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Flat UI Pro - PSD&HTML User Interface Kit

Flat UI Pro - PSD&HTML User Interface Kit

Find and Hire skilled Freelancers, at a click - PeoplePerHour.com Windows 8 Colors (HEX code) « CreepyEd's Tech-cellent Adventure Get started building apps for Windows 8 with 30 to Launch! Take your app from to in-store with tips and tricks sent to your inbox. Sign up here! In my own projects I really like to have correct colors. With Windows 8 coming out, more and more of my projects are around Windows 8. This first set of colors is from the tiles found on the Start Screen, such as Mail, Calendar, Store, Video, Music and Messaging. This second set of colors is from the Personalize –> Start Screen option on Windows 8. Color 4 I included because it seemed like a large part of the screen…so yeah.

Kimono Labs Scraper Independent Review This is an independent review of a brand new startup related to web data extraction and called “Kimono Labs“. It was born 16 January 2014 in California. At the moment it looks like a newborn baby: not mature, but pretty. Let’s get a bird’s eye view right now! I will use the testing ground page in my examples. The Main Idea The main idea of Kimono Labs service is very simple: “to turn a web site into API“. The Workflow The workflow is quite straightforward. Note, though, that you can’t follow links on the page when you’re selecting the items. The items you selected become collections which may be represented in JSON, CSV or RSS format or they can even become a web application: The Implementation As I mentioned before, all that you need to do to start building your Kimono Labs API is to click the “kimonify” bookmark on your browser’s bookmarks bar: Then you will be redirected to the Kimono website which will show your target web page with a special toolbar added at the top: Verdict

7 Best Sources for Free Photoshop Files + Bonus - Frontify Blog Showcases are a great resource for inspiration. At a certain point you as a designer sometimes is lacking the intuition how to solve a specific design problem. We've collected our 7 most used resources for design inspiration, in order that it might help you as it helped us. 1. If you're looking for the paradise, Pixeden is your choice. 2. Premium Pixels is not just a resource for free quality .psd Files, it offers WordPress themes as well as tutorials on an occasional basis. 3. Deviant Art is well known in the design universe for its variety of resources for web and creative workers. 4. freepsdfiles.net Another, rather unknown source is freepsdfiles.net I chose it because it's free, it's PSD and it's tidy. 5. Designmoo is clean designed and I love it's simple access to the relevant categories. 6. Not only because of the stock, I love GraphicsFuel because of the inspiring blogposts as well. 7. dribbble is an infinite source of inspirations. Bonus Hope you found this blend of sources helpful.

kuler When Maps Shouldn’t Be Maps | Matthew Ericson - ericson.net Often, when you get data that is organized by geography — say, for example, food stamp rates in every county, high school graduation rates in every state, election results in every House district, racial and ethnic distributions in each census tract — the impulse is since the data CAN be mapped, the best way to present the data MUST be a map. You plug the data into ArcView, join it up with a shapefile, export to Illustrator, clean up the styles and voilà! Instant graphic ready to be published. And in many cases, that’s the right call. For example, census maps of where whites, blacks, Hispanics and Asians live in New York City show clear geographic patterns, answering questions like “What areas of the city are more segregated?” or “Where is there more diversity?” Maps also a terrific way to let readers look up information about specific places. And obviously, when the story is completely based on the geography — “How far has the oil spill in the Gulf spread?” 1. 2.

Crazy Egg - Visualize where your visitors click Over 200,000 businesses Convert Better with Crazy Egg, The Original Heatmapping Technology A heatmap is an easy way to understand what users want, care about and do on your site by visually representing their clicks - which are the strongest indicators of visitor motivation and desire. A Crazy Egg heatmap lets you collect more than 88% of the data you would using a traditional eye-tracking process. Because Google Analytics & Site Catalyst Leave Questions Unanswered, Trust Crazy Egg Visualizations to Help You Understand Your Users. Wouldn't you like to fill in the gaps left by analytics… without A/B testing every little assumption… and without breaking the bank on in-lab usability studies? Heat Maps: At a glance, see the hotspots on each page - so you know what to change, preserve or delete "Do our users think they can click greyed out buttons?" Click-Tracking Overlays: Find a hot spot? "What percentage of traffic clicked the primary button versus this smaller link text below it?"

Storytelling with Data Feb. 28, 2013 This is a condensed version of my opening keynote at the Tapestry Conference, which was held yesterday in Nashville’s beautiful Union Station Hotel. I’m writing this from memory so at best it will only be an approximation of what I said. Thanks to all the organizers and attendees for a great event. Update: a video of my talk is now available on the Tapestry blog. Storytelling with data I was happy to see that the theme of this conference was storytelling, because as we develop new ways of gathering, processing, visualizing and presenting data, we sometimes risk focusing so much on techniques that we forget to tell stories. Storytelling is a basic human activity. Have an audience We naturally adjust our stories to fit our audience, but with graphics we don’t have that luxury. So whenever I look at a data set or try to build a graphic, I need to know who my audience is. I work at The New York Times, so the question is: Who is my audience? Design for someone else Respect the reader

Yeoman - Modern workflows for modern webapps

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