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IDE Install | Gorilla Logic. UI Prototyping Tool Made Beautiful - Create Interactive Wireframes & High Fidelity Prototypes. 13 New Apps & Resources for Web Designers. Given the fast pace of anything remotely related to the Internet, it’s no surprise that Web designers are constantly creating something new. Sometimes the results are absolutely hilarious, while others are innovative and highly useful. Today, we’re going to focus on the latter, with an assortment of new tools and resources discovered by our readers. Of course this isn’t a definitive list and there’s room for more. If we left out a resource or tool that deserved a mention, definitely share it with us in the comments below! Scroll Kit While I’ve never been a fan of site builders, there’s something refreshing about the way Scroll Kit operates. The possibilities vary based on the user’s taste, but all in all, the grid and text-dominant editor is quite useful.

. ➤ Scroll Kit Skeleton Skeleton is a small collection of CSS & JS files that can help you rapidly develop sites that look beautiful at any size, be it a 17″ laptop screen or an iPhone. . ➤ Skeleton Responsive Design Test Bookmarklet Invision. iPhone 4 Red Backgrounds iPhone 4 Red Background 01 – iPhone 4 Wallpapers, iPhone 4 Backgrounds. Instaprint: A Networked Photobooth For Printing Instagram Pics At Parties. Instagram is terrific for taking pictures with a hazy, saturated look of old snapshots and sharing them with your social network. But printing them out and preserving them for posterity is more of an ordeal. Who has time and patience to switch on the printer and load it with photo paper? Instaprint, a kind of modern-day Polaroid, streamlines the process by connecting wirelessly to your phone and spitting copies of your favorite Instagram shots.

The device is the invention of Breakfast, a Brooklyn-based company that is hoping to raise $500,000 on Kickstarter to start production. Prototypes have already been rolled out at events such as store openings, product launches, and at the Grammys and Lady Gaga shows. “Going from prototype to consumer product is a massive step,” Breakfast writes on its Kickstarter page. “Some things are sure to change as we get into the thick of it, but that means things will only get better.” Hoppit Launches The World’s First Ambience Search Engine For Restaurants. Finding a good restaurant – even in a city you’ve never been to – has never been easier.

Thanks to Yelp, Urbanspoon and its various brethren, a good place to eat is generally just a few clicks away. What if you want to find a restaurant with a very specific atmosphere, though? Say you’re in the mood for a pizza at a relaxed place where the noise level is just right for a good conversation? Chances are, Yelp won’t be of much help there, but the newly redesigned Hoppit is putting these kinds of searches at the core of its service. The service is now available in 25 cities and offers desktop and mobile web apps. To get started, you simply tell Hoppit where you are and what you are looking for. To aggregate all this data about these restaurants, Hoppit uses what it calls “state-of-the-art natural language processing technology and related algorithms [that] take into account a consumer’s preferences and provide personalized search results.” Instagram, Facebook, And The New Zero-Revenue Acquisitions. Ever since Facebook announced plans to spend a billion dollars to acquire photo-sharing startup Instagram, critics have rightly wondered why even a Silicon Valley giant flush with cash would spend so much on a company with $0 in revenue and no business model.

But it's far from the first zero-revenue startup acquired for millions recently. It's not even the first one acquired by Facebook. The social network spent tens of millions grabbing startups such as FriendFeed, Hot Potato, and Beluga--companies with little or no revenue, and no established business models. Like Instagram, there were other, perhaps less tangible (non-monetary) benefits to the acquisitions, from talent to technology to users. Other companies have followed the same strategy. Skype acquired GroupMe for a reported $85 million, even though the group messaging service had no revenue. And the same also goes for Siri, the personal-assistant service that Apple reportedly acquired for $200 million.