Monday, February 22, 2016

17 Tips for Successful Facebook Contests

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Are you planning a Facebook contest? Want to make sure it’s a success? An easy-to-follow checklist of tips and best practices will help you launch Facebook contests your audience will love. In this article I’ll share 17 tips to make your Facebook contest a success. #1: Review Facebook’s Terms of Service Facebook periodically changes its rules and regulations about contests [...]

This post 17 Tips for Successful Facebook Contests first appeared on .
- Your Guide to the Social Media Jungle


by Jim Belosic via

Quiver, new sharing made for people.

Share your files with complete control over who sees them, how and when.
by via Awwwards - Sites of the day

PreLoadMe – Lightweight jQuery Website Preloader

PreLoadMe is a lightweight preloader for any webcontent by using jQuery and CSS. It is fully responsive and will run on all modern desktop- and mobile browsers with no additionals plugins.


by via jQuery-Plugins.net RSS Feed

July’s June

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Visually stunning One Pager hosting a story by author Kyle Keen, called July's June. The Single Page website features a beautiful blend of big images, whitespace and mixed typography. Unfortunately the Viewport-Sized Typography isn't optimized for mobile but really shines on larger screens.

by Rob Hope via One Page Love

How to Prospect Using Twitter, LinkedIn, and Facebook

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Are you looking for more business? Wondering how social media can shorten the sales process? Twitter, LinkedIn, and Facebook make it easy to develop relationships with potential customers before you ask for a meeting. In this article you’ll discover how to connect with prospects on social media. #1: Research Your Prospects Researching prospects is critical [...]

This post How to Prospect Using Twitter, LinkedIn, and Facebook first appeared on .
- Your Guide to the Social Media Jungle


by John Hingley via

Sunday, February 21, 2016

An Introduction to Swift 2.0 for iOS and OSX

One of the major and most surprising announcements to come out of Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference was the introduction of Swift, a new programming language for Cocoa and Cocoa Touch.

Swift allows you to create native applications for iOS and OS X, and can be used in your existing projects alongside Objective-C. It promises increased performance and numerous modern features.

Here is a brief guide for getting started developing iOS applications with Swift today.

We will setup a development environment to work with Swift, look into the language fundamentals and compare the syntax side by side with Objective-C and other familiar languages such as JavaScript and C#.

At the end of this post we will create a simple but complete iOS application using Swift.

Setting up your environment

As with Objective-C you will require a current Mac and Xcode to develop with Swift.
At this stage version 6 of Xcode is still in beta, it can be downloaded now but you must be a member of the iOS or Mac Developer Program.

Log-in to the developer center and select the iOS 8 beta section, download Xcode from the Downloads section.

It is a rather large file, around 2.5 GB in size, so it may take a while. Once the download is completed, open the file and install the application by following the prompts. If you already have version 5 of Xcode installed it will remain unaffected as the beta version is installed as a separate application.

Go to the applications directory and launch Xcode 6.

Launch XCode

Accept the license agreement and wait for installation to complete.

That’s it, you are now ready to start exploring and developing with Swift.

Continue reading %An Introduction to Swift 2.0 for iOS and OSX%


by Patrick Haralabidis via SitePoint

Polaroid Stack to Grid Intro Animation

A tutorial on how to create an intro animation where a decorative Polaroid stack becomes a grid similar to the effect seen on the takeit website.

The post Polaroid Stack to Grid Intro Animation appeared first on jQuery Rain.


by Admin via jQuery Rain