Friday, January 30, 2015

Content Curation: How to Easily Find Great Content to Share

Do you curate content for your blog and social media sites? Want to discover how to find remarkable content to share? To learn how to explore content curation, I interview Ian Cleary. More About This Show The Social Media Marketing podcast is an on-demand talk radio show from Social Media Examiner. It’s designed to help […]


This post Content Curation: How to Easily Find Great Content to Share first appeared on Social Media Examiner.

Social Media Examiner - Your Guide to the Social Media Jungle




by Michael Stelzner via Social Media Examiner

Thursday, January 29, 2015

Packery : Bin-packing layout library

Packery is a JavaScript layout library that uses a bin-packing algorithm. This is a fancy way of saying “it fills empty gaps.” Packery layouts can be intelligently ordered or organically wild. Elements can be stamped in place, fit in an ideal spot, or dragged around.


The post Packery : Bin-packing layout library appeared first on jQuery Rain.




by Admin via jQuery Rain

GS Chained Custom Selects

GS Chained Selects provides you with a custom JavaScript class that automatically creates chained selects based on the options entered.


To generate the selects you can choose between using your custom created object or by accessing via AJAX a server resource that returns a custom formatted JSON .


The post GS Chained Custom Selects appeared first on jQuery Rain.




by Admin via jQuery Rain

blinkTitle.js : JavaScript TitleBar Alert or Notification

Is a Pure Javascript Implementation of TitleBar Alert or Notification.It Can Perform Blinking of Html Titlebar for Titlebar Alert or Titlebar Notification


The post blinkTitle.js : JavaScript TitleBar Alert or Notification appeared first on jQuery Rain.




by Admin via jQuery Rain

Responsive Email Design Is No Longer Optional - #infographic






With the total number of mobile devices set to rise to 2.6 billion by 2016 - up from 1.9 billion in 2012 - responsive email design is quickly becoming more important than ever. Responsive email, for the uninitiated, is essentially email that's designed to deliver the same viewing experience regardless of which app or mobile device the user is reading on.



You see, even though our mobile devices are never far away from our fingertips, and can be used for an increasing number of purposes - from banking and personal finances to games and gizmos - it may surprise you to hear that email remains THE most used functionality. A phenomenal 91% of consumers check their email at least once every day on their smartphone, and it's been reported that mobile email opens have grown by 180% in just three years. In fact, Adobe report that nearly 8 out of 10 people use their smartphone for reading email - which is, amazingly, a higher percentage than the number who use it for making calls.



This creates a critical challenge for marketers. It's generally accepted that email remains a tool with huge potential - how else can you deliver highly personalized and target messages to 100% of your audience? But, with 30% of consumers now EXCLUSIVELY using their mobile devices to access their emails, failure to deliver responsive emails can fatally undermine the ROI of your email campaigns. After all, over 71% of users will delete an email immediately if it doesn't display correctly on their device.



This infographic from the team at Instiller - an email marketing solution for agencies - lays out the case for responsive email design. It explores changing trends in mobile adoption and email use, investigates the growing shift away from desktop-only users, and illustrates some stats around how email advertisers and the industry in general are adapting to these changes.



It's clear - if you aren't doing responsive email design, then you aren't doing it properly!


Read more →



by Irfan Ahmad via Digital Information World

6 Must-Use Meteor Packages for (Almost) Every Project

Create a Tetromino Puzzle Game Using Swift – Final Steps

I hope you have enjoyed the tutorial so far. In this final part we add some final elements to gameplay to create a final, polished game. Let’s get started!


Rotation


Similar to the move method, we prepared the rotation behavior with the Tetromino class’ rotate method:


Continue reading %Create a Tetromino Puzzle Game Using Swift – Final Steps%




by Rico Zuniga via SitePoint