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The new jQuery site design has sparked a conversation about whether it is portraying the right kind of image to it's users.
As a quick reference I knocked up this image of the site without the "Rock-star" illustration.
EDIT I should probably mention I didn't design this site, all I did was remove the (cool but inappropriate) illustration.
Made using this tool. I promise I'm not obsessed with Dean Edwards; it's a good image to make fun of!
Simple example I created using EaselJS and Canvas to render spirals.
www.mikechambers.com/html5/easeljs/Spirals/index.html?min...
More info at:
More info at:
www.mikechambers.com/blog/2011/02/09/example-creating-spi...
Simple example I created using EaselJS and Canvas to render spirals.
www.mikechambers.com/html5/easeljs/Spirals/index.html?min...
More info at:
www.mikechambers.com/blog/2011/02/09/example-creating-spi...
You can view a time lapse video of the rendering for this at:
Joomla site for Stannah, manufacturers & distributors of stairlifts & lifts.
Updated brand presence and enabled users to access a suite of group sites from a single page.
IA: Jenni Lloyd
Art direction: Josh van der Broek
FE Build: Barry Bloye / Matt Hil
BE Build: Telmo Carlos
LightTable for Clojure, DrRacket for Racket, Pharo for Smalltalk, Emacs for Ruby, JavaScript, and all of the above.
CTO of e-conomic, told us which points he found the most compelling from their switch to using JavaScript on both the front-end and back-end systems.
From left-to-right: Stuart Langridge, Jeremy Keith, Peter-Paul Koch, Christian Heilmann, Derek Featherstone - the core group that now is the Dom Scripting Task Force
Design created with my PixelFlow HTML5 / EaselJS example:
www.mikechambers.com/blog/2011/02/02/pixelflow-easeljs-ca...