Friday, June 12, 2015

Evolutility.js : Web UI Library for Tables & Forms

Evolutility provides a set of generic Backbone Views to browse, edit, filter, export and chart Backbone models and collections of different structures. With it you configure views with metadata instead of hand-coding templates, Javascript and CSS.

The post Evolutility.js : Web UI Library for Tables & Forms appeared first on jQuery Rain.


by Admin via jQuery Rain

textChaos : Abstract CSS3 Text Animations

textChaos allows you to easily add unique and abstract CSS3 text animations to your page. All animations are hardware accelerated and completely random – delivering a different animation experience for every visit.

  • Multiple instance support
  • Easy to setup
  • Lightweight
  • Custom Character Selection
  • Define Color Palettes
  • Set Random Speed Ranges
  • Set Font Size and Scaling Ranges
  • Define Random Rotation Angles
  • No Coding Skills Needed

The post textChaos : Abstract CSS3 Text Animations appeared first on jQuery Rain.


by Admin via jQuery Rain

Mighty Form Styler for jQuery

Mighty Form Styler for jQuery replaces you form select element with a html ul list so you can easily and completely style it with css. With some little magic it behaves just like a regular select element.

The post Mighty Form Styler for jQuery appeared first on jQuery Rain.


by Admin via jQuery Rain

A One-Month Break from Customer Support, For Free

There are three factors to customer satisfaction: quality, consistency and scale. That matters across the board: from your product itself to how your team addresses support. If you run a business, customer support is either a highlight of your day, or a huge contributor to the background anxiety that often fuels passionate work. You love your customers, and want to give each request personal attention, as soon as possible! You also love your business and need to focus on the million other tasks on your to-do list. So, too often, the support queue grows, and you know that, at some point, you’ll have to apologize for the late reply. Influx was born out of the SitePoint Group to help with exactly that. Our new sister company does this by providing high-quality responses that scale up (or down!) based on your support volume. Best of all, your customers have their queries answered within 5 hours regardless of where they are in the world. You have round-the-clock monitoring for your servers (right?), so why not do the same for your customers? Here at SitePoint, we’ve been using Influx as part of our customer support team for Learnable, our learning platform, and the experience has been fantastic. Within our first month of using Influx, we cut our average response time in half (to less than 12 hours) while attaining a 100% customer satisfaction rating. As a bonus, our collective stress levels have lowered, too — I’m no longer anxiously looking at our support queue several times a night. To share the love, we’ve struck a deal with Influx to offer 100 SitePoint readers a full month of customer support for free. Fill out the form below to claim your spot:

Continue reading %A One-Month Break from Customer Support, For Free%


by Ophelie Lechat via SitePoint

Thursday, June 11, 2015

Top Qualities That A Social Media Manager Must Have

Top Qualities That A Social Media Manager Must Have

Social media marketing is not just about posting things on the social media networks, but you have to keep an eye on it continuously if you want to get success. Whether you are outsourcing social media marketing or hiring someone in-house for doing all this you must need to consider some skills or qualities in a social media manager. Here in this article we share top qualities that a good social media manager must have. So, before hiring one it is better to read all the points carefully:

by Irfan Ahmad via Digital Information World

Night Owls

We are Night Owls. We design and develop kick-ass user-friendly web applications. http://ift.tt/GZ5iyn


by csreladm via CSSREEL | CSS Website Awards | World best websites | website design awards | CSS Gallery

Design Games — Design Slam

Design Slam is the seventh in our series of Design Games.

Is this your first time visiting our design games series? A design game is basically a fun activity played by a small team and used to provide input to a design problem. They may involve users of a product, a project team, stakeholders, or even management.

For a more detailed description of what a design game is, check out our first design game post or refer to our other design games.

Description of Design Slam

Design Game - IA Slam

In a design slam a team works together to create a solution to a design problem. A design slam is usually conducted under some time pressure, and there may be a prize for the ‘winner’.

Design slams are good for identifying potential design solutions, but are also good for a team to learn about how to work together.

Tips

The design problem may be a real one, a completely artificial situation or a situation close to a real-life one.

Participants should be encouraged to generate a couple of ideas and choose one to submit as their solution. The idea should be fairly high-level, not a screen-by-screen interface.

Think about how you would like the team to present their work. For the IA Slam (an annual event at the IA Summit), participants must create ‘one eye-popping page’ that represents their idea.

If you are using this game to help a team learn how to work together, you may wish to assign roles, identify roles that the team needs to assign, or just allow the team to figure each other out.

Prepare

You may like to prepare just a brief summary of the problem, or a full back story with props & artefacts.

Provide paper, markers, sticky notes and other stationery.

Run

Explain the design problem plus any constraints or issues to participants. Explain that they are to come up with a creative solution to the problem

Explain any time constraints and exactly what they are to produce as an outcome. Encourage them to initially generate a number of ideas before selecting one to document and explain.

Analyse

Little to no analysis is needed for this game. Its purpose is to help teams look at a problem in a different way and break out of existing patterns not to create a real design solution.

Google+

The post Design Games — Design Slam appeared first on UX Mastery .


by Donna Spencer via UX Mastery