Milky Way Transit Authority
Via kottke the Milky Way Transit Authority map by Samuel Arbesman.

Via kottke the Milky Way Transit Authority map by Samuel Arbesman.

From svn:
…remember that performance optimization is never about the optimal, it’s about the good enough. Performance is a problem when it’s a problem, but otherwise it’s just not relevant.
Recently I had to tweak a site to perform a little bit faster… in the end the gain was not that much, but just taking a look and improving a bit is often all it’s needed.
From Slashdot:
Computers and their strange behaviours…
From svn:
Imagine if Information Architects and Designers worked together with Developers to create a working section or feature of a site. Wireframes can be part of that process but don’t have to be presented. The more real it is the better feedback you’ll receive.
Exactly on spot ! Only problem is, IA aren’t abundant in small companies, and designers end up doing that job, what (usually) leads to poorly thought features and interactions. Design is a visual process, and it’s too easy to look at that shiny polished look that’s appearing like magic on Photoshop and forget that what’s on screen is just a still, a frame from a bigger movie where the main character is played by the user.
Or, Developers take a shot at it, and being good faithful geeks they suffer from the reverse problem: everything is interaction, and every possible solution must be taken in to account, regardless of the look and interaction demanded from the user. We (I fit comfortably on the geek squad) end up making forms that present error messages on the wrong places, with non sequential fields and sometimes even loosing all the information the user just entered.
All this leads to frustration, with one (or more) of the following results:
Of course, we can work hard and try to make something good, designers, developers, and information architects (even the ones that perform this role in good will). But sometimes it’s hard…