"Mr Branding" is a blog based on RSS for everything related to website branding and website design, it collects its posts from many sites in order to facilitate the updating to the latest technology.
To suggest any source, please contact me: Taha.baba@consultant.com
Thursday, April 28, 2016
How to Repurpose Content From the Hottest Social Networks
Are you creating content on Snapchat, Blab, Vine, Periscope, or Facebook Live? Want to reuse that content on other social channels? Whether it’s a live broadcast on Facebook, a quick snap on Snapchat, or short audio from Anchor, you can save and download your social content and share it across all of your profiles. In [...]
This post How to Repurpose Content From the Hottest Social Networks first appeared on .
- Your Guide to the Social Media Jungle
by Kristi Hines via
Quechua Lookbook Spring Summer 2016
by via Awwwards - Sites of the day
jQuery Popunder Plugin
jQuery popunder is a jquery-plugin to create popunders in major browsers.
Popunders are popups which are opened in the background of a browser-window. This script will only work, if the popunder is opened on a user-generated event (e.g. click or submit).
The post jQuery Popunder Plugin appeared first on jQuery Rain.
by Admin via jQuery Rain
Flexdatalist : jQuery Autocomplete Plugin
Flexdatalist is (another) jQuery autocomplete plugin with support for <datalist>
.
The post Flexdatalist : jQuery Autocomplete Plugin appeared first on jQuery Rain.
by Admin via jQuery Rain
Wednesday, April 27, 2016
Why JPEGs are like McDonalds Apple Pies (and SVGs are not)
Last week we looked at a simple, free SVG editor called Boxy SVG ( it's here in case you missed it).
Let's see where it takes us today. But first, here's an idea…
SVG isn't an image format – it's more of a recipe
[caption id="attachment_129311" align="alignright" width="291"] Baking pies[/caption]
That makes it very different from all the pixel-based formats we've used in the past. Let me explain.
You could think of our classic pixel-based image formats -JPEGs, GIFs and PNGs - as being like those McDonald's Apple Pies. Each comes packaged in precisely fixed amounts. You can't ask the McDonalds serving staff to whip you up a 'family-sized' pie or to rustle up a 'half-slice' to have with your coffee. Well, technically, you can ask but you'll get a strange look.
It's a reasonable serving for one person, but if you need to share with 2, 3 or more people, you need to stretch your pie further – i.e. everyone gets less.
But SVG is like having a good apple pie recipe.
[caption id="attachment_129313" align="alignright" width="409"] Baking pies[/caption]
You hold the instructions to make as much or as little pie as you want.
Sure, there are numerical amounts written into the recipe – 8 apples, 4 cups of flour and so on. But if you need to feed twice as many people, you just double the measurements. If you want to feed half as many – just halve the numbers. It's designed to scale.
And because you control how the pie is made, you can even 'change things up' a little and customize the basic pie recipe for different people's needs. Nanna likes a handful of black currants in her pie. Your brother loves custard. Small, thoughtful changes to the original recipe are easy and valuable.
Of course, the 'S' part in 'SVG' stands for 'scalable', and it's part of what makes SVG so useful for the web. But 'scalability' – by itself – doesn't always mean 'more usable'. Sometimes we need to change how our layouts are displayed. SVG can help us.
Making Charts with SVG
Here's an SVG chart that I created using Boxy SVG. It shows the number of mentions of the phrase 'Star Trek' and 'Star Wars' in books since 1960 (data via Google NGRAM).
[caption id="attachment_129310" align="aligncenter" width="800"] A simple chart made in Boxy SVG[/caption]
You might typically see this type of chart online as a JPEG or PNG - in fact, you can export it from Boxy SVG as a PNG if you wanted to.
Ok, so, why not make it a JPG and be done with it?
Reason #1: The File Size
- The JPEG version is 47kb. (JPEG link)
- The raw SVG version from Boxy SVG is 14kb (SVG link).
- With a little tidying, I got it down to 10kb (SVG link).
The Boxy SVG chart isn't perfect out of the box. View the source and you'll see:
- some extra empty TSPANs in the text
- the extreme number precision makes numbers longer and more unwieldy than they need to be (tools like SVGO can fix this for you)
- elements moved inside the editor tend to get transforms added to their original X & Y positions. Ideally any repositioning would be made to that original X & Y co-ordinate.
A little bit of find-and-replace resolves these issues in five minutes. Even with these small issues, the Boxy SVG is clearer and easy-to-read than anything else I've worked with.
Of course, either of the SVG files above will still be laser crisp at 2000px (if required) with no increase in file size. The JPEG certainly wouldn't.
Still, internet speeds are fast – we're not going to fight over 30kb between friends, are we?
Reason #2: SVG has Non-Scaling Strokes
This is an SVG trick that I only became aware of yesterday.
While it's always handy to be able to squish down our images to fit it into a small screen, there's a point where our linework legibility simply breaks down. Similarly, highly scaled-up image lines can become fat and oafish.
[caption id="attachment_129308" align="alignright" width="400"] Vector-effect: Non-scaling stroke in action.[/caption]
Unfortunately, that's an unsolvable problem in our PNGs and JPGs. We just have to live with it.
Non-scaling Strokes
Continue reading %Why JPEGs are like McDonalds Apple Pies (and SVGs are not)%
by Alex Walker via SitePoint
Social Media, Email Marketing & Blogging: Top 9 Tactics for Finding New Customers Online - Infographic
Looking to grow your list of leads? Rely on these tried and true digital marketing methods.
Social media
Private message:There's still incredible value in one on one exchange. Reach out to Facebook, Twitter or Google+ fans via private message, and offer personalized consultations or custom promotions.
Group and Communities Discussions:
Join both private and public Google Plus communities, Facebook and LinkedIn Groups that relate to your industry. Build relationships with the members and eventually recommend your product.
by Irfan Ahmad via Digital Information World