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July 28, 2008

15 useful coding tools

Supercoder Mike Duncan’s list of 15 coding tools is an invaluable resource, particularly for PC programmers and web designers. Some of my personal favorites from this list include JRuler and Texter. EditPad is also worth the trial, but for a free coding editor that can be configured to upload with each save, and that supports basically any manner of language thrown at it, try Crimson Editor.

Filed under: Design Resources, HTML & PHP — Tags: — Katherine @ 11:33 am


July 25, 2008

CMU Professor Randy Pausch, 1960-2008

Diane Sawyer announced this morning on “Good Morning America” that Professor Randy Pausch ended his battle with pancreatic cancer last night. He was 47 years old. Dr. Pausch received his bachelor’s degree in Computer Science from Brown University and a Ph.D. in Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon University, where he worked as a professor of Computer Science, HCI, and design.Some of his mos famous accomplishments include his work in the CMU course “Building Virtual Worlds,” which he founded and taught at the university for ten years. The course website can be found here. He also founded and worked heavily in development of the Alice Project. Alice is a 3D application that allows users to create short animations while learning fundamental, otherwise abstract programming concepts such as object-oriented programming, loops, and statements. I learned the basics of programming with this application at Camden County College in 2003. It is a unique and invaluable tool to the CS community and encourages students who do not know anything about programming but are interested to learn without fear.

On September 18, 2007, Dr. Pausch delivered his “Last Lecture,” entitled “Really Achieving Your Childhood Dreams,” at CMU. It is shared on Google Video here.

Visit Randy Pausch’s CMU website to learn more about him and donate to pancreatic cancer research.

Filed under: Technology News — Tags: , , — Katherine @ 8:14 am


July 23, 2008

Twitter saves your Internet!

When the going gets tough, the tough complain on their Twitter feeds.

According to the Boston Globe, C. C. Chapman wrote a complaint on his Twitter account about his nonexistent Internet connection when Comcast was unresponsive. Within a few hours of posting his complaint, C. C. had received communication from Comcast proper and his Internet was up and running.

“We’re in a world where one person, by their actions, can make a company look bad, and it can get echoed and amplified over and over again,” Forrester Research analyst Josh Bernoff said. “The power has shifted, [so] that big companies now have to be worried about one individual with a microphone called a blog.”

Other big-name companies are following this train of thought as well, including Southwest Airlines. Twitter is easily term-searchable and so is one of the most prevalent social-networking services, but other tools such as Facebook, MySpace, and blogs like these are being combed for feedback and candid case studies. Another cool example of this is Ohio-native Pete Blackshaw’s hybrid-car-saga blog, HybridBuzz.

Filed under: Technology News — Tags: , , , — Katherine @ 9:08 am


July 22, 2008

Color-Palette Resources

One of the most important aspects of any given web site is the color palette used in its design. Studies in color theory have shown that this goes beyond personal preference taps into something psychological. For the web, colors must be readable and easy on the eyes without being incredibly boring or too wild. Most websites go with a white page and a dark blue or black text for the general text because this is the easiest to read. Some sites use black backgrounds or dark gray backgrounds with white text, but these are often gaming sites for young people who can play an RPG for 12 hours on a screen the size of a Saltine, so the eye strain that has been known to come from this is often forgiven.

In choosing colors for your site, there are several things to consider. How many colors in the palette, what the colors will say about your site, etc. Fortunately, there are some very good tools available for help in establishing good color palettes on the web.

1. ColorSchemer - A very intuitive piece of software with many variables for tweaking a color palette after creating it. This dual-platform tool costs $49.99 per license. Is it worth it? Download the trial version and decide for yourself.

Also note the 100%-free application on this site, ColorSchemer ColorPix, a good little desktop tool for isolating various values of a color anywhere on the screen.

If you’re stuck, check out the ColorSchemer Gallery for color palettes made by other users and offered up to designers.

2. The DeGraeve Color Palette Generator - There are other tools like this available, but this one was one of the first. You upload an image to the generator, and based on the colors in that image, a color palette is made.

3. ColorBlender - A lot like ColorSchemer, but with the bonus of being free. Not much can be done outside of direct edit mode, but this is good for some quick color brainstorming.

Filed under: Design Resources — Tags: — Katherine @ 8:00 am



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