jaronbarends / jarón barends

I’m an Interaction Designer & Frontend Developer for Vara, a dutch broadcasting corporation. I’m a sucker for details.

There are seven people in jaronbarends’s collective.

Huffduffed (128) activity chart

  1. Interview with Brian McDonald: Author of ‘Invisible Ink’ & ‘The Golden Theme’

    (description by Disney character designer Chris Oatley:) Brian McDonald wrote the two best books on storytelling that I have ever read. (I have read a lot of books about storytelling.)

    ‘Invisible Ink’ will equip you as a storyteller. ‘The Golden Theme’ will give you a sense of purpose as a storyteller.

    —Huffduffed by jaronbarends 8 months ago

  2. Five Tips To Make Your Character Designs More Dynamic & Believable :: PWP #9

    —Huffduffed by jaronbarends 8 months ago

  3. 012 JSJ Design Patterns in Javascript with Addy Osmani

    Addy Osmani talks about design patterns in javascript, the different flavours op mv*

    —Huffduffed by jaronbarends 9 months ago

  4. The Web Ahead #23: Maps with Alex Barth

    Alex Barth joins Jen Simmons to talk about maps. What is happening with the new Apple Maps? What options for web developers and app developers are there beyond Google Maps? Where can people get map data and what tools are needed to implement maps?

    —Huffduffed by jaronbarends 9 months ago

  5. Move It! CSS3 Transitions and Animations at Web Directions South 2011 | Lanyrd

    Since the early days of the web, the only reliable way to get movement on your site was through Flash, or more recently, Javascript. But now, with WebKit and Mozilla leading the way, transformations and transitions can be done with pure CSS, even on mobile devices. And for those in need of even more movement, CSS3 provides for keyframe-based animations. In this session, we’ll take a look at all of the possibilities and explore what works and where — from the simplest effects, to creative usability enhancements including the combination of CSS with mobile Javascript frameworks.

    —Huffduffed by jaronbarends one year ago

  6. Scalable JavaScript Design Patterns at Web Directions South 2011 | Lanyrd

    Would you like to learn how to organize your JavaScript applications so they can scale? Be able to write apps that support switching out Dojo or jQuery without rewriting a line of code? Application architecture is one of those aspects to development where minor problems can lead to major issues later on if it isn’t done right.

    Developers writing client-side apps these days usually use a combination of MVC, modules, widgets, plugins and frameworks for theirs. Whilst this works great for apps that are built at a smaller-scale, what happens when your project really starts to grow?. In this talk, I’ll be presenting an effective set of design patterns for large-scale JavaScript application architecture that have previously been used at both AOL and Yahoo amongst others to develop scalable applications.

    You’ll learn how to keep your application logic truly decoupled, build modules that can exist on their own independently so they can be easily dropped into other projects and future-proof your code in case you need to switch to a different DOM library in the future.

    —Huffduffed by jaronbarends one year ago

  7. The Dao of Web Design Revisited at Web Directions South 2011 | Lanyrd

    In 2000, when the web was less than half the age it is now, when the concept of web standards was still not much more than an ember carefully nurtured by a small group of practitioners who might fairly have been called fanatics (and less charitably, but just as accurately, lunatics), John Allsopp wrote “A Dao of Web Design”.

    Little did he know, and even less can he believe, that more than a decade later, an eon in internet years, it is still widely quoted by some of the web’s most well known and respected practitioners, and considered by some to be a seminal text in web design.

    So, ten years later, what does John now think about his thesis, and his suggestions for developers? In a world of highly fragmented user experiences, across all manner of screen sizes and input modes, what now seems hopelessly naïve? What if anything, stands the test of time. And what, if anything, new has John learned as he has continued to develop with web technologies over the last 10 years.

    Come and listen as John revisits a Dao of Web Design

    —Huffduffed by jaronbarends one year ago

  8. Sustaining Passionate Users at Web Directions South 2011 | Lanyrd

    Yes, business applications can be made fun and gamelike. No, points, levels and badges are not the way to create sustained interest.

    While many sites have added superficial gaming elements to make interactions more engaging, the companies that “get it” have a better understanding of the psychology behind motivation. They know how to design sites that keep people coming back again and again.

    So what are the secrets? What actually motivates people online? How do you create sustained interest in your product or service? Speaker Stephen P. Anderson will share common patterns from game design, learning theories, and neuroscience to reveal what motivates—and demotivates—people over the long haul.

    —Huffduffed by jaronbarends one year ago

  9. All The Small Things at Web Directions South 2011 | Lanyrd

    Microcopy is the ninja of online content. Fast, furious and deadly, it has the power to make or break your online business, to kill or stay your foes. It’s a sentence, a confirmation, a few words. One word, even. It isn’t big or flashy. It doesn’t leave a calling card. If it does its job your customer may never notice it was there.

    In this session, Relly will show you how you can bolster sales and reflect your company and client’s values through just a few well-chosen words. Designers? Do you get lumped with the interaction copy? Developers? Do you get left trying to make meaningful error messages? Ecommerce managers? Do you want an easy increase in sales? This session will help. It will be a lot of fun. You should definitely come.

    —Huffduffed by jaronbarends one year ago

  10. Designing without the browser at Web Directions South 2011 | Lanyrd

    Innovation is intensifying off the browser — the things we use everyday are increasingly controlled by touch, gesture and voice. And we, as interaction designers, are faced with a challenge that’s the opposite of our browser-​​based one-​​man-​​shop: there’s suddenly a gulf of production between our concept and the final product; the means of production is as tricky to navigate as a roster of Tolstoy characters; mistakes are expensive; and everyone speaks a different language. Sound dangerous? Sound exciting?

    Donovan argues the processes for the future lie in our more material-​​based graphic designer pasts, and our cousin disciplines of industrial design and architecture. After a decade of honing our newfangled browser-​​based skills, learn how to dust off and sharpen the tools of our roots.

    —Huffduffed by jaronbarends one year ago

Page 1 of 13Older