понедельник, 7 мая 2012 г.

Brand New Smashing Books Now Available

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Dear Friends,

The brand new Smashing books #3 + 3⅓ have finally arrived: freshly printed, neatly packed and ready to be shipped to you, our dear reader. We are very proud and excited; the first verdicts of both books have been throughout positive. Yet, it's you who decides how valuable the books really are. If you've bought the eBook versions, you should have them now.

Smashing Books #3 + 3⅓ Now Available

The new Smashing Books are valuable, thoroughly edited and prepared quality books for Web designers and developers. They provide a professional guide on how to redesign websites but also how to adjust your professional workflow to produce better results. Well-known experts share their practical know-how and introduce a whole new mindset for progressive, future-proof Web design. You won't regret it: buy your Smashing books #3 and #3⅓ now!

Get your Smashing Books today.
Get your Smashing Books today

The books provide a professional guide on how to redesign websites, but they also introduce a whole new mindset for future-friendly Web design. A detailed look at the business and technical side of redesign is followed by an overview of advanced HTML5, CSS3 and JavaScript techniques.

The books feature innovative UX techniques, the peculiarities of mobile context in Web design and useful Photoshop techniques for the new Web. Also, you'll learn a practical hands-on workflow for Responsive Web design, dive into emotional design, content strategy and storytelling. Get the books now!

If you've pre-ordered the books earlier, please log into your account in the Smashing Shop and download the eBooks from there. If you've purchased printed books, they should be on your footsteps very soon, too! The Smashing Book #3 is already on its way, and the Smashing Book #3⅓ will be shipped separately on May 15th.


Get All Four Smashing Books In One Swoop!

If you haven't purchased Smashing Books #1 or #2 yet, we've prepared a couple of "complete" bundles for your convenience. Although the first books have been published in 2009 and 2011, they still remain relevant and useful. Pay only $5 for shipping, save 20% off the price and get yourself the complete Smashing Anthology, a full collection of all our books as of today:

Smashing Books Anthology
Get your Smashing Books today


We Look Forward To Your Feedback!

The first books are already on their way and should arrive this week since they are sent via airmail. The official release of the books is scheduled for the upcoming Tuesday, but we'd like you to get an exclusive peek into the book already today:

Smashing Book #3
Smashing Book #3

Please use the hashtag #smbook3 on Twitter to ask questions, share images or just provide feedback  —  your support will be sincerely appreciated. And if you find the new Smashing Books useful or interesting, please share them with your friends and colleagues, too.

Thanks for your support and so long,
The Smashing Family


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вторник, 1 мая 2012 г.

Smashing Newsletter #58: Free Font - WordPress - jQuery - Diagrams - Story Posters

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The Smashing Email Newsletter

Issue #58 | Tuesday, May 1st 2012 | 105,781 subscribers | Previous issues

Dear Friends,

In today's newsletter issue, we'll get acquainted with a timeline generator, a fantastic gallery of children's story posters, a free font named Valentina and a free starter WordPress theme for your convenience. Also, there's a one-of-a-kind email lottery you probably shouldn't miss out on, and the ongoing projects of embracing failure by learning to move forward.

This time we're also giving away 2 conference tickets to the FFWD.PRO Conference in sunny Zagreb taking place in June. To win a free pass, all you have to do is tell us why you'd like to go using #ffwdpro on Twitter. The winners will be announced by the end of this week.

Thank you for reading, and as always, we hope that you'll find this newsletter issue helpful and inspirational. Don't forget to use the hastag #smnl on Twitter to provide us with constructive feedback!

Yours sincerely,
The Smashing Team

Table of Contents

01. FilePicker.io: A Better Upload Dialogue For The Web
02. Children's Story Posters
03. Free Font: Valentina Typeface
04. Generate Timelines To Visualize Data
05. Increase Productivity With Useful Terminal Tools
06. Share Your Positive Fail
07. A Free Starter WordPress Theme
08. Drawing Diagrams Online
09. World Wide E-Mail Lottery
10. Smashing Highlights (From Our Archives)
11. New on Smashing Job Board
12. Recent Articles on Smashing Magazine


1. FilePicker.io: A Better Upload Dialogue For The Web

Have you ever wanted to let your users easily add their content to your website quickly, without complicated and time-consuming server setup and authentication? Filepicker.io is a library that deals with all the dirty work and provides users with a rich interface to submit their files from Dropbox, their computer, Facebook, URL, etc. Users can then easily edit and save text files, adjust images, or even share groups of files.

FilePicker.io: A Better Upload Dialogue For The Web

Filepicker.io works with iOS and Android and is very simple to use. The example app shows you just how slick the interface can be, and includes drag-and-drop functionality for importing files from your own computer. While using the library, you can build more smart applications on top of it. (cc)


2. Children's Story Posters

We all remember those days from our childhood when we spent evenings reading exciting fairy tales and stories about fantastic, mysterious creatures. Christian Jackson revives these wonderful moments by designing and collecting Children's Story Posters.

Children's Story Posters

Among the illustrations, you will encounter classics such as Snow White, Alice in Wonderland, Pinocchio and The Little Red Riding Hood. It's interesting to observe how the designer managed to highlight the core idea of each story with only a few elements (along with a spice of good humor)—a little trip to the good old times. (tt)


3. Free Font: Valentina Typeface

Pedro Arilla, a graphic designer from Spain, shares his name with his father and grandfather. Luckily for the Web community, he did not share their passion for carpentry, but instead provides us with this truly beautiful, now freely available typeface today. "Valentina is a classic didone that follows some of the canons proposed by Bodoni in the 18th century, but incorporates many of the characteristics of the antique Spanish punches of the time." The font is a "sincere tribute" to the Pedro's grandmother, and "therefore bears her name."

Free Font: Valentina Typeface

Valentina consists of 457 glyphs, includes 125 alternative lower cases and 46 ligatures, as well as symbols and punctuations marks. You can download the font for free and use it in both your personal and commercial projects. Also, if you'd like to support the typographer, you are welcome to make a donation on his webpage, if you wish. (ml)


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4. Generate Timelines To Visualize Data

Displaying content in chronic order (as a timeline) is a very efficient way of visualizing dates, time-related events, or their developments. In fact, if you are on Facebook, you are no longer able to avoid seeing your friends' lives organized along a time-scale (and you most probably already have one yourself). For those of you who like organizing in chronic order, the developers of Vérité.co have developed a tool just for you.

Generate Timelines To Visualize Data

Timeline has a beautiful interface and can pull in media from different sources. It has built-in support for pulling in data from Twitter, YouTube, Flickr, Vimeo, Google Maps and SoundCloud—and more will be included in the near future. You can easily fill in data from a Google spreadsheet, or use a more detailed method such as JSON to create your timeline. You can also host it on your website by using the Timeline jQuery plugin. The project is available on GitHub, or as WordPress plugin. (ml)


5. Increase Productivity With Useful Terminal Tools

Terminal applications are a great way to increase your productivity. Mosh is one of those little time-saving tools that can definitely help improve the speed of your work for you. The tool is essentially a remote mobile shell that allows roaming (so even if your IP changes, you won't lose your connection), supports intermittent connectivity (it warns you if your internet connection drops, but resumes the connection automatically), and provides intelligent local echo and line editing of user keystrokes. It might be a nice replacement for SSH and works with GNU/Linux, FreeBSD and Mac OS X.

Increase Productivity With Useful Terminal Tools

Dropbox Sync Script is a backup script that will sync your server to your Dropbox account every day. Just have it triggered every day from your computer (with either a crontab entry or StartupItems) and your server will always be backed up. Sheet lets you create and access text snippets from your terminal, acting as your own personal wiki. There is thorough documentation available, including using it for opening URLs as well as a number of other actions. (cc)


6. Share Your Positive Fail

Failure does not automatically end with disaster. Actually, some even result into something positive or even amazing! Some great inventions would not even exist without failure, like the discovery of penicillin. With his idea of the hashtag #positivefail, Stuart Battersby wants to shift the cultural view of failure. He suggests that people embrace failure, learn from it and go forward. A failure can be helpful, and it forms a "postivefail". That's why he created Positivefail to collect and share positive fails from people around the world!

Share Your Positive Fail

Get involved! Everyone can participate—you only need your twitter account. Twitter your fail-and-positive outcome including the hashtag #positivefail and share your experience with others. You might want to include a link to the webpage, so people know what it's all about! (ml)


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7. A Free Starter WordPress Theme

Building great custom WordPress themes takes time to learn. There are frameworks out there that can speed up the process, but a lot of them are overkill for a basic website. If you just want a basic, responsive website without all the bells and whistles, Nick La has created a new starter theme just for you.

A Free Starter WordPress Theme

Base Starter WordPress Theme is simple and easy to extend, with a column grid included, custom header and footer navigation, and a custom comment template. It also includes pagination and child-theme support. There are templates for a variety of features, and thorough documentation is provided as well. (cc)


8. Drawing Diagrams Online

We're sure you've been in a similar situation before: you intend to send a diagram to one of your clients or even to a business partner, and so you send the file. Alas, s/he is not able to open nor edit it because the specific software has not been installed on their PCs yet. So you're asked to adjust the file and send it again as a PNG or even as a JPEG. And so it goes, back and forth. Until the whole process is resolved, at least ten emails have been exchanged.

Drawing Diagrams Online

Wouldn't it be easier if this whole process could be simplified by using an online editor? This is now possible with the help of Diagram.ly. The drawing tools are limited, but you will still be able to create mind maps, diagrams, schemas, and many other organizational charts to share online. Another tool that will surely help improve your workflow! (tts)


9. World Wide E-Mail Lottery

Here is a question for you: what would you say if you could reach a million people with only one email? Right. It just takes a few seconds to understand the purpose of the project called "listserve". You might think that you're already reaching thousands of people every day with your Facebook or Twitter updates, but in fact you know that you aren't. If you're very prolific, you may have 600 Facebook "friends" or 1000 Twitter "followers". Actually reaching between the current 13,000 and one million subscribers, would be awe-inspiring.

World Wide E-Mail Lottery

It's quite simple: you subscribe to the website, thus entering your email address into listserve's growing email list, and at the same time entering their lottery. Everyday one person is picked randomly from this list to write a message to all the other participants. This project has the potential to produce many deeply moving messages—as long as the emails don't end up in your spam folder. Be warned: the emails are sent out every single day. (jc)


10. Smashing Highlights (From Archives)

  • In Search Of The Perfect CAPTCHA
    CAPTCHAs, or Completely Automated Public Turing Tests to Tell Computers and Humans Apart, exist to ensure that user input has not been generated by a computer. These peculiar puzzles are commonly used on the Web to protect registration and comment forms from spam. To be honest, I have mixed feelings about CAPTCHAs. They have annoyed me on many occasions, but I've also implemented them as quick fixes on websites.

  • How To Make Innovative Ideas Happen
    In one of his recent presentations, Frans Johansson explained why groundbreaking innovators generate and execute far more ideas than their counterparts. After watching his presentation The Secret Truth About Executing Great Ideas, my thoughts began to surface about how meaningful the presentation was regardless of a persons industry, culture, field or discipline. Anyone can come up with an amazing idea but how you execute the idea will determine your success.

  • Useful Coding Tools and JavaScript Libraries For Web Developers
    Everyone who is a regular Smashing Magazine reader will know that we have a traditional habit of regularly researching the latest resources, tools and services out there on the Web, as productivity is a crucial asset of professional Web designers and developers. We could, and should, all integrate workflow optimization into our working practices.


11. New on Smashing Job Board

    Here are the job openings published recently at our very own Smashing Job Board:

  • User Experience Designer / Aflac at Aflac, Inc (Columbus, GA)
    Over 50 Million people worldwide have chosen Aflac because of our commitment to providing customers with the confidence that comes from knowing they have assistance in being prepared for whatever life may bring.

  • Web Designer / Project Manager at Clikzy Creative (VA, USA)
    Clikzy Creative is a Washington, DC based web design and marketing firm. We create amazing custom websites which stand out above the rest! Our clients range from small business to large government agencies. We have a very relaxed environment, and unlimited vacation days.

  • Senior UX Designer at Riot Games (Santa Monica, CA)
    Are you a passionate UX pro with the proven ability to create simple, innovative, and elegant design solutions that help solve real user and business problems? Do you have a love for online games and the player communities that surround them (esp. MOBAs and MMORPGs)? Then let us introduce you to a Senior User Experience Designer role at Riot games.


12. Recent Articles on Smashing Magazine


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The authors are: Cameron Chapman (cc), (tt), Melanie Lang (ml), Talita Telma Stöckle (tts), Jan Constantin (jc), Iris Lješnjanin (il), Vitaly Friedman (vf), Sven Lennartz (sl), Christiane Rosenberger (research), Elja Friedman (tools), John von Bergen (proofreading).

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среда, 25 апреля 2012 г.

New Overview of eBooks on Smashing Magazine

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Dear Friends,

Here at Smashing Magazine, improving usability is a never-ending story. We keep experimenting, tweaking, adjusting as well as refining, and are always grateful for constructive and valuable feedback from our dear readers.

For Smashing Magazine's design process, we use something that we call a "chameleon" approach to design. Instead of working towards big bang milestones or final designs, we always explore various (sometimes entirely different) solutions, and switch a variation on for a fixed period of time to test how well it performs—and finally measure the results.

New Smashing eBooks Page

You might have noticed our new Smashing eBooks page which we've created to provide you with a more clear and compact overview of our eBooks. We've also included links to Amazon and the Apple iBookstore where the books are available, too. The eBooks page has now been integrated into the magazine so you can add eBooks to the cart without actually leaving Smashing Magazine's pages.

Perhaps you've stumbled upon some other subtle changes on Smashing Magazine already, and you definitely will notice more changes coming soon. We are working on refinements of the mobile version and the main navigation, and we'd sincerely appreciate your feedback—either via feedback{at}smashing-media{dot}com or via Twitter using #smfeedback.

As dry as optimizations may sometimes be, every process can breed new ideas for even greater projects. Let's make the Web a better place—one UX tweak, one media query, or even with one bug fix at a time.

Thank You!

We would also like to sincerely thank everyone who has supported our publication efforts by resorting to our printed Smashing Books and eBooks. We appreciate your trust and we will keep doing our best to make sure that you won't be disappointed.

All the best,
The Smashing Team


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вторник, 17 апреля 2012 г.

Smashing Newsletter #57: Startups - JavaScript - CSS - Font Icons - Design

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The Smashing Email Newsletter

Issue #57 | Tuesday, April 17th 2012 | 104,895 subscribers | Previous issues

Dear Friends,

A couple of years ago, we received a lengthy email from one of our readers in South Africa. Back then, he was teaching digital communications and design in one of the local universities. The main difficulty of teaching, he explained, was the lack of up-to-date teaching materials, i.e. textbooks as well as exercise books were missing. For that reason, he would wake up earlier every single day, browse through the articles on Smashing Magazine, print out one of them, distribute copies at school, and discuss the topic of the article with his students. This was his way of introducing the concepts of design, and more specifically, Web design, to his students.

The moment after we read this email, it changed our lives forever. We clearly understood that what we do here at Smashing Magazine inspires and helps people all around the world, and would like to encourage you to make a difference today! Share your favorite tip or technique via social media, say a "Thank You!" to people who have helped you become better at what you do today, or just look out for friends and relatives who use a legacy browser and prompt them to upgrade—or upgrade the browser for them yourself.

Let's make a difference today. In the end, if it's just one single person who has sent you an email like the one we've received, it will be enough for you to know that you are changing the world for the better—one step at a time.

Once you've done this, please feel free to share your stories on Twitter using the hashtag #smchange and let us know how you use Smashing Magazine in your work and how we can help you. Of course, you can also contact us via our contact form.

We look very much forward to your feedback!

Yours sincerely,
The Smashing Team

Table of Contents

01. Startups, This Is How Design Works
02. Text Your Own Old-School Digital Movie
03. Client-Side Caching For JavaScript
04. Nostalgia Strikes Back: Reinventing The Slideshow
05. No More Banding In Photoshop!
06. Easy Batch Image Resizing
07. Create Your Own Font Icon Bundles
08. Fluid Line-Height (Or Molten Leading)
09. Lists, Numbers And Data You May Need For Your Work
10. Smashing Highlights (From Our Archives)
11. New on Smashing Job Board
12. Recent Articles on Smashing Magazine


1. Startups, This Is How Design Works

Good design requires time, patience, skills and attention to detail. Yet, what if you've got a nice idea and would like to test out your design skills? Or what if you're about to launch a startup but want to make sure that it has a top-notch design, too? How can you spot a good designer among a dozen of job applications? And what does a good design mean anyway?

Startups, This Is How Design Works

Wells Riley has prepared a comprehensive guide for startups about what design actually means and provides resources to help you find outstanding design talent—a handy reference for your friends, your colleagues and even for yourself. Among many other things, this guide explains the different kinds of design, important design qualities, and places where you can find great designers. It even features useful interviews with successful founders—a handy resource worth bookmarking and sharing! (vf)


2. Text Your Own Old-School Digital Movie

Do you remember when the peak of high-tech gaming was a game of ping pong simulated with a few dozen pixels? How many hours could that have been spent playing outdoors, developing a bit of athletic ability? Well, you can relive the days of two or three digit pixelation by watching (or even making) your own 8-bit movies on Pixelbuzz.tv.

Text Your Own Old-School Digital Movie

The creators of this online 8-bit television have given the users an opportunity to text their own movies. Through 130 characters, each frame is encoded as text, so making your own little pixel movie is not necessarily that hard—but definitely laborious and time-consuming. With this idea, the project is joining the pixelation movement. So if you are really into pixels as well, you might get lost in them by watching movies on the site—most of them can be exported and reused as GIFs, too! (jc)


3. Client-Side Caching For JavaScript

Server caching is useful for quick response times, but sometimes, especially when you are developing a Web application, you migh need to cache objects client-side rather than server-side. Maybe you need to cache something for offline use, or for reuse later.

Client-Side Caching For JavaScript

That's where locache.js comes in. It's a JavaScript caching framework for client-side caching in the browser using localStorage. The library has a memcache-similar API, no dependencies and is very small. And the best part: locache gracefully degrades when the browser doesn't support localStorage. So users with IE6 and IE7 will not get any errors, but as developers say, "caching attempts will be silently dropped and lookups will always appear to be a cache miss." You can provide an expiration time for cached objects as well. (cc)


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4. Nostalgia Strikes Back: Reinventing The Slideshow

Long before Facebook, Flickr, and the Web in general, we used to congregate at a friend's or family member's living room to watch slides of our most recent vacation, wedding or other photo-worthy event. You would watch those pictures for hours, while somebody told you the stories that they depicted. In some cases, the memory of '"the good old days" is better than the actual slideshow was, but that's nostalgia for you. Now Johannes Wagener and Katharina Birkenbach brought it back with a Youtube-style twist.

Nostalgia Strikes Back: Reinventing The Slideshow

Story Wheel lets you create your own old-fashioned slideshow and record a story (audio) for it. In the fold of SoundCloud Labs, Story Wheel lets people share their Instragram picture stories on the Web. Whenever you feel nostalgic for those days of the clicking slide projector, you can just go on Wagener and Birkenbach's website and wallow in other peoples' slides (or even produce your own little themed story). (jc)


5. No More Banding In Photoshop!

Designers that work daily with Photoshop have frequently some annoying experience with gradient banding in a 16bit color mode. Thinking about a solution for this problem, the designer Jeff Broderick developed a technique that may also be useful for you.

No More Banding In Photoshop!

The No More Banding Photoshop action is a free action that will help keeping the beautiful gradient effect you had in mind for your design. The document size will increase, but if you've been wondering on how to get rid of the banding effect, the result is definitely worth the inconvenience. (tt)


6. Easy Batch Image Resizing

You can batch process images in Photoshop, but that method is fairly resource-intensive, isn't it? What if you are on the go and don't have your machine nearby? Why not use a simple app that's designed specifically for the basic processing of images—tasks such as cropping and resizing, adding borders, and adjusting JPEG quality?

Easy Batch Image Resizing

That's exactly what B.I.R.M.E. (Batch Image Resizing Made Easy) does. Just choose your settings for size, cropping dimensions, crop alignment, auto-height/auto-width, border thickness and JPEG quality, and then drag and drop your images to begin. It's quick, easy and works perfectly in any browser! (cc)


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7. Create Your Own Font Icon Bundles

Some fonts just don't offer you the icons necessary to keep your project simple and straightforward—wouldn't it be so easy if just one font would include all desired icons? Fontomas, the "iconic font scissors", does just that in three simple steps. First, load the icon fonts you want to combine. Then piece together the characters you need. Finally, rearrange the icons to fit your keyboard however you wish, and save the font—done!

Create Your Own Font Icon Bundles

Fontomas is released under the MIT license and does not have to be credited. The generated fonts are intended for Web usage, and should not be considered or distributed as independent artwork. However, it's always a good idea to mention the original fonts as well, even if it's not required. (sp)


8. Fluid Line-Height (Or Molten Leading)

So far, in our responsive designs, we tend to focus on adjusting layouts for available horizontal screen size and changing font size and the line length of type, but we haven't quite discovered the possibilities of vertical adjustments, e.g. line-height. In his short article, Molten Leading (or, Fluid Line-Height), Tim Brown suggests to explore a more comprehensive solution for responsive Web typography.

Fluid Line-Height (Or Molten Leading)

The line height, line length and font size should behave responsively as well, yet it's quite difficult to achieve. In fact, adjusting any one of these elements without also adjusting the others is a recipe for uncomfortable reading, which is one reason designers have such a difficult time with fluid Web layout. According to Tim, what we need is a fluid way to set line-height. Web designers should be able to define line-height as a range, like we do with min-width and max-width. So one of the solutions is to set a minimum width at which the adjustment starts, a maximum element width for where it stops, and a minimum and maximum line-height to adjust it through.

Of course, manually adjusting line height for optimum readability across a bunch of media queries is time-consuming. The updates in the post provide some practical solutions, implemented with JavaScript. What would you be able to do with man/mix-width range media queries? (cc)


9. Lists, Numbers And Data You May Need For Your Work

Whenever you are designing a website that requires some input from users—be it Web forms, delivery addresses, or sign-up forms—you need data. Usually all information has to be in a specific format and language, which makes your work not so easy.

Lists, Numbers And Data You May Need For Your Work

Sasa Stamenkovic has prepared a list of all the countries in all languages in the various formats—plain text, JSON, YAML, XML, HTML, CSV, SQL, PHP. The result is a large downloadable list of all countries. When used for your forms you'll save a lot of time.

Another useful source is the Brighter Planet data sets. The available data covers raw data from various sources; different industries and sciences, such as the automobile and flight industries, ZIP codes, census data, climate data, etc. If you need some data samples for your upcoming project, you can surely find some useful data to work with using these resources. (jc)


10. Smashing Highlights (From Archives)

  • Useful Adobe Photoshop Techniques, Tutorials and Tools
    Below you'll find an overview of new useful Adobe Photoshop techniques and tutorials that we've found and collected over the last months. We sincerely hope that at least some of the techniques presented there will help you improve your graphic design skills in Adobe Photoshop.

  • The Semantic Grid System: Page Layout For Tomorrow
    CSS grid frameworks can make your life easier, but they're not without their faults. Fortunately, modern techniques offer a new approach to constructing page layouts. But before getting to the solution, we must first understand the three seemingly insurmountable flaws currently plaguing CSS grids.

  • Innovative Techniques To Simplify Sign-Ups and Log-Ins
    In this article, we'd like to present a couple of new ideas that might be useful for your next designs. Please notice that before using these techniques, you should make sure that they make sense in the context in which you are going to use them.


11. New on Smashing Job Board

    Here are the job openings published recently at our very own Smashing Job Board:

  • Web + Print = You at Orcutt | Winslow (Phoenix, Arizona)
    We are looking for a well rounded designer who understands print design, user interface design for websites AND web applications. This designer will be responsible for assuring our print, website, and web application design all represent the brand of our company in a uniform manner. Candidates must demonstrate ability to create designs as well as to produce functional HTML and CSS code in a browser.

  • Senior JavaScript Developer at Elevate Studios (Chicago, IL)
    Elevate is seeking a HTML5/JavaScript expert with at least 4 years of experience. The full time position will build, maintain and integrate custom interactive UI components into our new and existing sites.

  • Front End Web Developer working closely with Design Lead at Essential Travel (Soho, London)
    We have an exciting opportunity to work within our small central London-based team, with a PLC for a parent company in the travel industry too. Have you got excellent front-end skills and are you looking for a new challenge? If you know your jQuery from your CSS and your HTML from your JavaScript, then we're looking for you!


12. Recent Articles on Smashing Magazine


Join our community: follow us on Twitter and join us on Facebook

The authors are: Iris Ljesnjanin (il), Talita Telma (tt), Stephan Poppe (sp), Cameron Chapman (cc), Andrew Rogerson (ar), Vitaly Friedman (vf), Sven Lennartz (sl), Christiane Rosenberger (research), Elja Friedman (tools), John von Bergen (proofreading).

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