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Countdown to MIX09: Design Matters!

I was recently asked to sit down with some of my friends here at Microsoft and discuss the thinking behind the MIX09 Conference aesthetic and message.

image

This week we invite Tim Aidlin, the creative director of MIX09, to tell us about the design philosophy behind the MIX creative.  We know if we’re going to hold a conference for some of the best web designers out there, then we had better make sure we show we know our stuff.  In other words, it’s not just pixels on a screen but the whole damn experience – everything.  And we tell it the story in just 10 minutes as the chicken keeps us honest about not blabbing on and on (and on and on).  :)

Watch the show and then grab your MIX wallpaper, blog bling, posters and more from our MIXtify page!

As the Creative Director for the conference, I'm responsible for the process of engaging the Creative Agency (in this case, IF/Then, here in Seattle) and working to develop the visual voice for the conference.

From there I take the styleguide we've developed and work with other vendors to take that styleguide through the build and development of the website, adverstising, packaging, all the way up to signage and how the staging incorporates our aestheic.

It's really a very cool job :-)

What:MIX09
If you’re a designer or developer who builds on the web, MIX09 is the place to learn about products and technologies that help you plan for the future while addressing today’s economic challenges. Hear about advances in technologies like Silverlight, Expression, ASP.NET, Windows 7, and Windows Azure, and discuss topics like design, user experience, web standards, data visualization, workflow, and social networks. Learn how to use technology to increase customer satisfaction and impact the bottom line.
When:Wednesday, March 18, 2009 (all day)
Where:The Venetian Hotel Resort Casino
Las Vegas, NV

My Time at The Future of Web Design

Future of Web Design
November 3&4, 2008
New York

The Future of Web Design conference is in its second year and has a solid following.  Armed with engaging and influential speakers, the conference seeks to provide guidance and inspiration to the audience (maybe 1000 people?) to which they speak.  I attended this conference, held in New York, November 3&4.  It was inspirational.

 

 

A few key facts before diving in:

  • This was a great conference
  • 75% designer, 25% developer attendance (maybe 500?  My estimation)
  • Progressive enhancement is where it’s at.  Write semantic xHTML, style it with CSS, and make it work “properly” using JavaScript
  • Agencies are having a hard time with Developer / Designer workflow.  Still.
  • Everyone used a Mac.  Seriously.
  • Expression nor Silverlight was ever mentioned.
  • Clients really drive Agencies bonkers.
  • We’re in a unique position as both the “client” and “agency” concurrently at times.  It’s nice to get perspective on that.

FOWD Workshops

I attended two workshops the first day: “jQuery and other JavaScript frameworks for designers” and “Design Principles for Web App Interfaces.”

The second workshop was with Ryan Singer of 37signals.  It was a really informal session, but remained engaging and educational. 

We spent a lot of time discussing developer / designer workflow.  Some notes:

  • HTML is a more specific spec than you could ever give with a flat image-comp.  All wireframes and Photoshop comps are totally throw-away.  Get into HTML/CSS/JavaScript as soon as you can.
  • Make your comps *real*.  Not only does this help not create garbage, but helps you really communicate with the developer side of the project.  You’re speaking his language (or at least getting closer.)
  • “Number 1 design principle: the ability to change.  The structure of your HTML determines how changeable the design is.”

Ryan was a big advocate of Rails and used it in his talk quite a bit. 

Ryan and I talked briefly, and after responding to his question of what I did, he responded, “You said you’re working with something called “Silverlight?  What is that, exactly?”

Another good quote:

“I’ve ripped [Edward Tufte] off for basically all of my design aesthetic.”

Ryan used the 37Signals product, Bootcamp, as the basis much of his discussion/demonstration

Some key points for application design:

  • Decide what matters
  • Make that pop out
  • Make everything else fade back

The second session was about jQuery, my new personal favorite technology (although I still don’t know much about it.)  The talk was a little code-heavy for me and not so geared for “designers” per-se … but that’s getting into the weeds of “what is a web designer?  Does s/he write xHTML and CSS or just spend his day in Photoshop.”  Don’t get me started. J

Karl Swedberg , Fusionary Media was the speaker, and he seemed to know a *lot* about it.  Again, would have liked to see any examples of how to actually design with jQuery.

Here are some links:

FOWD Sessions

The second day was held at the Roseland Ballroom, in mid-town Manhattan.  Ryan Carson of Carsonified, the company that produces FOWD, came out to introduce the conference, himself, and a few of the sponsors, Microsoft being the only one in the "diamond" level.  Carson says the goal of the conference was "to inspire," and they really reached their goal with me.

On this second day we were to have a series of sessions ranging in length of 10-minutes, to an hour-or-so for the panel discussion held at the end.

clip_image003

There was a plug for the Website Named Desire Poster, and Surface and everybody seemed to really like both.  As always, the Surface demos were swarmed; at one point 6 people deep in circles around the one available.  No matter where I go, that thing is a total hit.

Before I get into the sessions, just a few notes:

  • About 500+ (maybe?) attendees ranging from what could have been college-students, to some of the “rockstars” of the web-design universe
  • Simple staging: stage, screen, two FOWD banners and a podium
  • Short sessions were awesome and forced focus to the presentation.
  • All the presentations were engaging to a great degree
  • The hard seats broke my ass.

So, the sessions …

THE FUTURE OF WEB APP INTERFACE DESIGN
Ryan Singer – 37Signals

clip_image004

I had attended Ryan’s Workshop the day before, so for me, this was a concentrated version of our previous discussion.  Out of that discussion, he said he found two particular subjects that arose often: Developer / Designer Workflow and “Designers don’t explain their decisions.”

Need to be able to answer “Why? Why did we make the decision we did?  What was the thought process?  Why should someone listen to me and my decision?"

TEN MINUTES OF DESIGN INSPIRATION
Hillman Curtis – hillmancurtis, inc

clip_image006

http://www.hillmancurtis.com/index.php?/film/watch/james_victore

Curtis showed a short film with the major take-away being “use design like a club with spikes.”  The film was well shot and executed and inspirational.  Curtis seems like a very interesting character, as well, and feel lucky to finally get to attend a session by him – even if it’s only him showing a little movie of his – as I’ve been a fan of his for years. 

THE EXPERIENCE LAYER: USING FLASH, JAVASCRIPT, AND OTHER TECHNOLOGIES TO ENGAGE USERS
Dan Mall – Happy Cog

Dan Mall gave an engaging talk with well-designed, cool slides.  Generally, the theme could be distilled to :

  • progressive-enhancement is the way to go to ensure a solid experience throughout one’s site or web-application
  • Technology over technique will never prove to emotionally engage the audience
  • increase the emotion and engagement of the audience, you increase the connection between *you* and the audience

Dan used sifr as a good example of progressive enhancement: users without JavaScript or Flash experience a good downlevel experience, but users with the technologies on get a richer-more precise experience.

Books he mentioned:

EDUCATING CLIENTS TO SAY YES
Paul Boag – Headscape, Ltd

To help clients understand what we actually do as designers, it helps to show the methodology we use, and also helps to set expectations on what the client and agency can expect from each other.

Speak the language of your client: businesses respond to vocabulary revolving around the business: bottom-line, schedules, goals, etc … marketing departments respond well to talk of “market-segmentation,” for instance.

Clients are not stupid.  They’re experts in their business field.  You are not. 

Be positive.  Say yes to everything, but explain the true costs of decisions.  Sometimes you can say “no” by actually saying “yes.”

HOW TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF JQUERY AND OTHER JAVASCRIPT LIBRARIES FOR YOUR DESIGN
Karl Swedberg
– Fusionary Media

Karl is definitely a dev, and it kinda showed in his presentation through the presentation of a lot of code.  There was a lot of comparison between similar actions using different JavaScript libraries, but not a lot of demonstration of what the libraries can actually do, which was a bit of a bummer.  I’m really excited about JavaScript, and jQuery in particular, and was hoping to get some more detail.

I had taken Karl’s workshop the day before, and experienced the same mild let-down.  For instance, the one example of what you could achieve using jQuery was zebra-striping table rows in different ways.  Yes, handy, I’ll admit.  Inspirational, I’m not so sure … and it was this example he used in both the workshop and the session the next day.

He seemed truly knowledgeable about how to implement some cool things, but I would have really liked to see more of a design-perspective on this issue.

WHATEVER HAPPENED TO THE ART IN DESIGN?
Mike Cus - Carsonified

Mike busted out the drawing-skills and presented his content with fantastic hand-crafted slides.  He also provided a printed “flier” of his slides as a take-away for the attendees.  This was an awesome idea.

  • First up is “the 50%” thing: the pixels on screen are only 50% of what matter.  The other 50% is concept, story, inspiration for the user – the thought and meaning behind the design and concept.
  • Preparation is key: knowledge about your subject allows for greater creativity when approaching the subject.
  • Inspiration: do it all to music.  Get out of your normal space.  Go do something.
  • Idea, concept, story: this gets back to “the 50% thing.”  The design has to look more than pretty.  There needs to be meaning
  • Ditch your Mac (or P.C.)  Get back to the roots.  “Computers are useless.  They can only give you answers.”
  • Execution: An amazing work of art is executed perfectly.

WEB DESIGN FUNDAMENTALS: LEARNING FROM THE PAST TO BETTER THE FUTURE
Patrick Haney - http://patrickhaney.com

Showed his site and talked about CSS and semantic websites.

Forms and inputs

  • Should be functionally stylish
  • Mosaic “defined” how form inputs and buttons look like
  • Make form inputs look like form inputs

Huffduffer.com sign up form : if you change your form fields so drastically, users may not understand what to do.  Here, it’s simple enough to probably not get lost, but … you can push the limits, if you’re careful

I like big buttons, and I cannot lie - Concern yourself with the size of hit-areas

Browser Sniffing “the stench of bad habits” - Progressive enhancement is better

Achieving pixel-perfection: Do websites really need to look exactly the same in every browser?  I mean, really?  Do they?

The state of typography on the web

  • Georgia is not just a red state
  • Siffr -  JavaScript font replacement methodology is cool if used as an enhancement
  • Pixels vs. ems:
  • Some say one Shouldn’t use pixels because it doesn’t scale in IE
  • Inheritance problem / issue
  • Pixels much easier

Don’t dig yourself into a hole with animated GIFs

  • Rarely add value (duh)
  • Good use on Twitter for progress indicator but in wrong place
  • Mobile flickr: m.flickr.com. Good use of animated gif
  • Basecamp: good use.  Submit buttons go away and replaced with animated gif when new item, or whatever is added

Accessibility: Accessibility should be considered throughout the process.

The future with CSS3: New tags:

  • Border-radius
  • Text-shadow
  • Box-shadow

Progressive Enhancement

  • Not just JavaScript
  • Keep in mind when coding CSS
  • Conditional comments are your friend.  Might make the code not-validate, but if it provides the correct experience, it may be the right call

CHARTING DAILY DATA
Nicholas Felton

clip_image007

http://daytum.com

Charted his life over many years, and created incredible data-visualizations of the results.  His summary: it’s really hard to do and you have to be really patient and detail-oriented to do it.

Really, this guy’s stuff is awesome.

FINDING INSPIRATION FROM YOUR ENVIRONMENT
Nick La – ndesign-studio

clip_image008

Nick gave a very inspirational “How-to” through one of his amazing Illustrations.

Sketch : Phonenix

  • Start with a little doodle sketch
  • Turn one squiggle into DNA
  • Another looks like a dandelion
  • Now use a leaf & butterfly pattern for wings

He then did the outlining and color in Adobe Illustrator

From there he imports it into Photoshop and brushes it up and adds effects like blur to simulate depth.  Really, it’s beautiful stuff.

Some points of inspiration:

  • Everything has design
  • Everything has a pattern

Where to look?

  • Bookstore
  • Mall
  • Art store
  • Contemporary art galleries
  • Craft paper, postcards, etc …
  • Carpets

How to avoid copying?

  • Look at the detail – octopus example
  • Zoom in
  • Abstract
  • Create patterns – see sucker illustrations
  • Mix and match

DESIGNERS AND DEVELOPERS, WHY CAN’T WE ALL JUST GET ALONG?

The last session of the day was a panel discussion featuring: Daniel Burka – Digg and Pownce, Joe Stump – Digg, Liz Danzico – bobulate, Ryan Sims – Virb, Chris Lea – Media Temple

  • Designers and Developers sometimes get into the “Mechanic syndrome,” where the Developers act as the mechanics toiling to make the customer’s (Designer’s) desires a reality.
  • Problem grows with scale – as teams of designers and developers grow, the communication problems grow exponentially.
  • Designers and developers speak differently, as they have different concerns: features vs. breaking

To be frank, the developers here sounded a bit like prima-donnas, not wanting to work on projects they didn’t think were interesting or cool.  It seems they were demanding the designers come to them and “sell” the developers on the project.  As a designer, I’d love to choose all the projects I’d been assigned over the years, but when it came down to it, I had to work on some crappy projects, as that was what was paying the bills.  No one had to convince me to do anything.  I just did it.

To summarize: awesome, inspirational, and I hope to return.

REMIX08 Australia : Days 1-3 (?)

I left for the airport to catch a flight which boarded at 7:00 on Saturday evening with my wife, Tami, driving, and daughter, Sophie, in the backseat reading a book and drinking some milk. She’s 1 year old and very smiley.

The flight across the Pacific to Sydney was uneventful, but super-long. I had a couple nice stiff drinks before boarding so was able to ensure some decent sleep. They showed half of Charlie Wilson’s War, but then switched to a very, very sad John Cusak movie about dealing with his little girls and his wife who went away to war, etc … very, very sad.

Oh well.

We landed at about 6:00, Monday morning, Sydney time. I arrived at The Four Points Hotel, which is right next to Darling Harbour, right in the middle of the city, and next to the monorail which rings it. It’s a beautiful hotel with charming people.

The Australian money is super-cool and very well designed, IMHO, by the way. I exchanged a couple bills at the counter maintained by a very pleasant young lady.

I went up to my room, got ready, had some breakfast, and headed out to The Powerhouse Museum, where REMIX08 Australia, Sydney was being held. Getting to the Museum was super-easy: it was basically a walk around the corner, up some stairs, and hopping on the Monorail. 7 minutes later, I’m at my stop and hop off. From there it was just a short walk down a nice covered walkway to the Museum entrance.

The Museum uses the tagline “science + design”, however, really, I saw very little of that there. The “Vectorlab” was closed, which was a drag. Most of what I saw was centered around, basically, the history of Australia told through its machines and culture.

I arrived at about 9:00, but things at that point were pretty chaotic: people setting up booths, tables, displays, putting up signs and placing swag. I checked in, told to return at two, and bailed, back to the hotel to take a freaking *nap* and work on my presentations.

I returned at two and hung out in the Speaker room for a couple of hours, meeting the other speakers, “DelicateGenius”, “ShaneMo,” and the crew. The room that I was going to be presenting in, however wasn’t set up, so I was going to have to return, again, at 6:30 to do a run-through of my presentation. No whoop, though, as we were getting together at 7:00 to head out to dinner, all together.

I left at 4:00 and returned to the hotel to drop off my bag, which was *killing me* being so heavy stocked with two computers, their power cords, an adapter, camera, phone, etc ... I dropped off my stuff, grabbed the latest Wired and went downstairs to a little pub around the way and got a bite to eat and a pint of good Amber.

I returned to The Powerhouse at 6:30, but still couldn’t run-through. Oh well. I was *crashing* anyway. I almost fell asleep in a chair while waiting and watching the other run-throughs in the main hall.

I made my apologies for having to miss the dinner that night, gathered my stuff, and returned to the Monorail once again, to return to my hotel.

I woke up at Midnight, still in my clothes, my feet underneath some balled up comforter at the end of the bed. Yes, I was *tired*. Whew.

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ReMix08 Speaker Bios

 So, it's official: I'll be presenting two demos at the Sydney and Melbourne Australia REMIX08 events.  My bio's been posted here: Link to ReMix08 Speaker Bios or see below.

 

Tim Aidlin is a Design Evangelist working in the Developer and Platform Evangelism Department at Microsoft. He currently works with the “Web Innovations Team” within D&PE to create next-generation software using WPF and Silverlight.


Additionally, Tim serves as the Creative Director for the MIX conference series, and brings a wide breath of knowledge from 10+ years designing websites and interactive experiences for clients throughout the U.S. Also a fine artist, he welcomes a good conversation about Matthew Barney, encaustic painting, and the like.
http://thunderkick.us

Tim Aidlin

Welcome to Australia’s REMIX 08!

It looks like I'll be presenting sessions in Australia on May 20 in Sydney and May 22 in Melbourne.  I'm really excited to be a part of a REMix event, especially since I was the Creative Director for the MIX08 event in Las Vegas this year.  It'll be very interesting to see how the "main event" translates into a more focused and condensed conference.

I'll post a little on what I'm going to present soon.

 

Link to Welcome to Australia’s REMIX 08!

PhotoZoom

PhotoZoom makes it easy to take your photos and use the new Microsoft Silverlight Deep Zoom technology.  Add your photos, let them process, and grab the auto-generated iFrame to embed in your site.  It's super-easy, and a great introduction to Deep Zoom.

PhotoZoom

Silverlight Deep Zoom Portfolio Test

I've used a new tool that's coming out called Deep Zoom Composer to publish a new version of my portfolio.  You can zoom into each item to view the story and the art in detail.  Unfortunately, the layout exports incorrectly, but that should be fixed when the software is released.

Zoom using the mouse-wheel, or if you're on a laptop, use Click and Shift+Click to navigate.

Let me know what you think, and return often for updates.

sl_port 

Deep Zoom Composer Output

MIX09 Conference - March 18-20, 2009

I designed a preview page for MIX09, and it went live today.  MIX09 here we come!

Link to MIX09 Conference - March 18-20, 2009

Mix 08: Silverlight Sessions at scorbs

This kind blogger mentions liking the bags at MIX08 that I designed.  Just thought I'd post some shameless self-promotion ;-)

mixbag 

Mix 08: Silverlight Sessions at scorbs

Just Cauz

Just Cauz is hosting their  Third Annual Casino Night and Charity Auction on Saturday, April 5, 2008.

The Just Cauz Foundation raises money and awareness for local non-profits through social events that are aimed at Seattle's young professionals. Our goal is to make it as easy as possible for young people in Seattle to give back to their community, while appreciating the time and financial constraints of those who support us.

Third Annual Casino Night and Auction
April 5, 2008 - 8:00pm - 1:30am
Fremont Studios
155 N. 35th St.
Seats Limited!
More Information ~ Register

 

JustCauz.org

Link to Just Cauz

Watch the MIX08 Keynotes in Hyperspeed | News | MIX Online

I thought this fast-motion video of the first two keynotes of MIX08 not only shows off the venue quite well, but demonstrates how *much* goes into putting on this event. 

Link to Watch the MIX08 Keynotes in Hyperspeed | News | MIX Online

Cirque de Soleil at MIX08

In addition to taking on the Creative Director role for the MIX08 conference, I worked in a team of 6 to develop the WPF and Silverlight applications they demonstrate during the Cirque de Soleil part of the Day 1 Keynote address.  Check it out.

I *wish* that dialogue box hadn't been open at the very beginning, though.  And the perspecive was a little skewed as it was projected 16:9, but whatcha gonna do?  Arrrgh.

I thought the integration with the webcam was pretty nifty.  The 3-d role-chooser wasn't to bad either ...

http://visitmix.com/blogs/News/Keynote-Cirque/

MIX08 Official Styleguide

I thought I'd provide a little secret link out to the official MIX08 creative assets.  It's a great aggregation of many of the particulars such as logos, posters, desktops, and what our notebook looked like etc.

Link to styleguide_summary

 

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