RJ / tags / sxsw2010

Tagged with “sxsw2010” (11) activity chart

  1. History of the Button

    Even though technology evolved at a crazy pace the last 100 years, the humble button has stayed at the center of it all. What is its past, its future? Why is it important? What does it say about the interaction between humans and technology? Pictures, stories, revelations, maybe movies.

    From http://sxsw.com/node/4713

    —Huffduffed by RJ 2 years ago

  2. Slow Twitter: Users Who Take Their Time Tweeting

    Slow Twitter is like Slow Food, but much sillier. The people who use the most impulse-driven site for the most thought-out one-liners have created a new art form with its own poetic language, economy of space, and a million ways to joke about being drunk, naked and crying on a Monday.

    A panel of witty Twitter users, moderated by the editor of the book "Twitter Wit," will discuss what goes into writing a good tweet, why Twitter is a legit form of literature, and why already-famous writers and comedians should "waste" their best ideas on Twitter.

    From http://sxsw.com/node/4763

    —Huffduffed by RJ 2 years ago

  3. Simple Steps to Great Web Design by Matthew Smith

    Creating beautiful web design is largely a matter of mastering a handful of simple techniques. The best designs employ systems of color, contrast, typography, and white space to achieve hierarchy, balance, and rhythm. The rest is just ingenuity and creativity. Matthew will review dozens of great and nearly great sites, explaining how to raise the bar on your next design.

    From http://sxsw.com/node/4855

    —Huffduffed by RJ 2 years ago

  4. Web Accessibility Gone Wild

    This session presents a wide variety of mistakes, blunders, misconceptions, over-indulgences, intricacies, and generally silly aspects of modern web accessibility. Sometimes the most serious errors are made by well-meaning developers who misunderstand the concepts or take their limited accessibility knowledge to an extreme level - thus web accessibility gone wild.

    From http://sxsw.com/node/4867

    —Huffduffed by RJ 2 years ago

  5. Ze Frank Conversation: The Creative Lifestyle

    Expressing yourself. Telling stories. Playing games. Connecting with others. It’s what the Web is for, but too often we focus on the latest trendy technology meme or e-commerce scheme’ and forget that the Internet is really a sandbox for engagement, fun, and participation. Pioneering Web maker ze frank will sit down for a conversation with Scott Kirsner, author of the book Fans, Friends & Followers, to talk about being creative in the digital age ’ and earning a living at it.

    http://my.sxsw.com/events/event/5240

    —Huffduffed by RJ 2 years ago

  6. Time Social Location. What’s Next In Mobile Experiences?

    As more devices become location aware, social uses will continue to evolve beyond just who and what, to WHEN. Adding the temporal dimension creates new opportunities for social interaction. Learn about ways to leverage and use technology to add features at the intersection of temporal, social, and location.

    —Huffduffed by RJ 2 years ago

  7. Interactive Podcasts: The Revenge Of Editorials

    As the Internet has accelerated the creation of all types of content, it’s become more and more difficult to sift through that content and find something of quality. We’ve tried it with machines and even mass consensus but the results are either wrong or lowest common denominator. The irony in all this is that we really need other humans to help us. The vast breadth of content on the Web only highlights what we’ve always relied upon: the valued opinion of others.

    —Huffduffed by RJ 2 years ago

  8. Be Creative and Get Paid

    Nick Campbell talks about ways to get paid doing what you like in design.

    From http://sxsw.com/taxonomy/term/16

    download

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    —Huffduffed by RJ 2 years ago

  9. Interactive Infographics

    nsights and examples from the frontier of interactive infographics. The smart, interactive presentation of data is emerging as a new form of media. Still in an early stage, this format shows major promise. We’ll explore what this is all about and where it’s going.

    —Huffduffed by RJ 2 years ago

  10. CSS3 Design with HTML5

    As HTML5 and CSS3 gets written, browser vendors are already incorporating their new features allowing for greater design and functionality. However, some major browsers haven’t. How should developers build for a constantly moving target? This panel discusses dealing with those older browsers and embracing new Web design technologies with practical HTML5 and CSS3 demonstrations.

    http://my.sxsw.com/events/event/546

    —Huffduffed by RJ 2 years ago

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