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Semantics, LESS and Sarcasm {Presentation} by vincebaskervillein webdev

[–]vincebaskerville[S] 0 points1 point ago

When SASS 1st started I wasn't doing any production projects in ruby so I never really adopted to it.. and then LESS came along and it was also backwards compatible, so it was a no brainier for people similar in my situation.

The tricky part now is picking one.. I usually say to pure front-end devs, they may want to stick with LESS if the command line scares them.. i know it's nothing crazy, but SCSS requires a lot of gems for the real power it claims over LESS... & I really dig the Compass support, and even other things like firebug support (which will come to less too)

Great points, and thank you for the feedback! :D

But if they're already in Ruby then it's clear SCSS is by far the better option.

Semantics, LESS and Sarcasm {Presentation} by vincebaskervillein webdev

[–]vincebaskerville[S] 0 points1 point ago

yeah.. sorry about that, I wasn't expecting it to be recorded — it was really an impromptu decision by the organizer. There will definitely be dedicated mics next time :/

Rethinking your Mobile First strategy by vincebaskervillein usability

[–]vincebaskerville[S] 0 points1 point ago

"Mobile First" should only imply that you create an experience that works well on mobile then can scale up. The mobile constraints should only arise from actual physical interaction limitations, such as screen size and touch-based interaction.

Well said, and I couldn't agree more!

Designing Happiness by vincebaskervillein startups

[–]vincebaskerville[S] 0 points1 point ago

That's a good point for the video.. I'll start brainstorming. Thanks again!

Designing Happiness by vincebaskervillein startups

[–]vincebaskerville[S] 0 points1 point ago

Thank you for checking out the kickstarter page, and asking some great questions!

As for how the book will be different, the main separator is that this book will focus on mobile UX (smartphone, tablets and some bleed into web/desktop). Most books (usability, IX, IA and the like) are really targeting for the web specifically or they're about general psychology studies and observations.

All those are great and awesome publications, however with this book I would love contribute by instead focusing on the multitude of mobile mediums. It's true that we can transfer much of the knowledge from our web/desktop understanding; however, everything doesn't scale perfectly.

As for hearing me speak on the issue, I unfortunatly haven't spoken about this specifically. All of my talks and presentations are pieces of this concept. I have a plethora of ideas of how I want to structure this book, but what ultimately will shape it is after all the brain dumping of lessons learned, guiding principles, what larger concerns and outside influences are, successful and failed trends, ux mobile strategies and elements, defensive & emotional designs, injecting personality, multitude of case studies from top mobile companies and user experience agencies.. etc

The hard part is going to be trimming everything down. I'm planning to work with some awesome editors and use the backers as a soundboard.

I do hope this helps a bit, and if not please keep the questions coming. My goal is to hopefully gain your trust so that you believe in me and this upcoming book.

Thank you again!

Great design equals a great UX… right? by vincebaskervillein usability

[–]vincebaskerville[S] 0 points1 point ago

I would have to disagree. Crafting the design and the layers of experience are two distinctly different things. As an example I would point to almost any website in the mid 90's using Adobe Flash (or Macromedia back then..) For many of the websites that actually did look great, they were a travesty to use. Sometimes the 1st visit might be awe-inspiring, but being forced to see flash intros and useless animation.. weird navigation layout, non-deep linking pretty urls... it was a mess. Pretty — but a mess.

Advice needed: I want to leave my job... by crashdummy123in startups

[–]vincebaskerville 0 points1 point ago

I would recommend for you not to quit your day job just yet.. but possibly take on a part-time paid or non-paid internship at a startup to see if you like it. Most startups wont take anyone on unless they are more seasoned (unless they're a co.founder) but, many times you can learn on the job by interning. We just hired a dev intern who has been with us for 4 months and was a History undergrad major.

If you have drive you'll find a way.

Advice on getting internships at startups/relatively small companies? by Manabasedin startups

[–]vincebaskerville 0 points1 point ago

I currently am a co.founder at a company and I can tell you that one of the major things is persistence. If it's < 10 person company, everyone is swamped and so they may be looking for interns but it's really just another headache to try to find qualified people.

I completely agree with @crazycracker too.. you could bring your resume if you want.. but in most cases we'll just look at it while your there to be nice.

As for what to target... I'd say you can be aggressive with going after anything in marketing and advertising for startups, just talk about different organic ways to do things as you'll be working with a small if any budget at all.

Good luck!

Do relationships have a place in startups? by vincebaskervillein startups

[–]vincebaskerville[S] 0 points1 point ago*

Calm down. I know mistakes happen, I have typos in some of my work too. But if people didn't call me out on it, then there would be more. Sure, I could have said it in a nicer way, but hey it's the internet.

I know and understand that it's easier to write short comments on the internet, and the simple fact that we don't know each-other doesn't warrant for a full or contextual criticism — but we should at-least try and take note if we are genuinely trying to be sincere and constructive, and not just curt.

To your second point, you posted a link to your blog instead of simply making a discussion post here. That action tells me you are trying to drive some traffic to your site, because if you were just interested in discussion, you would have pasted the text in to a post.

I get the point you were trying to make earlier much more now; however, we just have our differences of viewpoints. I understand this thought, and may take it into consideration by adapting when & how I write. I enjoy writing, and I know I'm not that great, but I am working on it.

Do relationships have a place in startups? by vincebaskervillein startups

[–]vincebaskerville[S] 0 points1 point ago

I do apologize for the typo, and if a small typo deters you from reading any of my articles then that's ok with me; however, I do find it ridiculous to accuse me of blogging spam in an attempt to drive traffic to my site. It's a serious article on a contentious issue, that many people I know and have talked to agreed on.

I write and share my articles. That's it.

I do use spell check, but things slip pass me. I have a friend who edits my post for me on occasion, but this is my personal blog about our industry. I don't claim to be perfect, and in fact content reviewing is just my weakness. I always welcome criticism as I am always looking to grow, so thank you for your words of wisdom.

It’s official, my startup is more bada$$-er than yours by vincebaskervillein startups

[–]vincebaskerville[S] 0 points1 point ago

6 down votes.. ouch.. No love for team building I guess :/ -- either that, or my title pissed people off o_O

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