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Posted on: January 20th, 2010 by Famous Phil
Hi, and welcome to the new FamousPhil website! It isn’t actually all that new, but it is a major revision of my website. This has been coming now for at least the past 5 months because I completely hated the colors that I chose for the overall site theme. I can’t believe that I thought mixing all sorts of colors would even remotely look good. Anyways, I fixed it and I feel that the site looks better.
So what exactly changed?
I changed the color scheme a little bit and this is what you will likely notice the quickest. I decided to go with a traditional blue theme using the same blue that I selected before, but this time with a color guide. For anyone in need of finding colors that go well together, I strongly recommend: http://colorschemedesigner.com/. That site helped me a lot!
In addition, FamousPhil now validates to XHTML Strict 1.0, it used to validate to XHTML Transitional 1.0. This is basically technical language saying that FamousPhil is guaranteed to look the same on all compliant browsers that can display this website. This was very difficult to achieve considering the old website base uses many elements of XHTML transitional that don’t exist in strict. Regardless of the difficulty, I managed to get everything updated and working well
You may ask why I didn’t choose HTML 5 (I know one person who did), and my reasoning is, its standards aren’t fully established yet and aren’t mainstream enough for my personal preferences.
Finally, the major component that I really wanted to fix for a long time has happened. On my end, FamousPhil now has a real content management system. I wrote a theme for WordPress (thanks to John) and I now use WordPress as my content management system. Doing this has made my life much easier since changing the site has gone from manually editing source code to “drag and drop”. Hopefully I can continue to make my sites easier to manage so I can perhaps find more free time in the future
Thats all for now. I still need to do some blogging on some important issues, but that will come someday in the near future
Tags: color scheme, design, famousphil, validation, xhtml
Posted in My Site
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Posted on: September 16th, 2009 by Famous Phil
I am taking an unusual course this semester that is titled “software engineering” but covers a much wider scope of not only software engineering, but common life problems. The instructor, Michael “Fantastic” Buckley, took a few days outside of the curriculum to discuss bad vs good design in everyday life. This really has made me think a lot about designs and how horrible they tend to be.
The ultimate bad design that has always slowed me down is here at the University at Buffalo. If you have any classes in the Natural Sciences Complex (NSC), you know exactly what I am going to be ranting about. Have you ever got caught in the after class rush hour traffic? (sorry, I had no better words). Whoever engineered the exit door for NSC into the surrounding buildings really designed it badly. There are two doors and a single file stair case (basically 1 lane coming up and 1 lane going down). Trying to push about 1000 people through that staircase at the same time results in HUGE backups and it usually takes me 5 minutes to get through that passage when leaving class late. Here is a picture of this design:
Another bad design at the University at Buffalo is the front lawn between Bell Hall and Bonner Hall. In this case, there is a sidewalk that runs about 150 feet in a square around this huge patch of grass. Diagonally, there is a really beaten path that is now showing only dirt. Unfortunately, whoever designed that path didn’t realize that putting a sidewalk through the center might be a good idea since the door to a building is about 20 feet from that diagonal path and most people going to it come from the exact opposite corner of that patch of grass. Note that a^2 + b^2 = c^2 and the hypotenuse (c) is obviously the shortest path and most people take the shortest path.
Now lets talk a little about door handles. Have you ever sprained your wrist because a door handle looked like a handle you pull, yet at that door, you push it? Or even yet, a door bar that you push but the door was actually meant to be pulled? I can give you many instances of this that occur on the University at Buffalo campus and I’m sure you could give me many examples also. Mike pointed out a really surprising but believable story. Between the math building and NSC, there is a tunnel that connects both buildings together. The doors open out of this tunnel and both sides of the doors have a pull handle. Someone entered this tunnel through one door and got trapped because he couldn’t pull and didn’t try to push the door open. This is truly a bad design and it could potentially scar people who got seemingly trapped. This is very similar to people who get trapped in an elevator once and never ride them again.
Naturally, I could go on and on about bad design so I’m going to stop ranting here. I am going to leave this little tidbit for you though: as you go through the day, how often do you hit a bad design such as the door handle and blame yourself for being stupid? I know I do it quite often. Mike pointed out that it really isn’t the case that I’m stupid, but rather, the person who designed what I’m doing wasn’t really thinking critically for real life application. So the next time you hit a bad design, blame the designer, not yourself!
Tags: bad design, design, university at buffalo
Posted in Student Life
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Posted on: May 20th, 2009 by Famous Phil
After a lot of pressure, not only from Jordan but mostly everyone, FamousPhil.com now has a new, shiny look! *at least for the most part*. Sure, I could improve the navigation buttons a bit to make them look “web 2.0,” but that will come in another project down the road after I finish up the rest of this never ending to do list.
As you’ve probably noticed, over the past couple of weeks, I’ve been very tight with my blog releases after posting almost every day for one stretch there. The truth of the matter is, when I get highly involved in a site redesign, I like to spend all of my time and effort working on that redesign and forgetting about everything else. I do admit that its tough for me to get into working on a website design in the first place, but once I’m in the process of working, I generally do not like being distracted.
For me, a distraction of any kind, even that 1 second hi to a friend passing by can throw my mind off by a huge amount. To me, distractions can end up costing me a few hours (sometimes an entire day) to get my thoughts back and continue working on the problem I was focusing on at the time of the distraction. Sure, this is annoying, but I’ve learned how to slam the door and tell people not to disturb me at all unless the world is on fire when I begin such projects. Its just the way that I work I suppose.
Tags: chrome, css, design, div, firefox, internet explorer, position, positioning, problems, relative, safari, table, validation, web 2.0, website, xhtml
Posted in My Site
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