Posts Tagged ‘iphone’

Canadian Job Postings

One of the more interesting things about the web, as far as I’m concerned, is it’s ability to allow somebody designing websites in Fredericton to see what’s going on across the who country, it allows us as marketing people to see the complete spectrum of employment and in this case, learn what different markets across Canada have for work.

Below is a tag cloud (a visual representation of keywords) for 300 different marketing job searches I conduct each day, it’s an interesting way to understand what the country is looking for and how it’s promoting employment across the country.

3 Years Ajax Ambassador Ambassadors Attitude Bonus Budget Business Analyst Calgary Canada Ca Usa Communication Skills Cover Letter Customer Service Cv Developer Developers Downtown Toronto Downtown Vancouver Edmonton Event Marketing Expert Familiarity Fast Paced Environment Female Model Female Models Gig Google Graphic Design Graphic Designer Gta Halifax Hello High Energy Hourly Rate Html Css Illustrator Images Interpersonal Skills Iphone Java Developer London Love Lower Mainland Marketing Marketing Campaigns Marketing Company Marketing Team Microsoft Mississauga Models Money Montreal Opportunity Oracle Ottawa Passion People Phone Number Photo Photos Php Developer Php Mysql Positive Attitude Problem Solving Skills Programmer Promotions Reply Sales Marketing Self Starter Short Film Subject Line Supervision Surrey Team Environment Team Player Toronto Vancouver Vancouver Bc Verbal Communication Skills Web Designer Web Developer Winnipeg Written Communication Skills

5 Free iPhone Apps that I love to play

Last week I started reviewing a whole host of tools to get ideas for the new series of cookbooks that I’m programing and I have to be honest and tell you that I went and got hooked on some really cool, free games for the iPhone:

World War™ – 40 Honor Points FREE!

World War™ - 40 Honor Points FREE! artwork

It’s the year 2010. A nuclear war has broken out. Most countries in the world have fought and many have been vanquished. 5 countries have emerged as the major superpowers in the devastating war. Which one will you be?

Start as a general defending your base from the enemy and fight to become the dominant military presence in the world as you march your way to victory in World War.

Waterslide Extreme

Waterslide Extreme artwork

Feel the speed as you negotiate your way down the serious twists and turns of a massive waterslide in this unique racing game brought to you by Barclaycard. Nine stages await you, as you race against the clock picking up as many points as you can.
Glide through cool modern cityscapes and ride the skies as day moves into night. Twist and tilt your way round tight corners and huge loops, following the natural velocity of the slide. The faster you go the more points you win.
But watch out, the edges are steep and there are some little surprises along the way.

Feel the speed as you negotiate your way down the serious twists and turns of a massive waterslide in this unique racing game brought to you by Barclaycard. Nine stages await you, as you race against the clock picking up as many points as you can.

Glide through cool modern cityscapes and ride the skies as day moves into night. Twist and tilt your way round tight corners and huge loops, following the natural velocity of the slide. The faster you go the more points you win.

But watch out, the edges are steep and there are some little surprises along the way.

Facebook

Facebook artworkFacebook for iPhone makes it easy to stay connected and share information with friends. Use your iPhone to start a conversation with Facebook Chat, check your friends’ latest photos and status updates, look up a phone number, or upload your own mobile photos to Facebook while on the go.

Do Not Press The Red Button

Do Not Press The Red Button artworkAlmost all of us saw this unusual and fascinating application about the “Red Button”

Now you have unique chance to know the true story about the “Red Button”, right on your iPhone/iPod Touch.
There are doors shouldn’t be opened, there are secrets shouldn’t be told, there are buttons shouldn’t be pressed…:-)

TMega Man® II Lite artworkons of options allow you to play Mega Man II Lite your way! Take on Dr. Wily and his robot army in both portrait mode and landscape mode. Test your mettle in Classic mode with all the enemies and action you remember, or toggle it off and enjoy a rebalanced gameplay experience with more forgiving controls, scaled-down enemies and an auto-fire option.

Great Chefs new iPhone Cookbook

Screenshot 2009.07.03 19.38.03

Great Chefs new iPhone Cookbook

I’m so excited to let everybody know, the new Great Chefs Great Salads cookbook is now available on the App Store from Apple for just 99 cents! The cookbook includes over 20 great recipes from the hit television series, all geared towards helping us beat the heat with some wonderful simple recipes we can share with a salad.

You can download it from the Apple App Store.

5 Great New Marketing Articles and Why You Should Read Them

A Dozen Video Game Firsts

Ignore the porn quality ads on this site and give it a good read. The article outlines industry firsts for the video game industry. Don’t play games? I don’t care. The video game industry is bigger than Hollywood, learn from them and apply their firsts to your industry.

9 Ways to Ignite Innovation Inside Your Company…and Light Your Way out of the Recession

Innovation is an amazing concept. Simply take something that’s already being done and do it better … who’d of thought? Well here are nine great, simple things that people can do to make their business more successful. Not into real estate? Who cares, read it anyways and learn from it!

YPulse

This is a great website that helps us old folks (anybody over 30) keep an eye on the kids marketing trends. Not into kids? OK, now I’m just messing … sort of, it’s a huge market.

Your pink slip may turn you into an ‘unintentional” entrepreneur

I love positive pieces about getting fired, reminds me of this one I wrote about how great it is to lose your job.

The Meteoric Rise of the App Store

OK I’m back on my kick, don’t have an iPhone or know that App Store is? Then you’re in a lot of trouble. The App Store (from Apple) is one of the best ways to market digital products such as games and books ever created, college students are selling millions of units of software and earning an equal amount of money for their custom apps.

25 Marketing ideas to make your website work

  1. Buy some great domain names and put up a series of websites promoting your industry, great for backlinks as well as traffic building
  2. Remove your intro “splash” page, it does nothing for your search engine rankings and is just an extra click to get to the good stuff
  3. Make sure your website is clean and simple, get rid of the clutter and remember a lot of people are surfing on mobile devices these days
  4. Use popuri.us/ to find out how you rank on the world stage
  5. Make sure your navigation is super easy to follow and that you’ve tested it recently
  6. Look at what your website says about you, does it reflect the brand you’re trying to build?
  7. Make contact forms as simple as possible and keep it to only a few fields
  8. Learn to use  Google Optimizer to figure out how your website should really work
  9. Whenever possible, use video and rich media to promote your business message instead of text
  10. Use Google Maps to post directions to your business, they’re interactive
  11. Distribute your content in RSS feeds as well as Twitter and Facebook
  12. Offer a lot of information, remember people use the Internet for research so include rich photos, colors, text and diagrams to help educate your consumers
  13. Link to similar businesses and ask them to do the same. If you’re a regional operation, link to similar businesses outside your area and form relationships to encourage travelers to find you
  14. Use Google Analytics to understand which pages on your website work, and which don’t
  15. Let visitors leave comments on your articles and blog posts
  16. Write a blog every day and help people understand why they should trust your business
  17. Treat your websites as your most important marketing asset, set it as your homepage and visit it regularly
  18. Offer specials and deals on websites like CraigsList
  19. Add social bookmarking services Digg and del.icio.us to important pages
  20. Make your website mobile friendly for all those pesky iPhone users out there
  21. Use Google Web Master Tools to increase your website effectiveness
  22. Write articles and distribute them on popular websites in your industry
  23. Use a tool like WordPress to make adding content to your website easier and faster
  24. Subscribe to your competitors email and RSS feeds, get to know exactly what they’re doing on their websites
  25. Offer contests on your website using Google Docs to collect information in easy to use mailing lists

Need help making your website super friendly? Why not drop me a line and find out about pricing for me to help? I’m a sucker for a great website and I’m always looking for new web design projects. You can check out some of my portfolio items here, or here or my new website all about building fast, cheap websites.

Could somebody explain Twitter to me, please?

twitter bird 6 Could somebody explain Twitter to me, please? imageOK, so a few weeks ago I wrote a piece that I don’t get Twitter and oddly, despite peoples great intentions I still have to admit that I just don’t get what all the hype is about. Now some people are quick to point out that the web is full of Twitter naysayers but I think it’s more than that, perhaps I’m just too attached to popular media to see the relevance or I just can’t see where it’s going but when it comes right down to it … I still just don’t get it.

Now Stephen has a great point (or two) about Twitter keeping people updated and redefining the term “up-to-date” but honestly, my Twitter feed keeps telling me things like what my friend Brian’s going to go see at the movie. OK, that’s a little harsh … because of Brian’s Twitter a few weeks ago I’m saving $40 a month on my iPhone but that’s not the point (and no Brian, I’m not cutting you in on the savings) … the point is that beyond pointing me to a lower cost plan, I’ve not seen anything positive come from the service yet.

It’s also possible that I’m just too “old” to get Twitter. I don’t mean my actual age, I mean my time on the Internet. I’ve been doing this for 15 years, 25 if you count my time on the old BBS and FidoNet services so the idea of Twitter, which I basically break down into a glorified Instant Messenger has been around since the early ’60s (even before me!) in one form or another. The only real difference as far as I can tell is that Twitter is meant to allow thousands of people on my “friends” list instead of the dozens I have on services such as Skype or MSN.

My other beef with Twitter is that while I don’t mind sending the odd message on it, the terminology used in the Twittersphere makes me feel like a Twat. Personally, I don’t want to join Tweeple in being a Tweeter any more than I want to have Tweeps for friends. Of course, the biggest beef I have is the concept of it being a popularity contest and Ashton Kutcher just drove this fact home with what I’d call the worse thing to ever happen to Twitter

So even if I ignore Oprah and Ashton’s antics on the service and pretend not to notice the stunning media band wagon for the service, and I manage to get past the fact that I still just can’t seem to wrap my head around why I’d care to follow what flavor yogurt you’re buying … then what? Most people I’ve followed are industry people who post a pointless stream of self promotional rubbish claiming to make tons of cash from the service (with little proof btw) or some close friends who basically just replicate their Facebook status updates.

twitter Could somebody explain Twitter to me, please? image

This of course leads me to the ever pessimistic and often commented on issue with Twitter … how are they going to make money? See, the problem is simple … Twitter is a celebrated thoroughbred who’s never won a race. It a practical world, businesses can not survive without making money and to date the service hasn’t made money (the comic is from Geek & Poke). I’m not the first person to ask how the micro-blogging service plans to keep the lights on, it’s been on peoples mind for a couple years now and to date, nobody has an answer which concerns me more than all the Tweeps and junk posts combined.

(btw, for those who are curious the bird comes from Smashing Magazine and designer Gopal Raju.)

Why are websites so hard to make?

Wow, I’ll tell you honestly that one of the questions I tend to get asked a lot (and drives people to my website) is Why is a website so hard to make? Actually, that question (or a version of it) accounts for a few unique visits every day so to help answer the question, I’ve explain a few of the reasons that websites are so hard (or expensive) to build.

First, the Web is inconsistent.

This is possibly the worse news for people just starting out, but it’s the horrible and sad truth. Web sites are nothing more than code, it’s not terribly complicated once you understand the basics of it but it’s still just a bunch of gobbly gook until it’s read by something else … and there’s the problem. Each ’something else’ is different. Web code is read by popular web browsers such as Internet Explorer, Safari, Chrome and FireFox but that’s only the tip of the iceberg because Internet Explorer has several versions in common operation today (versions 5,6,7 and now 8) which all display the web dramatically differently. 

Once you get past the basic issue of browsers, you need to think about operating systems. How many computer operating systems can you name? Obviously there’s Windows and Mac right? Great … except … you also have Windows Vista, Windows XP, Windows ME, Windows 2000, Windows NT, Windows 7 and Windows Lite to content with, Macintosh OS X Leopard and Macintosh OS X Pather. That’s got to be it right? Not so fast, what about Linux and Unix? There are hundreds of variations of computer based operating systems, each running one of a dozen web browsers for countless combinations but at least that’s all there is to worry about … except for handhelds (iPhones, BlackBerries, Windows Mobile Devices) and gaming consoles (Nintendo Wii, Microsoft XBox, XBox 360, Sony PSP, Sony Play Station 3) and TV based internet consoles … I hope that I’ve made my point, one of the reasons the Internet is complex to publish for is because there are too many “things” to publish for, instead we’re forced to practice failing gracefully.

The Web lacks a standard language.

Problem number two for somebody just starting out in the great big world of the web is that there is no standard programming language for the Internet. At it’s core, the World Wide Web is programmed in a language called HTML right? Everybody knows this, except it’s wrong.

The web is published in a language called xHTML which is based on HTML, but some people in the community didn’t agree with xHTML so they created other strains of HTML. As a result, we have HTML 1.x, HTML 2.x, HTML 3.x, HTML 4.x, DHTML, xHTML, xHTML 1.1 and xHTML 1.1 SE. Soon we’ll also have xHTML 2.0 as well as xHTML 5.0 … don’t ask.

Now, as we discussed above, there are at least a few dozen major operating systems and each of those has at least a handful of web browsers, plus a ton of mobile devices all designed to interpret some or more of the languages that the web is built on but it’s important to note that not all web browsers agreed on which standards are acceptable or for that matter which codes, structure, text or tags from any standard would be accepted. As a result, a web page developed to be viewed in Microsoft Internet Explorer 5 may (or may not) be visible in other web browsers including other versions of IE.

Scripting on the Web

Now, once you get past the basic problem of coding for some browsers while ignoring others and you pick one of the standards to adhere to, you’ve got to take the time to start writing more than simple content and for that you need what’s called a scripting language of which … there are many.

Most scripting languages such as PHP, Python, ASP, ASP.net etc. execute on the web server (where the website is hosted) but some such as JavaScript execute on the web browser after being downloaded (not to be confused with Java which is not a scripting language but a programming language and completely different). These scripts are what power everything from a simple email form to complex social media giants such as FaceBook.

After you’ve picked the scripting language you wish to use and ensured that it’s compatible with your hosting account (where you store your website for others to access it) you’re all set and ready to start building your first website.

How to handle it all

I’m lucky, I’ve been building websites since 1996 which means that in my very (very) long career I’ve seen countless technologies come, go and die. So my advice to people getting started in the industry is a lot like Benjamin’s in Animal Farm, Web Masters much like Donkeys know that times change but stay the same, simply pick your standards and be the best developer in that selected field. You will be mocked, scorned, insulted and ignored by others in the industry for your choices but in just a few years … everything you know will be outdated and you’ll have to relearn new tools anyways so don’t worry so much.

“Only old Benjamin professed to remember every detail of his long life and to know that things never had been, nor ever could be much better or much worse – hunger, hardship and disappointment being, so he said, the unalterable law of life.”

- George Orwell, Animal Farm,

I don’t get Twitter.

This morning there was an article by Erick Schonfeld called Biz Stone Plays It Cool On Colbert and I have to admit, I feel a little foolish professing this on a technology blog but I don’t really ‘get’ Twitter.

I think my problem ‘getting’ Twitter is that to me it’s a bunch of noise distracting me from my daily objectives. I already have an Instant Message client running as well as Skype, Facebook, an iPhone, iChat and my office phones. Not including my email, RSS subscriptions and usernet group updates … I guess in truth I just don’t understand the need for another source of chatter. 

Please don’t get me wrong, I’m sure there’s got to be a purpose to it … I just don’t get it.  I don’t think I’m alone either.

Biz Stone (Twitter) was on The Colbert Report last night and even he seemed unable to truly explain what the purpose of the popular social networking tool is. Jeremy Lichtman Lichtman has a point where he states there’s a high ‘noise to signal’ ratio, so maybe my issue with Twitter is the same issue I had as a kid when my uncle tried to get me to listen to the old Ham radio … maybe Twitter users are the modern, Internet version of dorky middle aged men talking to each other in closets?

What to do now that you’ve lost your job

Losing your job is a lot like getting dumped by the love of your life but it doesn’t have to be. I used to teach a class called Career Management at the Center for Arts and Technology here in my small city, in that class I taught students how to begin their careers but  I think at its hard, the lessons I taught struggling 3D animation students is true for all career paths and levels.

 

 

First, let’s establish that your career is irrelevant. I know that’s a tough thing to admit but I want you to honestly feel the power of that statement, even say it out loud. Your career is irrelevant. It doesn’t matter, it never did. 

Secondly, look at what is in your wallet. What matters can be found in your wallet, open it up and look at the pictures of your loved ones. If you don’t have pictures of loved ones, it’s time to find some. If you got hit by a bus today what would your wallet say about you? If who you are is defined by the name on your business card I’ll give you tip, you can print business cards for around $49 per 1,000. You can be the Queen of England if that’s what makes you happy, so stop identifying yourself with your job title.

Look at your cell phone. Now … the tough question. Who’s in your favorite five? Take a few seconds and look at your iPhone contact list and ask yourself how many of those people do you love and how many love you in return? If you can’t find a half dozen people you’d trust with your cat in that list, you’re in trouble. If you can’t find at least two that you’d trust with your life, your job has taken over your life. What’s my point? People matter, jobs do not.

We spend our lives in high school trying to get good grades so that we can go to a good college, and we spend college trying to get good grades so that we can get good jobs. We move out of our neighborhoods, away from family and even across the country to pursue a dream of working for big name companies. Once there, we form relationships with others at those companies and then when our company closes or we’re laid off we lose our social networks and start over. It’s not the loss of a job that you mourn, it’s the loss of a tribe.

How to change your life

First, there is always one tribe that you’re part of. Go see your parents, they know you better than most people and they’ll be honest with you. Plus, your mom will make you pudding. Smell the house you grew up in, look at pictures of yourself in old cowboy outfits and try to remember who you really are. Too many people I know woke up one day and had no idea who they were or how they got there. Remember Ben Wades quote even bad men love their mommas? It works the other way too, go ask her how you got where you are today and maybe she’ll tell you where you need to go tomorrow. 

Secondly, have a good look at your life. If you need to have a good midlife crisis, do it. Take a plane to the other side of the planet and learn to kick box in Thailand or stay home and learn to mix drinks behind a bar. The technology industry is a tough beast, maybe what you really need is to get out and relax. I have a good friend who was killing himself working hard in the film industry, he left it a couple years back and now he’s the happiest man I know. If your career is killing you, quit.

Third, know what matters. This is critical. You might have been an IT wiz kid for the past 20 years but maybe it’s time to be a chef or a plumber. Look at your beautiful house and ask yourself if you need it, ask your wife if she’d be just as happy with you owning a gas station or working at the local hardware store. Knowing what matters will help you know what you need to do.

Finally, follow my simple three step guide to happiness:

  1. Set realistic goals.
  2. Reach your goals.
  3. Repeat.

Something a little more helpful

Need something a little more helpful to get yourself back on track? OK simple … let’s talk about what you are and how you fit into the world. You’re an expert in your field or at the very least you should start believing that you are. Remember there is always somebody just behind you on the learning curve so it’s time for you to start writing a blog every day, help others understand what you know, so you can learn more.

I know that sounds counter intuitive but the more you talk about what you know, the more people help you learn more. They correct your assumptions, add to your knowledge and increase your understand of your subject. I once heard an old Chinese medicine theory about ginseng, apparently medicine men would give you ginseng for just about everything, if it cured you then it worked and if it didn’t cure you, you didn’t drink enough of it. Knowledge is the same, if you have enough of it you’ll always be successful. You only fail because you lack enough of it.

There is no wealth like knowledge, no poverty like ignorance. - Ali ibn Abi-Talib

Keep that in mind, I don’t care if your 35 learning to be a 3d animator or 55 learning to build shaker cabinets for the first time, knowledge is like a fresh mountain stream, the more of it you take the better you feel but unlike water it never runs out. In fact, the more of it you share the more is returned to you. That’s why writing a blog is so powerful, in order to write quality content you must first read quality content. Writing a blog isn’t about always being right, in fact something it’s about being corrected by people who know more than you do.

My 30 day challenge to you

Over the next 30 days I want you to wake up every morning an go for a half hour walk. Here’s what you’re going to do on that walk:

  • Smile at the pretty girls in the coffee shop, or wave to the local barber
  • Hold a door open for somebody or help somebody in a small way
  • Buy fresh fruit from a produce shop and enjoy it

When you get home, read ten blog posts about a subject that interests you and then write one of your own. If you don’t already have a blog, I’ll set one up for you for free. If you don’t know how to find blog posts that interest you, search Google Blogs.

Subscribe to a dozen job sites using an RSS reader. Every day, after you’ve written your blog post take the time to send a personal email and resume to no fewer than ten positions. Point them to your website, let them read about your experience and expertise. 

Do that everyday for 30 days and I guaranteed you that you’ll be turning down work by the end of the month.

February Contest & Prize Giveaway

As you all know, I’m trying to build my website and increase the readership and to me, the best way to increase my readership is to increase the quality of my articles.

Welcome to February, the coldest and darkest of the months (or at least it is for those of us here in Canada). This month I wanted to warm us all up by offering a prize so delightful that everybody can benefit. Luckily for me, the great people over at Marketcircle  agreed to lighten everybody’s mood and give away three copies (worth almost $120) of their increadable software package Billings 3. Now later in the week, I’m going to go into a bit more detail of why I love this product so much but this post isn’t about the software, it’s about how to win it. 

Billings

As you all know, I’m trying to build my website and increase the readership and to me, the best way to increase my readership is to increase the quality of my articles, my writing and what I’m covering here on thisismyurl.com.

How can you help me with that?

Simple, between now and the end of February I challenge each of you to:

  1. find an article on my website that you think could use improving 
  2. leave a comment on that post and include the URL to a great article on a similar subject that you’ve read elsewhere on the web
  3. include a brief description of why you enjoyed that piece

That’s all there is to it, the more you enter the better your chances.

Prizes will be announced March 1st and randomly selected from the comments which match the criterial.

About the Prize

Billings 3 is an award winning time billing tool designed to be so easy to use, ever a web designer can do it. The tool features recurring billing, time management tools, expense tracking, one click invoicing, customized invoices and coming in 2009, iPhone integration.

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.

Minimalist Fixed Free WordPress Theme

Demo of Minimalist Fixed

The Minimalist Fixed theme for WordPress is a free theme designed to be clean, white and very easy to read. The theme favors usability over design, although I also believe that it’s well designed :)

The theme features a clean, broad design with a fixed width. The header is designed to be focus attention on the site title and description using a vivid red on white background while the content also used a wide formating for easy reading. The menu is located just below the site description is non-intrusive and easy to navigate.

I’ve placed the traditional side content at the bottom of the design using a three column split, personally I find this ensures it’s out of the way and visible only when you’ve finished reading the article or post above.

The theme has been tested in WordPress 2.6.x in Internet Explorer, FireFox and Safari as well as on the Nintendo Wii and Apple iPhone.

Download Minimalist Fixed. If you like this theme but would like to have it customized or installed for you, why not contact me? I’m available for WordPress consulting, theme customization and freelance development.

  • Download the Theme
  • Preview the Theme
  • Making Images Print Friendly

    Aaron Gustafson has produced a wonderful article on replacing web images with images suitable for printing, the iIR: img Image Replacement method allows web designers to create pages which look great in both web and print.

    Using Aaron’s method, designers should be able to create and maintain websites viewable on multiple devices without having to deploy multiple versions of the site. This will allow users to access the same website via an iPhone, a Wii, a laptop or a printed version and have graphics on the page served to meet their specific needs.