Developing Articles

18.02.10
Written by Robert Wild 
Drupal Logo

It seems that the first task I am set to with new clients is briefly summarising what a content managed system actually does, why it would be a benefit to them and why I personally push for an open source approach. In all honesty they seem to take on board the benefits I reel off (I do tailor them to the particular client), but generally they are bought when you advise on cost comparisons. Its really simple, an open source, mature content management system is going to be far cheaper than developing a custom system, or purchasing a licensed application.

15.10.09
Written by Robert Wild 

Lets get to the point, if you are easily offended and don't like swearing, stop reading now.

Still here??

Good....

The CD here at Mono got sent a link from one his old college mates, it couldn't be closer to home for any designer to relate to....

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5pS7_ob2itY

and they have even produced a sequel!!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XCjcwBGQtiw

and the web version

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8sU3KaT74JE

Magic!!

15.10.09
Written by Robert Wild 

Lets get to the point, if you are easily offended and don't like swearing, stop reading now.

Still here??

Good....

The CD here at Mono got sent a link from one his old college mates, it couldn't be closer to home for any designer to relate to....

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5pS7_ob2itY

and they have even produced a sequel!!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XCjcwBGQtiw

and the web version

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8sU3KaT74JE

Magic!!

21.08.09
Written by Robert Wild 
Stupid Comment

Every now and then I get a spare 5minutes to catch u with a few of my favourite blogs. I haven't researched into many, but have been either referred to by close industry colleagues, or simple stumbled across by accident.

Once such stumble is the Coding Horror blog, written by a chap called Jeff Atwood. The whole Coding Horror blog has its own widget for your iGoogle account and makes a compelling read.

14.08.09
Written by Robert Wild 
Worse HTML Bloat ever!!

Admittedly I am very particular coder, I do my best to work to the 'web standards' – by which I mean those set by the W3C, I validate all my code against the online tools provided by this service. But making your code validate is not too difficult a task, in comparison making it validate and also work in IE is far more challenging! I also try and keep my code as minimal and light weight as possible, I shorthand all my CSS, re-use common classes and build the HTML is a logical and easily identifiable way.

21.07.09
Written by Robert Wild 

Flash has been about since 1996, and has since built up a progression of uses and options for deployment, commonly to add animation or interactivity. The impact of flash on webpage (if done correctly) can give some lovely visual effects and really bring a page to life.

However it does have some down sides, before any design through flash can be achieved, you of course need the application, currently a new install of flash CS4 would cost around £620. In terms of a webpage, the flash content is completely invisible to search engines and visual impaired user tools (like screen readers), designers can get carried away with design and so file sizes increase rapidly, slowing down page load times and increasing server strain for busy sites.