Archive for the ‘Reviews’ Category

Monitoring Services

When it comes to knowing that your website is online, what’s the best way? There’s a process called network monitoring which is basically a computer tied to the internet which constantly checks to see if your website is online at a regular schedule. If it’s down, an email can be sent right away.

This same process can be used for stream monitoring and video stream monitoring and it’s a great way to ensure your website provider is doing their job, which of course is to keep your website online.

What is the purpose of monitoring?

To ensure high quality and availability in your streams, to track buffering time, throughput, user frustration, and much more! With optimized streaming, you can keep your visitors happy, improve your image, and guarantee the quality of your video streams without having to spend internal resources to maintain expensive connections. The best part is that with quality monitoring services, you can test your streams from all over the world and  know immediately when your streams are frustrating users.

Monitoring can be used to monitor not only websites but intranet solutions, rich media, business applications and even Internet enabled devices from coffee makers to earth movers.

Is your website available right now? Was your website available 10 minutes ago? What about an hour ago or during a major release? Do you know when it wasn’t available or for how long? As consumers become more reliant on the Internet, it’s important that your website be as reliable as your business.

Web monitoring remotely monitors your streaming media such as video and audio to ensure you have the confidence to say your online business is flawless. After all, in the modern world when customers can easily switch to another service provider at the click of a mouse, it’s it important to ensure that you’re always just a mouse click away?

10 of the Sexiest Web Headers on the Planet

thou shall blog 10 of the Sexiest Web Headers on the Planet image

What makes one website stunning while another is bland? The header of course! Visually speaking it’s one of the most important elements of a website, so let’s take a look at ten sexy blog headers to see what they’re doing right (and what you’re doing wrong?).

Billings Time Management and Invoicing Software for Macintosh

Over the month of February, I asked all my regular readers to help me build a better website by telling me how I could improve my website or pointing me to better articles, I have to say honestly that I was overwhelmed by the feedback. Many of you send me private emails with great resources and I want to say thanks to everybody who contact me. As a prize to the best contributions (which I have to admit I randomly selected because everybody was so helpful) the fine people over at Marketcircle agreed to give away three copies of Billings, the most awesome time management and invoicing software for Macintosh.

Billings 3 isn’t about accounting, it’s a time management tool for designers which feels more like an extension of the Mac OS than an account tool. The interface is easy to learn and uses standard iTunes style drag and drop functionality. In fact, the tool appears to be built from the ground up to take advantage of the Mac OS by integrating directly into Mail and Address Book.

billings mactinosh invoice 245x300 Billings Time Management and Invoicing Software for Macintosh imageThe software comes complete with some stunning templates to make your invoicing less about accounting and more about your companies image, which of course is important to any designer. There are around 30 templates to choose from or you can use the invoice designer to create a unique theme for your business.

invoicing2 Billings Time Management and Invoicing Software for Macintosh imageSending an invoice is as simple as clicking the button, Billings will then ask you if you’d like to print the invoice, save it to PDF or automatically open Apple Mail to email the invoice to your client.

Improved Wordflow

What’s unique about this particular package is the integration between client management, estimates and invoicing. A typical work cycle for a project outside of Billings involves me tracking most things on paper or spread sheets, leaving dozens of emails marked unread to indicate which tasks have yet to be accomplished but with Billings, I simplify the process using the following steps:

Create a New Client

 

Using the Mac OS, Billings shares details

Using the Mac OS, Billings shares details

Before I can send an estimate to a client, I need to create them as a client but there’s no clunky copy and paste with Billings I simply right click the client’s name in Email and add then to the Address Book. Once the new client is in my Mac OS address book, I import them into Billings. That way, if I change their details in one application (Mail, MS Office, Billings etc) their details are automatically changed in Billings.

 

Create an Estimate

mac quote 286x300 Billings Time Management and Invoicing Software for Macintosh imageNow that my new client is in Billings, I can create a quote using the internal quote tool pictured here. Billings allows me to set my overall billing rate for all clients as well as specify my rate per client and per project. Another benefit is that it allows me to quickly offer my client a discount or if they deserve a PITA (pain in the ass) tax I can quickly do it here.

The quote also allows me to set taxes for individual clients or projects, set this specific quote to be billable or “for my eyes only” which allows me to track time regardless of if clients see the final bill or not.

estimate 150x150 Billings Time Management and Invoicing Software for Macintosh imageThe resulting estimate is automatically formated and transfered to my email application so that I can easily customize my message and send it off to the client.

Working on the Project

Once my client has accepted the estimate, I can begin the project by clicking a simple iTunes style button labeled Start Working. Pretty complicated so far right? It gets better.

tracktime2 Billings Time Management and Invoicing Software for Macintosh imageEach job is controlled by a series of timers, you can have as many timers as you’d like per job or you can add fixed rate items such as hosting or domain name registrations to the final tally. Timers are used to calculate actual time on the project and can be set to round to the nearest minute or time interval. If I get up to run an errand and leave the timer running, Billings automatically stops the timer and prompts me to deduct the time I was away from the computer.

Once I’ve completed each timer, I accept the charges or choose to mark the time as non billable, which allows me to track a lot more than my client ever knows and improve my billing capacity down the road. Dr. Michael Markovitz, the CEO of Yorkville University once told me that without data you can’t run a business, that’s sound advice for running a multi million dollar company or a small consulting team.

timed billing Billings Time Management and Invoicing Software for Macintosh image

Invoicing the client

invoicing21 Billings Time Management and Invoicing Software for Macintosh imageinvoice for chris 231x300 Billings Time Management and Invoicing Software for Macintosh imageNow the fun part, sending the bill … it’s actually a snap with the built in One Click Billing system. Basically, you click the button and send the bill by email or printing it out.

The same system works for generating monthly statements or reports and it’s this simplicity that has done a few things for my small business:

  1. Now I know how much time tasks take
  2. I can produce estimates faster than other designers
  3. My estimates are based on information, not hopeful projections
  4. I can track outstanding tasks and complete assignments in a timely manner
  5. My invoicing is stream lined
  6. My mortgage is paid.

Frankly, I think that last one is very important but more importantly for me is that because Billings makes my life easier, I can focus on what matters … getting jobs done and spending time with my family instead of fighting with other billing software.

Reporting Tools

billings for february Billings Time Management and Invoicing Software for Macintosh imageWhat I actually love about Billings is that it tells me what I need to know in simple, easy to understand language such as the brilliantly named Billed & Collected report displayed here. 

It tells me what I billed and what I collected. Brilliant.

Other reports let me quickly see who still owes me money, which accounts have retainers applied and who’s accounts are behind schedule or are costing me more money per project or task.

You can download a copy of Billings on a 21 day trial to see for yourself.

Great Photo Web Sites and Photo Blogs

I get asked what I do when I’m not building awesome websites or working with hotels to build even better websites and the secret is … I’m a photo junkie. I desperately wanted to be a photographer when I was a kid, my older brother was a great photographer before training to become an electrician and I always envied him for what he could do with an old pin hole camera. Frankly, he was one of the guys that could MacGyver just about anything together but the photo stuff was always cool. I gave up trying to be a photographer when I was about 20, what I realized was that most photographers never made a decent income and more importantly, other photographers would pay me to Photoshop their images. That was about 15 years ago, well before the Internet was common and as technology grew, so did I.

My passion for great photography has never changed, it’s never waxed and it’s never waned so while I don’t get a chance to take a lot of photos anymore I still get to look at a lot of great work and today I thought I would share some of my favorite photo websites and photo blogs.

digital photography school digital photography tips for you 20090124 300x199 Great Photo Web Sites and Photo Blogs imageFor learning, I absolutely love the Digital Photography School. The website is clean, professional, well designed and chalk full of helpful tips for everything from marketing to post production. To be honest, it’s a great place to pick up wonderful design tricks as well as well as photography tips. Take a few minutes to read:

Photopreneur isn’t the best looking website out there but what it lacks in design it makes up for in devilishly good photography, especially the food articles.

File Magazine is sexy. I don’t put that label on websites often but in the old days of working in the magazine industry, my art director used to tell me that some designs reminded you of the woman in red, they simply made your head turn. For me, File Magazine is one of those well through out pieces that makes you do a double take. After all, what’s sexier then a nipple shot on the beach

Frank Expada (Sorry, this site belongs to Joseph Szymanski, my mistake) origins c2bb philosophy of a fine print by frank espadae280a6 20090124 300x199 Great Photo Web Sites and Photo Blogs imageruns a great little website, all very inspirational but also very cool. Take a look at the subtle alpha fade at the bottom of his page. It’s this type of detail that separates the men from the boys when it comes to great designs.

Martin Gommel runs a very different website, it’s a typical blog that you’ll have to run through a translator to get the most out of but it’s well worth it. Mehr aus RAW-Dateien machen (How to get more from the RAW file format) is just one example of a great article, even if Google’s translator does leave a little to be desired.

http://strobist.blogspot.com/ looks at first to be a typical BlogSpot site, I’m not a big fan of BlogSpot but I can forgive him for using it since the website content is great.

OK, Bill Wadman at  365 Portraits is the type of man I desperately want to hate. His website is amazing to look at, it has brilliant content, it’s well structured, followed most of the usability rules and … it’s filled with killer photography that I’d give my right mouse button to be capable of.

What can I possibly say about JMG Galleries other than it’s amazing. The website is informative, clean, good natured and filled with helpful tips for people who want to know more about the process behind the lens.

Five Great Looking WordPress Magazine Web Sites

All Things Digital

All Things Digital

By this time, I think all of you know that I’m an avid rabid fan of WordPress, the free open source content management software that powers not only my own website but also that of my travel and tourism design company, Getaway Graphics. In fact, these days I use WordPress to power just about everything from photographer’s websites to restaurants, universities, pubs and farm orientated sites.It’s not because it’s free (although that’s a great reason) it’s also because the tool has made life easier for my clients by providing an easy to upgrade, easy to use interface for routine monthly maintenance to complex marketing tools.

The Christian Science Monitor

The Christian Science Monitor

WordPress as an Online Magazine Platform

Today I wanted to look at one of the cooler applications of the WordPress platform, online magazines. The blogging tool is a natural fit for online magazines (sometimes called eZine’s) since it’s built in method of creating new posts is similar to that used to create complex newspaper articles. Web sites such as the Christian Science Monitor make extensive use of the build in Search Engine Optimization, as well as automated URL optimization which changes boring web addresses into easy to read, SEO friendly strings.

Chick Speak

Chick Speak

Separation of Design and Code

What seperates WordPress from other free open source tools such as Drupal or Mambo is it’s ability to be easily customized with little programing knowledge or experience and to keep those customizations outside the core code. Each website (or in this case magazine) uses a single theme to make itself look and act different but is infact still running virtually all the code of other WordPress websites.  Since all the files which make a website look unique are stored in a single directory, the core components can be updated without having to recode special features or functions.

Oddity Cinema

Oddity Cinema

Stability of Code

Since the front end (what the consumer sees) is always stored in a unique template directory, the rest of the WordPress structure is common among millions of WP installations around the world. I believe this is the single strongest reason to utilize the platform since unlike traditional CMS solutions or custom tools, the WordPress website is being tested, fixed and upgraded routinely by millions of users around the world. There isn’t another CMS  tool in the world that can claim that.

Backend

Boys Life

Boys Life

Finally, the best reason to using WordPress to power a magazine website has to be the easy of use, training and consistency the platform gives to a company or organization. Once trained on using the WordPress system (which usually takes a few hours) users can easily update, publish and manage thousands of pages of content without having to use other tools such as FTP or Dreamweaver.

I started writing this article as a simple means of showing you what I consider to be five excellent WordPress magazine themes but found myself writing a short essay on the positive aspects of the tool. Part of me considered changing the title or even tossing out this piece (as often happens) but instead I’ve decided to keep it along with the five great WordPress magazine themes that I’ve used as feature content for the piece. I hope you’ve discovered something new about WP from me here and if not, I at least hope you’ve seen some great examples of WordPress websites.

The five examples above are:

  1. http://allthingsd.com/
  2. http://www.csmonitor.com/
  3. http://chickspeak.com/
  4. http://odditycinema.com/
  5. http://boyslife.org/

Site Review – Famous Smoke

cigarsite 234x300 Site Review   Famous Smoke imageI was recently asked to do a review of a cigar website and I was lucky enough that the people who asked me let me post my opinions here on the site for all of us to see and read. I get asked to review hundreds of websites over the course of a year but most people are not willing to let me post my findings to a public forum so for me, this is a rare treat.

Let me start off by saying that all website designs are a matter of opinion, so regardless of my personal feelings about the colors and quality of the design, there’s a lot of great things about this site that we should go over. After we look at the negatives.

What I don’t like

Web sites that sell cigars should be just that, cigar websites. The should look like cigar websites, smell like cigars, even taste like cigars. This website, doesn’t. I’m personally having a hard time figuring out what this website looks like, especially when I’ve seen their sister website and I know the owners of this site know what cigars taste like. In my opinion, the site looks more (or at least the same) as a car parts website or a discount computer reseller. Perhaps that’s the theme choice but let’s take a quick look at their sister site which also promotes cigars and you’ll see the difference. 

The interface is busy and cluttered but worse of all, you have to dig deep below the fold to even see their product. The fold on a website is the point where a web browser cuts off, everything after it you need to scroll to find. In the case of this website it cuts off half way through the Back to Jamaica promo, well before seeing product.

Cigar PhotoThe website lacks great photography. You know, this always ticks me off. Cigars are sexy, they’re phallic but they’re still sexy. Even in our politically correct world, a fine cigar is one of the great images of wealth and power. To not use a quality photograph on the site seems lazy. The image to my right is courtesy of Andrew Osterberg and took me less than a minute to find on Flickr.

Back in my days at the Hudson’s Bay Company, we had three divisions. The Bay, Zellars and a now defunct discount store. The first was where we sold expensive items for households that liked spending money, Zellars was for average families and the third was for people on a budget. In order to appeal to people on a budget, we used solid orange and black ink in our flyers, cramming content into pages and low quality photos. Our flyers looked cheap so that our prospective customers thought our store was cheap, this site reminds me of that design theory.

What I do like

footer 300x105 Site Review   Famous Smoke imageI absolutely love the footer of this website. All you aspiring web designers out there, take note of this amazing piece of work. Why’s it so amazing? First off, you have to establish what a footer is for. It’s a little like the index of a book, few people even know it’s there until they need it. The footer acts the same way and in this case gives weary website surfers a lifeline at the last minute, helping the prospect find exactly what they’re looking for.

Also, a little known fact about web surfers … if they’re lost, they go to the bottom and oddly, read from the bottom up. Maybe it’s a conditioned habit but with that in mind the first thing they see when they get lost? An email address, fully hyper-linked and ready to go. Sure, this will result in a bit more spam for the people managing the website but it also increases their orders and lowers problems for their customers.

The other thing I love about their footer? Brand piggybacking. Using logos such as BillMeLater and SafeSite, they’re doing a few things:

  1. Adding color to a drab site, visually this is very appealing
  2. Reassuring their customers that they’re a valid retailer
  3. Co-operative advertising works both ways, BillMeLater gets more recognized and in return, this site ‘borrows’ some of the credibility of the other.
  4. Clearly identifies shopping options. People fear getting too deep into a shopping cart before being told how to pay. 

Concusion

Overall this website is a basic template theme with little thought given to the customer’s shopping experience. I’d shop here but only if the prices beat other, similar websites.

Web 2.0 style buttons

circle Web 2.0 style buttons imageA good friend of mine just posted 12 Free Vector buttons to use for your website (or print work), these are great and definitely worth downloading if you’re looking for high quality artwork for your website. He has also posted a tutorial on how he created buttons in Illustrator, if you want to do it from scratch.

Cliffside Malibu Addiction Treatment

drug rehab alcohol rehabilitation center addiction treatment program detox 20081121 300x300 Cliffside Malibu Addiction Treatment imageCliffside Malibu Alcohol Rehab Center provides it’s clients with meticulously honed to support for drug and alcohol addiction recovery, their website (cliffsidemalibu.com) is an online information portal for potential addicts and their families who are looking for information about not only the center but also addition treatment.

In an earlier post, I discussed the four basic principles of design as laid out by Robin Williams in her book, The Non Designers Design Handbook:

  • Contrast
  • Repetition
  • Alignment
  • Placement

Let’s take a look at how the website does on these key points and take a closer look at the structure of the site itself.

Contrast
Remember, contrast is the state of being different from something else. With this site the header (dark blue) is clearly different from the content and menu structure, which ensures the reader is quickly capable of differentiating between the content areas.  

Repetition
Unlike Contrast, repetition calls for things to be the same. In this case, items that are the same should be the same, such as the menu items and with this website we clearly see the menu items across the top are the same. Throughout the website, headers are consistent and common design elements are carried through the site.

Alignment
S
imply put, do things line up. With this site the side menu has a specific structure which uses both repetition and contract but also alignment to ensure the items line up in a logical order. This increases the users ability to coastline a series of menu items and select the right depth quickly and easily. 

Placement
On a website, placement is possibly the most important element a design can use. Where we place items has a direct relationship to how the user accesses information on the site. In the case of the Cliffside Malibu center, important details such as their phone number are placed at the top of the page while less significant items are placed at the bottom, this ensures readers can easily find what they’re looking for.

Overall, the center follows the four basic guidelines for a well designed website and has created a site which fulfills the key objectives of helping the public find information about alcohol rehab while also promoting their own core business.

Free defrag utility for Windows

ultradefragscreenshot 285x300 Free defrag utility for Windows imageAnybody who knows me in person can tell you that I’m a Mac guy, I carry a MacBook with me everywhere I go, if my high school family studies class had given me a MacBook instead of an egg to care for the little bugger might have survived but alas, a little known fact about me is that I’m secretly a PC user as well.

It’s true, I go both ways.

My MacBook is small and light, it’s powerful and easy to use but I also run a Windows XP computer (named Bob) at my home for gaming and testing as well as a Windows 2000 machine for testing and dual booting to Linux for application testing. The problem is, Windows machines need to be de-fragmented regularly and I always find the built in Windows defrag utility lacking.

Enter UltraDefrag, an easy to use and free windows defrag client that I stumbled upon the other day with the help of an article at tech-buzz. Actually, they had two great articles on the subject of defragging.

UltraDefrag is a small, simple to use and free utility for defragging your Windows computer and includes the ability to fix your fragmentations at startup. It lacks good documentation but that’s easy to get around with a little bit of common sense … click either Analyses or Defragment depending on which you’d like to do. Another great feature is that it provides you with a list of files which are still fragmented after it’s run, which is invaluable to helping you understand why your computer is running slowly.

What is fragmenting?

Silly thing, but some people might know what file fragmentation is so let me explain it to you in a very simple overview, the same way I explained it to my son last week.

example of fragments1 204x300 Free defrag utility for Windows image

Your computer hard drive is like a big green LEGO board and your files are standard LEGO pieces. As we know, most LEGO pieces are all different sizes and files are the same. When you go to save a file to your hard drive it writes the file to the first available slot and does the same with each extra file you go to save. As long as you don’t delete anything off your computer, it keeps writing files in a linear order. However if you delete a file it leaves a space which your computer will try to write into … regardless of the size of the file. 

To ensure it can fit the file into the space, your computer will split the larger file into a piece that will fit into the hole and write the remaining piece (or pieces) in the next available holes resulting in file fragmentation.  As you can see in the example to the right, the red file is now fragmented, when your computer tries to load the file it will have to go to multiple areas of your hard drive to find the pieces and then put it back together again before it can be used.

What programs such as UltraDefrag do is reassemble the files into one consistent file on your computer and move it to an available area of your hard drive which in turn saves your computer time and resources when looking to load the file.

Google maps flu trends across the US

google flu trends 20081112 276x300 Google maps flu trends across the US imageBetween 5% and 20% of Americans will catch the flu this winter. Influenza symptoms can include fever and come on quickly. The virus is highly contagious and spreads quickly but there’s a new player in the fight against this seasonal visitor. Google has just launched the Google Flu Trends (http://www.google.org/flutrends/) application to help map the flu as it spreads across America this winter.

Google.org, the company’s often ignored philanthropic unit believe that it may be able to detect outbursts of the flu and other diseases a full week or 10 days before they’re reported by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Google used search data to detect spikes in queries about flu symptoms almost two weeks prior to the CDC report. 

The new service, available at www.google.org/flutrends using the Google Trends engine to data mine the search data and create maps of the country which in theory will show where the flu is spreading. This information will help public heath officials and hospitals accelerate the response of medical professionals by alerting officials to flu outbreaks before traditional reporting systems are capable of correlating the data.

The flu results in about 36,000 deaths annually in the United States, with this new data the hope is that institutions will be able to put measures in place sooner by detecting the flu before it spreads to dangerous levels. Other web tools designed to track infections such as www.whoissick.org requires people to report their illness voluntarily and then displays the information on a map. The Children’s Hospital Boston and Harvard Medical School use a tool called HealthMap which scours the web for blog entries and newsletters on the subject but access to Google’s search queries should prove to be the most valuable source of data on the subject.

In my opinion, this is a great example of how technology can be used to help mankind. 

While researching the new flu trends tool, I also found these websites contained a lot of useful information:

Looking to win a premium WordPress theme?

Blog-Oh-Blog is running a free giveaway contest for premium themes, if you’re looking to win a premium theme for your WordPress blog.

http://www.blogohblog.com/mega-contest-win-10-premium-themes-worth-700/

There Is No Such Thing As WordPress 2.6.4

Some of you may have read my feature article on the Ten great new features of WordPress 2.7 in which I take a look at the new features. We’ve only got a few more days until the stable release date, in the mean time if you’d like to read a few more reviews take a look at the official WordPress 2.7 blog and the Download Squad. For those of you interested in the new editing screen, take a look at the article  Customizable Post Editing Screen.

In related news, there’s been a fake version of WordPresz released on the market which malicious code. Make sure when you download WordPress you do it from the official website only (http://www.wordpress.org), when in doubt double check. Crunchgear has an article on the subject as well. Remember, there Is No Such Thing As WordPress 2.6.4.

Greatest iPhone Application Ever … FakeCalls

As most of you know, I’m a die hard Apple Fan boy as are most Joe Six-Pack’s but I do have a couple of beefs with my new 3G that I spent the weekend grumbling about. First, I download Force Unleashed for my phone and to say quite honestly is stinks. It’s a waste of time. Perhaps when they upgrade the processor as PalmAddicts talks about it’ll be capable of playing real games but until then I’m pretty disappointed. Despite popular rumors,  Opera Mini is Not Rejected from the App Store which is really a bit of a shame because that means iPhone developers will now have to deal with two browsers there. On a related rant, I’m still a little snippy that my kids can’t play WebKinz on my phone because the latest version of Flash didn’t come with my phone and I can’t upgrade to it. Any suggestions?

yourmom 200x300 150x300 Greatest iPhone Application Ever ... FakeCalls imageHere’s my pick for the greatest iPhone application in the history of iPhone applications … the FakeCalls app will (I’m not joking here) let you setup your iPhone to fake call you. Check out this great write up on the Standard.

Book Review: Content Rich by Jon Wuebben

contentrich 126x300 Book Review: Content Rich by Jon Wuebben imageRecently I won a copy of Content Rich by Jon Wuebben from Andy Beal’s website the Marketing Pilgrim. First off, let me say a huge thank you to Andy for running the contest and that I received the book yesterday. In fact, I didn’t put it down and finished reading it this morning. Now my dog eared, sticky noted copy of this great book is going to sit on my book shelf for a few days while I absorb the contents and then I’ll reread it paying extra attention to my own comments I wrote the first time through.

In his book, Jon covers a lot of ground with an emphasis on ensuring content is unique, interesting and above all focuses on the reader. Think of it as user-centric writing for the new age. He also talks about how to use blogs to sell your product and reminds us that recommendations are a powerful sales generator:

 “Blogs are really great for another big reason: consumers end up buying from your compnay not because of you so much, but because of what other consumers are saying about your product or service, in the blog. ”

Buy Online: Content Rich: Writing Your Way to Wealth on the Web Book Review: Content Rich by Jon Wuebben image

There are a couple other strong reviews for the book at the KISS Business and Business and Blogging that I recommend taking a look at.

WordPress from contests to templates, and a cool pumpkin to boot.

I found a couple of interesting WordPress websites today, there’s an ongoing competition going on but I think Eric has to win for the best WordPress website today, he’s done a great Pumpkin carving that is sure to amuse even Matt. Speaking of WordPress, if you’re looking for a WordPress expert for your next job you’re looking for some freelance WordPress work, you should take a look at http://jobs.wordpress.net.
On a more technical note, there was an interesting piece about stripping classnames in WordPress which pointed to a couple of great sources to how to fix this problem at MaisonBisson.com. And of course, a lot more press about the LinkedIn plugin here and here.
To wrap it up today … 21 WordPress themes: