Recently, my team at work spent a few months building a thing with Twitter Bootstrap.
Like most folks on the web, I've been watching the ebook shift with great interest over the past few years.
There's no one person I have to thank more for the kind of designer/developer/person who loves content and users that I am today than Jeffrey Zeldman.
There are design companies out there. The Apples, Twitters, Mints, Instagrams (before Facebook bought them?), Nintendos, and so on.
In July of 2010, I decided to buy a smartphone. I didn't want to leave Verizon, and Apple hadn't yet announced the arrival of the iPhone, so I did a great deal of research to try to find the Android phone that had the best design available on the platform and on Verizon (by that, I wanted user experience design, industrial design, etc.).
Once again, the lovely folks at A List Apart have started their unique-in-our-industry survey, as they have each year since 2007.
One of the interesting things about web design is the number of fields into which it reaches.
One of the defining things about the experience of reading online is that it is completely impossible to read everything, or even everything that would be interesting to any specific person.
As I expected, I've been learning a lot about baby products the past several months, and how they are designed.
As you may know, Google has opened up limited access to its new social network, Google Plus.
Jonathan Stegall is a web designer and emergent / emerging follower of Jesus currently living in Atlanta, seeking to abide in the creative tension between theology, spirituality, design, and justice.
Full Blogroll Blogroll & Friends