Tue, Aug 18, 2009 @ 9:59 am10 comments
Over the years of being a freelance web designer, I’ve been developing my own processes for the business of designing websites. One of those processes has been compiling a list of tasks that need to be completed before launching a website, whether it be a new site or a redesign. This list is kept in a spreadsheet which I work through, ticking off each item after the client has given final sign off for the site to go live. I view it as my final quality control procedure and I usually find that the process will highlight a few of the ‘little things’ that I might have overlooked in general development. Usually nothing too major; more a case of ‘dotting all the Is and crossing all the Ts’.
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Posted in Accessibility | CSS | HTML | Javascript | Search Engine Optimisation | Web Development
Mon, Aug 3, 2009 @ 1:09 pm2 comments
Håkon Wium Lie’s article, CSS @ Ten: The Next Big Thing on A List Apart in August 2007 may have got the (snow)ball rolling, but it seems that it was the announcement of Typekit on May 27 this year which has prompted an avalanche of interest in web fonts. Or maybe I’ve just woken up to the issue since then and been taking more notice. But I seem to be adding a lot of font and type-related bookmarks lately and thought it would be worth sharing some of them.
More on The @font-face snowball

Posted in CSS | Legal issues | Typography | Web Development
Mon, Jun 9, 2008 @ 11:52 am0 comments
A while ago I wrote about some of the extensions I use with Firefox which make the job of web development easier. I’ve since added some new ones to Firefox that I use on a fairly regular basis, so thought I should update the list.
More on More useful extensions for developing with Firefox

Posted in Browsers | Web Development
Fri, May 30, 2008 @ 12:21 pm14 comments
Having compiled the list, done the numbers and dealt with the facts, I thought for the follow-up article to the The Ultimate Web Design Gallery Resource that I’d get some opinions from not only some of the people who run the web design galleries in the list about what it’s like to run one of these sites, but also some search engine optimisation (SEO) professionals about the perceived value of having your site included on one (or many).
More on What it’s like to run a web design gallery

Posted in Web Development
Thu, May 15, 2008 @ 3:45 pm49 comments
$docroot = $_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT'];
include($docroot.'/shed/galleries/conn.php');
include($docroot.'/shed/galleries/countries.php');
include($docroot.'/shed/galleries/queries.php');
?>
In case you haven’t noticed lately, there a LOT of web design galleries out there. I’d always kept bookmarks for the galleries I’d come across but recently while looking at one I noticed links to a lot of galleries that I hadn’t heard of before. So I thought it might be worthwhile to investigate just how many there were out there. I came across a few blog posts with links to galleries but rather than just adding to the list and then publishing it, I thought I’d do a bit more investigation and analysis.
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Posted in Web Development
Wed, Mar 19, 2008 @ 7:22 pm4 comments
Theres’ been a bit of news recently about the ‘semantic web‘ (or data web) with Yahoo! announcing that their new Search Open Ecosystem will support semantic web standards, thereby providing a far richer and more useful search experience. Tim Berners-Lee, the founder of the Internet, even believes that the rise of the semantic web could see the wane of Google.
More on Will the ‘semantic web’ see XHTML finally supercede HTML?

Posted in Semantic web | Web Development
Fri, Jan 25, 2008 @ 2:58 pm3 comments
A furore has erupted over the past couple of days within a section of the web development community over a decision by Microsoft to require web developers to add a meta tag to their pages to define what version of Internet Explorer a site has been designed for. I’m not going to go into the pros and cons of this decision as it’s been comprehensively covered elsewhere.
More on My website’s broken!

Posted in Browsers | Web Development
Tue, Jan 22, 2008 @ 9:26 pm4 comments
I recently had a discussion with a client that I’d already produced a template for who said they wanted to change the primary navigation items at the top of each page. As the site hadn’t gone live yet (they were producing it themselves – I’d simply done the graphic and template design for them), I didn’t see much problem with fulfilling their request. But it was a two-part request and the part that raised a warning flag for me was that they wanted the navigation to be flexible enough for them to be able to make further changes easily at some point in the future.
More on How thinking about your website can benefit your business

Posted in Web Development