halloween party! Please come dressed
as your favorite website, application or device. There will be a prize for
the most cleverly designed costume. Additionally, we will be breaking int
On Oct 13, 2008, at 9:13 AM, Kordian Piotr Klecha wrote:
[...] I am wondering about basic equipment we need - and current
list is: one PC (well equipped: fast hdd, a lot of RAM and so on),
one camcorder, some mousetracking software... and?
Kordian,
Are the systems you're going to be testi
P.P.S. - My bad, the earlier book is called Universal PRINCIPLES of
Design
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Posted from the new ixda.org
http://www.ixda.org/discuss?post=34240
Welcome to the Int
William Lidwell's forthcoming book, Deconstructing Product Design, won't be
published until Fall 2009, but he is soliciting input on 100 classic product to
include in the book. From the web site:
If you have actually used any of these products, know interesting or little
known facts about the
On Oct 13, 2008, at 11:30 AM, Todd Zaki Warfel wrote:
While ours stay fixed, the iMac gives us the flexibility to pack it
up quickly and easily and take it w/us to test at remote locations
(e.g. trade shows, client offices, homes).
Oops, this should have read "While ours stays fixed most o
I have never used it myself, but you might want to check out:
http://silverbackapp.com/
Its a mac app. that allows you to capture both the users movements on
the screen and the users facial reactions as well. Of course you would
need a Mac (the laptops come with built in cameras).
Hope this helps
Hello,
Take a look at techshmith's morae software. http://www.techsmith.com/
That can cover screen activity and has some great analysis tools.
With a web cam and mic you can record facial expressions and sounds
for the same session and review both together in one frame.
At my company we are tryi
We are thinking about building small and simple usability lab. The goal is
to minimize the cost, retaining capabilities to quick test some own ideas
and (especially) results of changes we made. I am wondering about basic
equipment we need - and current list is: one PC (well equipped: fast hdd, a
lo
Thanks for the link back to crowdvine. I am flexible - before or after the
conference - but getting 3-4 days of skiing in at whistler is just what I
was thinking.
On Mon, Oct 13, 2008 at 3:18 AM, Yohan Creemers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Yes, I'm interested. I plan to stay there for a week.
>
>
Yes, I'm interested. I plan to stay there for a week.
I've seen a Whistler three day trip in the list of workshops a while
ago, but can't find it anymore...
Gustavo Gawryszewski started a thread about skiing as well:
http://www.interaction09.crowdvine.com/posts/show/1974060
- Yohan
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