Archive for April, 2009

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Did you know…

April 29, 2009

… that you could incorporate a Poll on your WordPress blog?

Here’s a sample from GrainEdit:

Screen capture of poll on GrainEdit

Screen capture of poll on GrainEdit

Go to Dashboard> Polls and click Add Poll.

Then think of something that might be interesting to poll about.

Hmmmmmm.

Enter your questions, Save Poll. Then in your next post, in the Upload/Insert Media bar, click the furthest right radio button. (that’s the Add Poll button).  You’ll also need to sign up for a free PollDaddy account, a relative of WordPress that handles the data for your poll. You’ll see some code generated in your post. Move it to where you want the poll to appear in your posting. Like right below this:

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Greyscale Gorilla’s 7 rules…

April 27, 2009

…for Building an Online Portfolio

1. Your site is a frame
2. Make every project a link (AKA: Don’t use Flash)
3. Make it simple
4. Don’t be clever
5. Make it easy for us to contact you
6. Make it easy to update
7. SIMPLIFY!

Read the full story at Greyscale Gorilla.

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Pingback

April 27, 2009

This is a test to see how pingbacks work.

Barb’s Blog

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Coroflot

April 27, 2009

Besides being an online design job and portfolio posting resource, Coroflot also has an Advice column called Creative Seeds. Many of the articles posted are geared towards students and recent design school graduates. For instance, check out:

“Six reasons I didn’t look at your portfolio” – an honestly written article by Carl Alviani.

Coroflot is also related to Core77 (design magazine and resource) which is worth a look.

Similar to Krop, (see my previous post), you can create a FREE online portfolio. Go ahead and GO for it!

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Krop

April 25, 2009

Krop is a Job Board and career resource website for creative professionals. It is free to join and you can post an online résumé,  upload 10 images and customize how your profile page looks. Watch this short screencast on how to join and use Krop.

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Social Networking

April 25, 2009

LinkedIn

This video is created by Lee LeFever of Common Craft in Seattle and provides a simple explanation of this online networking service for professionals. I discussed this in Fall term, but it’s time to put services like this in to action! Start with the network of people you’ve met in this program and you may be surprised at the connections that spring forth from there. I’ve maintained connections with former students and colleagues going back as far as 1984 through LinkedIn.

BTW, Common Craft has dozens of short “Plain English” videos on topics ranging from Twitter to RSS to Phishing to Search Engine Optimizing. Worth a look.

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A worthy toil

April 23, 2009

(the following is excerpted from Why We Design: Before and After Magazine, April 21 written by John Wade)

“You might look again at what you do. You sit with a full tummy in your warm office at a blank screen with an ad to make, and you’re thinking, “Jeez, I have to come up with something original and clever and it better be soon.” That’s not how to think. As a designer you have a privilege, one that others do not. It is the privilege of making visible that which others can only imagine, feel or think. When you do this, you open a window through which your audience can see, know and understand.

Design is about communication.

To take a word or a thought and design it is to give it form and body, so others can see, too, and respond.

The more compelling the design, the deeper the response.

By more compelling, I don’t mean prettier, necessarily, or artsier. I mean richer, more complete, more efficient. The design I’m talking about isn’t about making something only look better, but actually function better. Design has to do with how a thing works.”

Read the full posting here.

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One year later

April 21, 2009

You’ve all seen or heard me reference 2008 graduate Shauna Haider’s work (AKA Nubby Twiglet) from time to time. After a year interning and then working full time for Nemo HQ in Portland, she and a dozen colleagues were  cut loose because of downsizing. She’s been busy retooling her portfolio to drum up freelance work and/or a new position.

You can download her new 2009 portfolio here. And take a look at how it looked in June 2008. (scroll to the bottom). You’ll see student work in both versions, but note how she describes the pieces (MercyCorps, Penguin Books cover, 2008 Calendar).

She’s got 10 pages of tightly edited work, (including a logo page of 9 wordmarks) that shows her range and unique perspective. It’s a strong, simple layout that uses a system of typographic labels and rules.

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Template homework

April 20, 2009

Before class on Wednesday, April 22, please spend at least 4 hours modifying the template files you downloaded from Xsrv2> GD252 on Monday.

Play with the CSS by creating your own rules or modifying the values in the template’s existing CSS.

If /when you get stuck, refer to the resources available (see his  “Web Resources” page)

On Wednesday, we’ll review each student’s modifications, answer questions, and go from there.

Please continue (or start) your daily post to your design blog.

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Privacy Issues with Online Social Networks

April 19, 2009

from Duboff Law Group LLC, Portland, Oregon

Do you post on MySpace, Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn or other social networking sites?  A recent ruling by the Superior Court of Fresno County cautions Internet users about the lack of privacy inherent in the use of such sites.

The case involved a woman named Cynthia Moreno, who published a blog entry called “Ode to Coalinga” on her MySpace page, opening with the line, “the older I get, the more I realize how much I despise Coalinga,” and going on to criticize the California city and its residents.  When the principal of Coalinga High School found the Ode on MySpace, he forwarded it to the editor of the local newspaper and the newspaper published the Ode in its letters section.

The woman’s family still lived in Coalinga and claimed that as a result of the newspaper’s publication of the Ode, they received death threats and their home was shot at.  They also claimed that the father’s business lost so much money it had to be closed.  Morena and her family sued the principal and the school district as well as the newspaper and its publishers for invasion of privacy and intentional infliction of emotional distress.

The appellate court noted that Moreno had “made her article available to any person with a computer and thus opened it to the public eye” and went on to say that “[u]nder these circumstances, no reasonable person would have had an expectation of privacy regarding the published material.”  The court pointed out that although Morena had used only her first name on her online journal, her identity was “readily ascertainable” from her MySpace page, which included a photograph of Moreno.

While most of us are aware that Internet postings are not private, this case serves as a reminder that unless your settings provide for limited access, you should be extremely careful when using social networking sites.

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