February 5, 2012

Embedded Simpleviewer into Latest Web Creation

Recently, my company RavenWood Creative launched a new site for a client, botanical-expressions.com that makes extensive use of Simpleviewer by Airtight Interactive. We embedded the viewer into a few pages so users can scroll through all the different arrangements and floral creations the shop can produce.

We had a few issues with the viewer, but worked them out. One of the them that had me pulling my hair out was that we got the Flash to play on the page, but you could not scroll down to see the thumbnails below the main image and the footer of the site, once it was previewed in different browsers. After some research I finally found the solution on the Simpleviewer FAQ, to add a vertical scroll bar, we had to remove a single line of code from the resulting index.html.

overflow-y: hidden

A single line of code.

Sometimes it’s just the small things in life, but what a relief, when I found it!

Let me know what you think of the new site? The clients are happy and we’ll be tweaking the site in the coming weeks, they are always a work in progress.

Until next time, Tim

A Funny Video about Rod Blagojevich – say what?

John Stewart has a way of wrapping up the insanity or chaos that is politics:

Check this out.

Until next time, Tim

Does the Location of a Blogger Matter?

Yesterday, I was asked to add my blog to LoadedWeb, a online directory of blogs. Nothing special there, but this one has a unique angle.  The directory is broken out by geographical area (in the U.S. and Canada) of the blogger.  It also has local business directories on its site.

My question is to you, does the location of the blogger matter? Are you more willing to read a blog in or near your hometown over on across the country? I tend to think I’d find more of interest in my own area, but I also like to see what’s happening in the world and in places I’ve visited or want to visit. That’s the beauty of the web, correct.

What do you think?

BTW, I listed my blog in US/Pennsylvania/Flourtown (nearest my office). Should I have listed it under Philadelphia, which is less than a half mile away? I thought Flourtown, PA would be more unique. No one, who isn’t from around here, knows where it is. Let me know your thoughts …

Until next time, Tim

Loving the new WordPress 2.7 Interface

I recently upgraded my blog’s backend, yes, I know it sounds dirty, to the new WordPress 2.7. The new interface is very sleek and more intuitive than past dashboards. Like most new interfaces it will take some getting use to, but I’m liking it so far. The tools I use most in creating posts are still in the same area, but the other organizational tools are, well, more organized.

What do you think?

Until next time, Tim

So Long MacWorld … The beginning of the end of Trade Shows?

Say it ain’t so, Apple announced today that next month’s MacWorld in San Francisco will be Apple’s last. I always wanted to make it to the one in SF, but never had the chance. I love everything Apple, but like most people, find what I need online or at the local retail store.

It makes you think, Apple is always on the forefront of trends and this could mean that trade shows are in trouble. According to Apple, “Apple is reaching more people in more ways than ever before, so like many companies, trade shows have become a very minor part of how Apple reaches its customers. The increasing popularity of Apple’s Retail Stores, which more than 3.5 million people visit every week, and the Apple.com website enable Apple to directly reach more than a hundred million customers around the world in innovative new ways.”

I attended a trade show for trade show managers over the summer here in Philly. It was interesting how the keynote speaker, David Meerman Scott, spoke to the audience about how social media and the Internet is changing the game for marketers. You know it’s bad when the keynote at your trade show trade group is advocating other resources other than a booth at a trade show to market your wares. Has the Web and social media marketing changed the game?

What do you think, are trade shows a thing of the past and fading into obsurity?

Until next time, Tim

Learn the Basics of Search Engine Optimization SEO

As a web designer, I often get asked by clients and other I speak with at events, “How do I get my site to be higher in the search results?” I often tell them that it usually only requires a few simple steps to help move the ranking in the right direction. But as with most things, if you start with garbage in you’ll get garbage out. It often comes down to redesigning the site to clean out years of either neglect or too much attention (i.e. too much content that is dis-organized and lacks focus).

It’s what the industry has come to know as Search Engine Optimization or SEO. The Internet is filled with companies promising you results by using their SEO plans. But with a little education on such matters most problems can be addressed before calling on professionals to help. Google recently published a 20 some page starter guide to SEO. Its a starter guide to SEO, that covers such topics as:

  • page titles and the importance of accurately titling your pages
  • descriptive meta tags
  • friendly URL structures
  • using sitemaps to construct easy-to-navigate sites
  • custom 404 error pages
  • quality content
  • using anchor text effectively
  • using “alt” text for images
  • and using robots.txt files

While most of the information in the guide should be old hat for your web designer, I’ve found that I educate the site owner a bit, they can focus on the areas of their site that need help.

Google has put together a good guide to help those outside the web development world to understand “this SEO thing” a bit better. Even though some of the guide could be deemed contrary to what Google has promoted in the past, such as the statement, “Search engine optimization affects only organic search results, not paid or “sponsored” results such as Google AdWords”, most of the information is right on target. Hopefully, Google will address the contrasts of in future version of the SEO guide.

Until next time, Tim