Friday, April 30, 2010

The State of Web Development 2010 – Web Directions

The State of Web Development 2010 – Web Directions: "

What are the current Web Directions? John Allsopp is back, with results from his latest State of Web Development 2010 survey.


There is a ton of content here, and the data is made available. For the full report you can grab the PDF.



Fancy some crib notes? Here are some of the highlights from the report:




  • Few respondents use any form of Internet Explorer for their day to day web use, but IE8 is the num ber one browser devel op ers test their sites in.

  • Google Chrome has jumped dramatically as the browser of choice for devel op ers, to rank 3rd, at 17% just behind Safari at 20%.

  • Firefox remains the number one choice by some way, but respon dents were split between 3.5 and 3.6 at the time of our survey.

  • Firefox 3.6 was released only a week before the survey began.

  • Over half of respondents now use Mac OS X as their primary operating system.

  • Nearly a third of respondents (up from 16%) use Mobile Safari, while Android use is at around 4%.

  • JQuery has become even more dominant, with nearly 80% of all respondents using the library, up from 63% last year.

  • Desktop-??like application frame works, such as Cappuccino and SproutCore show little sign of wide spread adoption by developers. Perhaps the day of desktop-??like web apps is yet to come, or perhaps developers really aren’t look ing to build webapps which mimic the desktop.


When it comes to web devel op ment tech nolo gies, the big sto ries are CSS3, web fonts and HTML5.



  • More respondents (45%) than not (44%) use CSS3 and experimental CSS, up dramatically from last year (only 22% then were using CSS3 and nearly 70% not)

  • Last survey, only 4% were using font link ing using @font-face. This survey that’s climbed to 23%

  • HTML5 is now used to some extent by around 30% of respondents, up from under 10% last survey



Interesting stuff. Do you see any other trends from the data?




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Saturday, April 24, 2010

Almost Genius: The Cardboard Box That Fits Anything Perfectly

Almost Genius: The Cardboard Box That Fits Anything Perfectly: "

An invention that might eliminate almost all of the wasted space in a cardboard box.

universal packaging system

 How brilliant is this? Designer Patrick Sung's Universal Packaging System is meant to precisely fit anything that needs shipping. The individual cardboard sheets are scored with a triangle pattern that can either be fitted to an oddly shaped object, or formed into a custom fitted cardboard box:

ups

Potentially massive savings would result from all the extra shipping space saved--cutting down on how much space each package takes up, and therefore the number of gas-guzzling trucks needed during shipping.

There's just a few niggles. For one, would anyone really put up with the added hassle of folding a custom-sized box, given all the added complexity? And two, the space savings issue might be more complicated than it seems: If people pack things in oddly shaped boxes, there's every possibility that these all don't fit together well enough to actually save space. (That's why square-shaped boxes are so efficient.) But still, with a few tweaks--such as printed guidelines for easily creating boxes of different size--this could be the cleverest thing since the Puma shoebox redesign.

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Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Top 10 Ways to Access Blocked Stuff on The Web [Lifehacker Top 10]

Top 10 Ways to Access Blocked Stuff on The Web [Lifehacker Top 10]: "
The web is a generally free place, but some sites and services want to make it annoying to navigate and enjoy. Stream any video you'd like, see the sites you need, and get at services you thought were down with these tips. More »









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Thursday, April 15, 2010

iPad printing…solved!

iPad printing…solved!: "


theformgroup  "How to Print from an iPad" via Engadget



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Who's #1 in broadband? 1Gbps fiber for $26 in Hong Kong

Who's #1 in broadband? 1Gbps fiber for $26 in Hong Kong: "

According to people like Ivan Seidenberg, Verizon's CEO, the US is number one in broadband, no question about it. But one only has to look around the world to see just how specious such claims are.







City Telecom's ad for its 1Gbps service



Take Hong Kong as an example. City Telecom made waves a few months ago with its US$13, symmetric 100Mbps connections. Today, the company slashed prices on its much faster 1Gbps fiber-to-the-home offering; a fully symmetric, 1Gbps connection costs HK$199... or US$26 a month.





Want phone service with that? That'll be US$3. IPTV service will cost another $6-12, depending on the channel package. (There's also a US$115 installation charge to run the fiber link from the building basement up to an individual apartment.)



This is an exceptional offer, but City Telecom isn't alone in offering service that should make US operators cringe—and US customers green with envy. Hutchison Telecom offers 100Mbps symmetric connections for US$13. i-Cable offers 130Mbps downloads for $39 per month using DOCSIS 3.0 tech.



This isn't the US market, so prices aren't directly comparable, but Hong Kong and the US are almost identical when it comes to GDP per capita, adjusted for purchasing power parity (PPP).



Hong Kong is one of the densest spots on earth. One wouldn't expect to see this level of price and competition across a country as broad and sprawling as the US, but one would expect it to be possible somewhere. Sadly, even something like 100Mbps is hard to come by in most US cities; 1Gbps is unknown, except to tiny specialty operators, even in a place like New York City.



City Telecom took out a full-page ad in the South China Morning Post today, advertising its new offering with the tagline, '1000M: Transform your life.'




Read the comments on this post



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Opera Mini now the number one free download in all 22 App Stores

Opera Mini now the number one free download in all 22 App Stores: "

Seems like users actually do want a choice, Steve.



[Thanks, Atesh]

Opera Mini now the number one free download in all 22 App Stores originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 14 Apr 2010 14:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments"

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Microsoft exec: The world runs on software

Microsoft exec: The world runs on software: "

Declaring that software runs the world and developers are the engine behind software, a high-level Microsoft official Monday unleashed the company's latest software development platform, Visual Studio 2010 and the accompanying .Net Framework 4.

The two technologies became available Monday after a long preview period for developers.

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Work pressures lower nicotine dependence

Work pressures lower nicotine dependence: "It is often thought that smoking is used as a coping strategy to deal with work stress. However, the pressures of work can actually lower a smoker's nicotine dependence, contrary to popular belief. The surprising finding was published in BioMed Central's open access journal, Tobacco Induced Diseases, contradicting even the study researchers' hypothesis."

Monday, April 12, 2010

Why are manhole covers round?

Why are manhole covers round?: "
Manhole-cover-100402-02Because there are no angles for alignment, the round shape makes these heavy covers easier to put back on once they’re taken off.

 

Round covers are also easier to manufacture.

 

But the main reason manhole covers are round is so they won’t accidentally fall into the subterranean abyss. With a round cover, no matter how you hold it, you can’t shove it in. It just won’t go. If it were square, a prankster could hold the cover diagonally over the hole and drop it in, to be followed by who knows how many scooters and pedestrians.

 


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Saturday, April 10, 2010

It's Official: Google Now Counts Site Speed As A Ranking Factor (Matt McGee/Search Engine Land)

It's Official: Google Now Counts Site Speed As A Ranking Factor (Matt McGee/Search Engine Land): "

Matt McGee / Search Engine Land:

It's Official: Google Now Counts Site Speed As A Ranking Factor  —  Google has kept a promise it made last year: Site speed is now a ranking factor in Google's algorithm, and is already in place for U.S. searchers.  But Google also cautions web site owners not to sacrifice relevance in the name …

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Saturday, April 3, 2010

Your Company Can Succeed Without A Website

Your Company Can Succeed Without A Website: "

computer smash


Note: This article was originally published on Entrepreneur.


Rudy Mendoza makes no bones about his strong aversion to computers. 'I don't enjoy them,' he states flatly.


So what's a cyberphobic jewelry maker from West Covina, Calif., doing on the vanguard of online marketing, intrepidly--and, some would argue, unwisely--testing a strategy to build his company's web presence that is nothing if not unconventional?


What's unusual about Mendoza's approach is that it involves abandoning the website his company, Jewelry Sales & Design, launched close to a decade ago in favor of a simple third-party-hosted landing page. In doing so, Mendoza is breaking a cardinal rule of mainstream business strategy that says companies, however small, must have a formal, static website to be competitively viable.


Venturing into the online world sans website is not a widely endorsed practice. In fact, it runs contrary to the better judgment of even the most progressive internet marketing experts (see sidebar). What's surprising is that Mendoza's nonconformist approach seems to be working.


'We spent tens of thousands of dollars on our website and got almost nothing out of it,' Mendoza says. 'We spent $2,500 or $3,000 for this whole [landing page] package, and I'm very sure we got that much out of it in the first couple months. We've had thousands of hits, and we're getting a lot more phone calls from those hits.'


Why Forgo a Website?
In the experimental laboratory that is the internet, convention-bucking entrepreneurs are using a distributed strategy to build an online presence exclusively with social media and web apps. It's an approach that has merit in certain situations, if only as a stopgap until a company has the resources to invest in a full-blown website, according to Kirsten Manger, CEO of WebVisible, an internet marketing firm that develops small-business online marketing strategies built around landing pages. 'There's an immediacy to these kinds of vehicles, an ability to change on a dime to meet changing needs, without having to maintain a 20-, 30- or 40-page website.'


When it comes to building and maintaining relationships with clients and prospects, a business may not need a website when there's Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter, contends Adam Ostrow, editor-in-chief at Mashable.com, a blog-based site that covers developments with Web 2.0 and social media. 'Social media can really be far more impactful than a traditional corporate website to engage people on an ongoing basis. It's great for regular conversation and mindshare.'


Even startups such as Digital Americana, a soon-to-launch web-based multimedia literary and culture magazine designed specifically for the Apple iPad, have been emboldened to launch without a formal website.


'So far,' says Tony Fasciano, the New York-based magazine's publisher, 'by using Tumblr as the main blog site, and creating pages on Twitter and Facebook, we have been able to generate about 100 page views a day--all without yet issuing our first press release.'


Going without a website is a way for the startup to keep operations lean until it becomes more established, at which point Fasciano says he may consider adding a website. "For now, we're looking to stay pretty low to the ground and not overcomplicate things." 


Cost is a key motivation for taking the website-less approach to online marketing. Participation in most social media outlets comes at no charge, while many web apps are free or almost so. Another is the ability to target local markets via vehicles such as Facebook advertising. Using a tool such as Twitter or a landing page also allows a company to create a 'quick and dirty' online presence for specific purposes such as special offers, events and product launches, explains Joseph Manna, community manager at InfusionSoft, a firm specializing in online marketing tools for small business. And, according to WebVisible's Manger, it provides a platform for a company to test a marketing message before full-scale rollout.


Those factors make such a strategy best suited to certain kinds of businesses. For example, says Ostrow, restaurants and bars can post a special on Facebook or Twitter to drive foot traffic that day. Sole proprietorships and very small companies, from yoga instructors to contractors, can use landing pages, LinkedIn and Facebook to create a simple yet functional online presence.


Best Practices for Going Without
While there may be no real substitute for a conventional website, the right combination of tools and tactics can deliver an online presence that in many respects rivals what a website can provide. Here are some suggestions from the web marketing experts:



  • Identify a social media focus. Businesses pursuing informal relationships with the public, such as restaurants and bars, might look first to Facebook, for example, while those wanting relationships with more of a professional flavor might start with LinkedIn.

  • Customize a blog, social media page or landing page with logos, images and information about the business.

  • Lean heavily on web apps to bring dimension, functionality and reach. A wealth of plug-and-play apps are available, many at little or no cost, to add vital elements such as a shopping cart, a lead form, coupons and video. Apps like TweetDeck and Involver, which manage and coordinate content posted through social media, are worthwhile, says Ostrow, as are those that help a business reach local prospects.

  • Blog. Besides being a great way to feed fresh content to the masses, it positions a person as an authority in their field while also spreading the word about their products and services. With a blog, you control the content, which is not necessarily the case with other forms of social media. Tools such as Wordpress, Blogspot and Tumblr are among many solid options.

  • Embrace analytics tools. They're vital for measuring the reach and impact of a business's online efforts. Fasciano says Google Analytics has been invaluable for its ability to provide simple, useful metrics on how web users respond to specific social media actions.

  • Interact. Lend a personal touch by judiciously inserting yourself and your company into the social media dialogue through groups, Tweets, etc.


All these components, says Manger, should be geared toward conveying and controlling the desired message while capturing vital competitive information--and, of course, new customers. 'What you're talking about is reputation management--controlling your content and your data so it is wholly owned by you as an asset.'

Join the conversation about this story »

See Also:






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