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anonymous

The Interesting Stories Behind Brand Names - 0 views

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    The Interesting Stories Behind Brand Names; Not Enough Fans on Your Facebook Fan Page? Learn How to Increase Your Fan Base; How Google +1 Can Change the Dynamics of SEO
anonymous

Strengthen the Impact of Your Web Design with Website Analytics - 0 views

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    Some people associated with the web design industry think that usage of website analytics is limited to calculating traffic. However, the reality is that website analytics can be used for understanding user behavior, geographical location of visitors, and calculating conversion rate of the website.
anonymous

Why Like-Gating Will Not Help You Earn Customer Loyalty? - 0 views

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    Many companies use short cut strategies these days to increase number of customers. They need to consider the fact that impact of short cut strategies do not last long. To establish a long-term relationship with your target customers, you need to put in energy and time.
Bartłomiej Małysz

Crazy Egg - visualize your visitors - 0 views

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    CrazyEgg are not crazy, but insane important (if You want to know what Your users are clicking). It provides simple with most clickable areas of Your website. It can have huge impact on Your site.
anonymous

How Google +1 Can Change the Dynamics of SEO - 0 views

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    If you offer SEO services in India, you must have heard about Google's new search result recommendation service called Google +1? This has revolutionized...
Vernon Fowler

Replacing the -9999px hack (new image replacement) - Jeffrey Zeldman Presents The Daily... - 0 views

  • My friend Scott Kellum, design director at Treesaver, has now sent me this refactored code for hiding text, which I hereby christen the Kellum Method: .hide-text { text-indent: 100%; white-space: nowrap; overflow: hidden; } Really long strings of text will never flow into the container because they always flow away from the container. Performance is dramatically improved because a 9999px box is not drawn. Noticeably so in animations on the iPad 1.
  • Scott Kellum said on 1 March 2012 at 3:41 pm: I went ahead and created a side by side site to test the performance: http://lab.pgdn.us/hidden-text-performance/ @Ethan, This is the best 43min I have ever spent learning about optimizing the performance of my CSS: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xuMWhto62Eo
  • Would be interesting to understand both the SEO and accessibility impacts of this approach.
  • ...4 more annotations...
  • Scott Kellum said on 2 March 2012 at 4:06 pm: After much deliberation over here: https://github.com/h5bp/html5-boilerplate/issues/1005#issuecomment-4293007 Jonathan Neal suggested a method using font: 0/0 serif; and things seem to be settling on this — .ir { font: 0/0 serif; text-shadow: none; color: transparent; }
  • While I think this is certainly and interesting approach, I have some concerns with the accessibility. In some, if not all, cases when overflow: hidden; hides the content of the element this is applied to from screen readers. In most cases where I use image replacement, I still need the text to be accessible (e.g. call to action buttons set in Gotham). See Aaron Gustafson’s A List Apart article, http://www.alistapart.com/articles/now-you-see-me/. Has anyone tested this with a wide battery of screen readers or other accessibility devices?
  • Another note on accessibility: Besides the screen reader problems – people who don’t get images will not see the text too.
  • As a few people said already, this does not solve the accessibility problem that comes with text-indent. Worse, it may send the wrong message: “this is new and cool, use this from now!”. As a leader in the industry, I think you should warn people that even if this is “better” in term of performance, it is still a bad solution. Imo, Image Replacement techniques should be evaluated against the problems they solve/address. Fwiw, I wrote something about these challenges a few years back: http://tjkdesign.com/articles/tip.asp </shameless plug>
BluEnt Global

The Truth About Your SEO Contract That Could Save You Big Dollars - 0 views

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    BluEnt reveals the top three factors impacting search engine optimization contract. Achieve the highest possible ROI with the best SEO pricing plan.
Frederik Van Zande

» 8 fonts you probably don't use in css, but should - Web Design Marketing Po... - 0 views

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    CSS has brought us many capabilities in terms of typography and the web, but we always seem to be limited to the same 4-5 typefaces over and over again. There is an inherant problem, if the font you specify isn't on the viewers computer it won't render in that font. So as designers and developers we end up selecting the ones that we can safely assume is available on most computers today. So most pages use Arial, Helvetica, or Georgia as their typefaces… and the world of the web remains slightly more bland.
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