Searchme Visual Search - Beta - rev. 2.0.1
Technology, UI Design, SEO July 15th, 2008
Searchme is a graphical page screenshot search engine. You flip through screenshots of websites like your browsing your iTunes library. The idea is interesting.
Searchme Visual Search - Beta - rev. 2.0.1
Best Feedback System I’ve Seen To Date | Two Guys One Beer
Cool Shit, Great Ideas, UI Design, Web Development July 1st, 2008
Check out the feedback system they are using from (Updated: uservoice ). Best one i’ve seen so far.
Episode 12 - Viewer’s Recommended Brews | Two Guys On Beer
Unique Horizontal Scrolling Non Flash Navigation
Great Ideas, UI Design, Web Development June 25th, 2008
Phorsite.com has a unique horizontal scrolling navigation. I’ve seen this navigation before on flash sites. It is an intriguing effect. From a UI point of view, there are some issues. I clicked the “More Info” button on the homepage and didn’t realize that I was now on the solutions page. So I then clicked “solutions” tab at the top and received no interaction from the site at all.
The pros and cons of user choice from the makers of twitter
UI Design November 11th, 2007
I’m looking at the Obvious blog, the company behind twitter and found an interesting article about the woes involved with the introduction of a new “feature” into an existing system.
His solution is an “Opt-Out” setting that the user can use to revert back to pre-feature version. This is basically version control for the user.
Goldman discusses the difficulty of coming up with a name for the opt-out setting which is basically asking: “Did our feature break your stuff?”
Personally, I think that is a great label.
The problem is of course that after X new features, you have a possible X! situtations to test and accommodate for. That’s a lot. 10 opt-outs = 10! scenarios = 3628800 scenarios. Well, in that case, let’s just force it on the user and say screw those 800X600 users and those Apple Safari users and eventually those IE7 users.
And it is all very relevant given Gmail’s recent update and their decision to offer an “Older Version” link.

This version control may be the best method to get new releases to production, part of the perpetual beta philosophy that Google had taken on GMail. From a user’s point of view, what are the differences in the new Gmail version?

System messages are no longer in Times New Roman? ….I’m kidding, contacts are much improved.
Read on… http://blog.obvious.com/2007/02/enable-float-alignment.html
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