26 Mar

Hey college….

Life: Hey college, Ralph called…

College: Oh yeah?

Life: Yeah he says he wants to hang with me and blog.

Blog: Yup!

College: FINAL MAJOR FINAL MAJOR FINAL MAJOR!

:(

16 Feb

To-Do Lists are Awesome

Recently I have had to fit a lot of work into not very much time. Usually I have a rough plan for the week in Google Calender however this has proved completely useless in the past couple of weeks. I needed something more temporary, more immediate, more portable. This is when I stumbled upon the all powerful To-Do list.

To-Do lists are awesome, here’s why:

  • You can take them anywhere.
  • They’re disposable.
  • They’re cheap.
  • They help you organise.
  • They give you a sense of accomplishment when complete.
  • They make you more efficient, you will forget less.
  • They help you break down big tasks into little ones.
  • In some rare cases they give you super speed and allow you to complete tasks in 1/3 of the time.
  • They’re easy to make!

How to make a To-Do list:

You will need:

  • Pen
  • Paper/notebook

Method:

  1. Think of things you need to get done.
  2. Write them down on paper.
  3. Do what’s on the paper.

Helping you get things done,

Ralph.

09 Feb

Apple, Adobe and HTML5

So unless you have been hiding under a rock this past week you will know that Apple has announced a new product called the iPad. If you don’t know (Really where have you been hiding?) the iPad is a tablet device running on the iPhone OS. Among its many supposed shortcomings, lack of multi-tasking, crappy name and general uselessness there is one that stands out. The iPad doesn’t support flash.

This isn’t really a problem for a device like the iPhone, its a phone/portable gadget, it doesn’t need to do everything under the sun. The iPad is a content consumption device, it bridges the gap between your laptop/netbook and your phone. Surely it is vital that such a device is compatible with a technology that has such penetration on the web. Surely not having support for said technology would ruin a device. Well…. maybe.

Lack of flash on the iPad means you wont be able to watch video from places like Hulu and wont be able to play flash based games like farmville. As much as I hate flash, the resource hungry monster, this is quite a problem. For a device that isn’t a work machine, not being able to consume most of the rich media on the internet limits the use you will have for it. Simply put, this device is pretty much useless for content consumption on the internet as of right now.

Apple are trying to push HTML5 as the answer to this. For the non-techy among you, HTML5 is the latest version of HTML. Every page on the internet has some HTML in it. HTML5 has loads of new things but in particular it allows you to embed video on a web page without the use of flash.

Awesome, you say, lets start using it right now! There is one small problem, HTML5 isn’t supported in IE6 and IE7 and only has partial support in IE8 (the latest versions of Safari, Chrome and Firefox support it fairly well). You can of course make the older browsers support HTML5 with a bit of javascript but this isn’t ideal. It is this reason why you wont see HTML5 become widely used for a while.

HTML5 is starting to seep into areas of the web. Youtube and Vimeo now offer HTML5 versions of their sites and I would expect other video sites to be working on HTML5 implementations however this is far from being mainstream.

The bottom line is website owners do not want to cut off large proportions of their audience, HTML5 is going to have a slow but steady adoption and Flash isn’t going to die off overnight, much to Apples annoyance.

What does this spell for the iPad? To be honest, I don’t know. I can’t see much use in it for myself at the moment. Flash is important today and will be for a few days to come. If I were to predict the future I would have to mumble an unenthusiastic ‘meh’. I can’t see the device being as big as the iPod but I don’t think it will be a failure like the Apple T.V.

Sound off in the comments.

Ralph.

30 Jan

Creativity in Web Design

Creativity is probably a misleading word, if I were to be accurate I would title this post ‘Being Clever and Witty in Web Design’ but that doesn’t make a very good title now does it?

When I say creativity I mean being funny. It doesn’t have to be laugh out loud funny, a smirk is just enough. It makes your website more likely to stick in the mind which is a good thing, I’m sure you would agree.

Most web design is pretty boring (this blog included). Its just a load of boxes with a few shiny graphics and this makes for a boring experience. If you have something that makes your user smile, that surprises them and ultimately connects with them on a human level then they’re going to enjoy your website more.

Obviously you can’t be amusing everywhere. Banking websites, for example, need to look official, people want to feel safe putting money into them and its not going to be reassuring if you have a formal bank making wise cracks on their website. You might also have a hard time convincing your clients that this is a good way to go. With this in mind its probably best to play with this on your own site first.

So, what do you do? Where do you start? It might be as simple as having an image change when you refresh the page (click Mr Wooters at the top-left there and you will see what I mean). It doesn’t have to be a big change, it could simply be playing with a characters expression or making something move when you mouse over it. It doesn’t really matter what it is as long as when the user does it they give a little smirk.

This wouldn’t be a complete post without a few images, I’ll let you work out how to take this mentality and apply it to the web.

Ralph.

ImageImageImageImageImage

28 Jan

Saul Bass: On Making Money vs Quality Work

I guess that really is the difference when it comes down to it.

Ralph

28 Jan

Site Downtime

The site is due to go offline for 5 minutes at midnight tonight (Jan 28th) as host servers need to be rebooted. Lets hope all goes well.

Ralph.

19 Jan

Ralph is on Leave…

Ralph has been a little busy this week and has not written anything. Appropriate steps have been taken and Ralph has been dealt with. We realise we can’t make this up to you and for that we are sorry. We tried persuading Ralph to write a post but failed, all he produced was this:

Drill/ScrewdriverWhich wasn’t even his.

We hope Ralph will be back on form later this week but we cannot guarantee it.

Ralphs Peers.

10 Jan

Touch Screen Devices and the Web.

Among the many thoughts that have floated through my brain this week there was one that was the tinniest bit interesting. How will the web handle touch screen devices?

If you are up on your tech events – after all, who isn’t – you will know that CES was this week. A week where blogs likeEngadget work themselves silly to cover all the new electronic devices we will see over the next year or two. Among the wave of e-Readers and weird looking micetouch screen devices seem to have been a rather large trend this year.

While you can browse the web perfectly fine in your iPhone or Blackberry its not exactly a great experience. Some websites are better than others and include CSS that is  targeted at phones which is ok but you don’t get any of the benefits a touch screen gives you. What I’m talking about is gestures. I think it would be pretty damn cool to flick through a slideshow using a gesture rather than poking at a button on the screen.

Of course the addition of gestures isn’t going to make a massive difference but its the little things that make the experience better. There will be other changes, making click areas bigger and not storing important information in hover states come to mind.

So how will gestures come to the web? The iPhone has a touch API and there have been experiments with Flash and Javascript but nothing that is really mainstream yet.

Ralph.

01 Jan

First Post on Creative Woot

Among the many ramblings which will occur on this blog, this might just be the most important. In this short post before the new year I shall explain what Creative Woot is about and what its for.

To put it simply Creative Woot will be my space to post design related content. I will be posting typography, websites and logos with commentary as well as bashing Internet Explorer 6 users and occasionally, people who use Comic Sans for formal documents to make them “more fun”.

I will try not to post images without comment unless they speak for themselves and if I happen to do so please send angry, but not overly angry, tweets to @ralphsaunders. Upon receiving said tweets I shall respond accordingly.

Before I sign off to savour the last moments of 2009 (consuming Twiglets) I must address something. Specifically the name of the little birdy up in the top left there, that is to say he is nameless. Few names have been suggested during the development of the site; Mr. Wooters is the current favourite (suggested by @THErealFROGMAN). If you have any suggestions please @ me on twitter.

One last thing I should mention; Creative Woot has its own twitter account which can be found here. All posts and updates from the site will be linked to there.

Ralph.