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Here are posterous posts filed under jquery...

Tocki says...

Filed under: jQuery

simonsurtees says...

A useful application allowing designers to specify interaction and user behaviours. As keen wireframers in Omnigraffle, this ability is sadly lacking for us, but tools such as Ixedit bring the designer one step closer to controlling all of the interface & application visuals, which are presented to the end user; as opposed to developers. Always a good thing in my opinion!

Filed under: Jquery

gltss says...

Filed under: jQuery

simonsurtees says...

The post I've linked to highlights the nature of forms becoming useful wizards, and whilst I agree it serves this purpose extremely well, I think the advantage is most evident when applying this codebase to Ecommerce channels.

Wayfinding, signposting - call it what you will. All the evidence collated of users in the 'cart', show that highlighting next steps in a process is one of the most important factors in reducing drop-outs, and consequently, increasing conversion.

For those of you who have limitations on the design of your shopping cart, then I'd recommend using this Jquery example: and watch your conversions go skyward.

Filed under: Jquery

Thom says...

Firefox is one of the few applications that is always running on my computer.  It is monumentally important for doing almost anything, yet its user experience is imperfect.  My complaints stem from Firefox's many superfluous tool bars that consume a large amount of screen space. Many of the tool bars are unnecessary and could be eliminated to reduce screen space consumption. Google Chrome has done this effectively. With Firefox, I wanted to enhance the interface by minimizing tool bars using some clever add-ons and lots of hot keys.

What I learned from adjusting my Firefox configuration was that the navigation bar is nearly unnecessary. I use the navigation bar for 3 reasons:

  1. Going to a particular website after opening a new tab.
  2. Adjusting the URL slightly. Ex: from twitter.com to twitter.com/tdedecko
  3. Wanting to know the URL of the web page I am currently browsing.
Reasons 2 and 3 are case situations. Needing to adjusting the URL occurs rarely and I generally know my location on the web (Gmail, Hacker News, Google Reader, etc). These situation arise infrequently and could be accomplished with a navigation bar that can be minimized.

Reason 1 is the important part. I use the navigation bar as if it were a shell for launching applications (which it is). This is a regular occurrence with the way I use Firefox. This implies that I need a navigation bar primarily when I open a new tab. The solution is to put the navigation bar on a web page that loads when I open a new tab.

I decided to accomplish this. First I needed to install a few Firefox add-ons. I installed:

These add-ons made it so opening a new tab launched my homepage and makes my navigation bar toggle-able by hitting F2.

Then, I spent an hour or so creating a navigation bar on a web page using jQuery and Blueprint CSS.

Try out my implementation: http://www.dedecko.com/navbar/

I set this as my homepage in Firefox. Now when I open a new tab a navigation bar on a web page appears. Very useful in my opinion.

This might be particularly useful for netbooks. Let me know if this is helpful.

Filed under: jquery

xea says...

Take a tour to look at this awesome tutorial! buildinternet.com

DEMO

 

 

 

Filed under: Jquery

Oz says...

This guys are working hard on Javascript!

They made the FlowPlayer a powefull flash video player, and jQuery Tools a robust UI set of components, built using jQuery.


Check out the demos of FlowPlayer!


The set is not too big and looks good.
Check out the demos of jQuery Tools!

Filed under: jQuery

Tocki says...

Filed under: jQuery

symfonip says...

symSlider is a brand new stack from SymfoniP. Utilising the power of the ‘Stacks’ Image Stack that is already built in to the Stacks Plugin and  jQuery code to create an automated Image Slider.

That’s right this is all jQuery , not Flash, so your iPhone will thank you too.

Like with all our stacks, we like to automate as much as possible to leave you ,the designer, to just get on and build great sites quickly without thinking about integrating any additional code.

Learn more about by symSlider by watching it in action below.

symSlider is available for a limited time at only $9.95 at our online store so get it fast before we put the price up to our recommended $12.95.

enjoy :)

Filed under: jquery

gltss says...

Filed under: jQuery