Tweets

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@BrandonFlorkey - Met a fellow today looking for a job. Java, CSS, HTML. Anything open there?

almost 10 hours, 57 minutes

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Got a very small start on Alanis #Morissette's "Thank You" arrangement in #Reason5. More over next few days.

almost 11 hours, 17 minutes

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I'm at Bar Louie (4492 Glengarry Drive, The Greene, Beavercreek). http://4sq.com/ayUPnX

almost 14 hours, 6 minutes

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Need to aggregate cream of the #Reason5 and #EWI tweets and feeds. Will announce result broadly soon.

almost 14 hours, 7 minutes

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Alanis Morriset's (sp) "Thank U" will be good test of using #Reason5. Repetition, tonal quality, slower meter. Melody on #EWI4000s.

almost 15 hours, 2 minutes

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Tonight: explore #Reason5's Kong drum machine and the sequencer.

almost 15 hours, 7 minutes

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@happycog - I'm not upset with those numbers. Users need time to process. If Live results help users, fine.

almost 15 hours, 10 minutes

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Slow at work. Nothing wrong with that. Ebb and flow. But, rather it steady than balls to wall.

almost 15 hours, 17 minutes

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I'm at The Pub (39 Greene Blvd., The Greene, Beavercreek). http://4sq.com/7fP9n9

almost 15 hours, 36 minutes

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Thisis a test of Twitter to Facebook integration. Disregard.

almost 16 hours, 36 minutes

Ponder

Do, or do not. There is no 'try'. - Yoda

Feeds

Giving the client more

“Integrity is doing the right thing, even if nobody is watching.”

I’m mailing off a formal proposal to a client today.  I spent a lot of time on this, as I wanted to get it right.  Determining fees is a tough one for me, as I want to give value, but can’t give my time away.

Looking over articles and websites of other web designers, I know what the typical fees are for services.  Clients can have different views about the merit of specific fees.  Some understand; some don’t.  Clients won’t question a $75 an hour fee paid to their mechanic, but can question this same fee when paid to their website developer. I don’t blame the client, especially if they have had a bad experience with another web design firm; an all too often told story.

The fee I charge for a project is worth every penny.  The client gets more than they ask for, a true value in today’s business environment.

06/03 at 10:23 AM

Making site theme my own

“There is nothing in a caterpillar that tells you it’s going to be a butterfly.”  ~ Buckminster Fuller

I just replaced the theme I had re-launched this site with just over a week ago.  That’s the problem with web development—it’s so easy to make changes that I find myself tweeking the site instead of doing other things.

While the previous site was fine, it wasn’t my own.  I bought a theme and re-worked it.  Nothing wrong with this; I often recommend reworking themes, but in this case—for my own site—I decided, after the fact (and over 20 hours of work), that it wasn’t the way I wanted to go.

Process

I started with the grid of the homepage and placed borders around everything so I could see the margins and padding.  The previous theme was a little too tight, so I designed in more white space and created a two-column design instead of three.  This give more room for the content and allowed me to increase the font-size a bit.

I then worked on the header region, creating a shorter space for the logo and site navigation.  I’ve enjoyed designs I’ve recently come across that minimizes space requirements for header stuff, allowing users to get to the real purpose of the web site quicker.

Main site navigation went through a few versions before deciding, again, on a minimalistic approach.  Many sites are using a tab-based navbar, so I decided to steer the other direction and keep it simple.  I then followed up by placing the site navigation in the footer region also.

The color scheme stems from the basic and white with the black moved a little toward gray.  For a third color, I originally used a shade of purple, but in the end opted for a brilliant blue.  As I’m using that is only a few places, it counters the starkness of black and white well.

Still to do

I’ll be adding a portfolio section soon, but I need to rethink how I want to present that.  I also may be combining the “articles” and “blog” sections as I’m not sold on having those independent.  Expanding categories and using them to selectively display content seems to be the way I’m leaning.  I’m also going to do something with the image region on the homepage, possible a little rollover effect which displays a color version of the image.

05/03 at 06:14 AM
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