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Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Career advice part 2


My goal is to become a PHP Developer. Could someone please give me some advice as to desirable languages, frameworks, or technologies that people look for when deciding to hire a PHP (backend web developer).

These are the current languages / frameworks that I plan on learning:
JAVASCRIPT

1. jQuery
2. AJAX
3. JSON
PHP
1. PHP & MySQL
2. PHP & AJAX
3. Wordpress
4. cakePHP or Zend
Please let me know if I am learning the wrong stuff. I don't want to learn a bunch of fooey.
(ALSO, should I learn the CakePHP or Zend framework?)

Record browser type of visitor.


I need help in devising a way to record the browser type and system that visits a site. Even if the script could grab the browser type and write it to a file locally that would help tremendously. My hosting service does not offer this so I am looking for a javascript or some other script that can write this to file for me.

Thanks!

Contact, Connect, Communicate: Designing Your Contact Page

via SitePoint Blogs » Design by Jennifer Farley on 2/17/11

When a visitor comes to your site and has a look around, one action you’ll want them to take is to contact you. They may be contacting you for more information, or if they’re very impressed, to hire you for your services. All going to plan, your contact page will be something they will actively seek out on your site. So what should information should appear on your contact page and what information should you be attempting to get from your visitors through your web form?

Let’s start with the blatantly obvious. You should have a phone number and an email address on your contact page. A postal address is required if visitors want to meet with you and also to provide a sense of security that there is a real and physical address that your are operating from. Some designers place this sort of contact information in the footer of every page, as well as on the contact page. I believe in making things as easy as possible for the visitor, and if they can find what they want quickly and easily in the footer of any page they visit, that can only be a good thing.

Google and Bing maps are easy to embed on any page and certainly make it easier for potential clients to physically find you if necessary. These maps also allow you to provide driving directions from where they are to where you are and are just another small element that improves your visitor’s experience.

If you’re an online social butterfly, don’t forget to add buttons to let people know where you are on Facebook, Twitter, Gowalla or whatever your social network of choice.

When creating a form for your visitors to contact you, make sure that you are collecting all the information that YOU need from them, such as their contact details, what they are are contacting you about. Depending on what type of service you offer, you may need to add extra fields, check boxes, radio buttons or drop down menus to your contact form. For example, if someone is inquiring about the costs of your design services, you might offer a drop down box specifying logo design, web design, graphic design.

If you don’t have a contact page, you are completely missing an opportunity to engage with your visitors, and you are potentially losing clients. They are not difficult to put together, and below I’ve collected some examples to provide a bit of inspiration if you’re not sure where to start.

Paramore Redd

Paramore

Lionways

Lionways

Bert Timmermans

Berttimmermanss

Electric Pulp

ElectricPulp

Fabrica De Caricaturas

FabricaDeCaricaturas

Triangle

Triangle

Bubblesoc

Bubblesoc

Substrakt

Substrakt

Bio Bak

BioBak

Hasrimy

Hasrimy

What do you think of these contact pages?  Do you think the contact forms should be unadorned with little or no design, or do you like the contact pages with extra illustration and customization?

Form Design Made Easy with Adobe FormsCentral

via SitePoint Blogs » Design by Jennifer Farley on 2/19/11

Earlier this week, we looked at some examples of forms on Contact pages. In related news, Adobe this week announced the release of FormsCentral. It’s an online service for designing, distributing, collecting and analyzing data from HTML forms. You can create several different types of web forms and surveys including registration pages, contact forms, mailing lists and questionnaires. The forms are hosted by Adobe.

adobe-logoThe form creator is an easy to use drag and drop set-up. When creating the forms you can add text, paragraph, single choice, multiple choice, date, drop-down options, and checkboxes. There are a number of templates available and it’s probably fair to say you won’t be blown away by the basic designs, but you can customize by adding your own images and setting up your own color schemes to beautify and enhance those dull web forms.

One major feature which is missing, however, is the ability to embed the form into your own site or blog. It would be nice to have the visitors fill in the form or survey on your own site rather than being brought to a separate page, but this will possibly be addressed in future updates.

FormCreator
Once your visitors have filled in the form, you can see the data in different ways with search and smart filtering. You can look at all the responses as a whole or look at individual replies as a record view. The returned data can be shared amongst colleagues and you can decide who accesses the data and what they can do with it. If you run an online survey you can view all responses in a table format or export the data to XLS, CSV and other formats. You can add additional columns and formulas to your response table to help you analyze your form data.

FormsCentral has three pricing levels:

  • Free (one online form or survey and get up to 50 responses)
  • Basic for $14.00/month (five forms or surveys 500 responses per form)
  • Plus for $199/year (unlimited forms or surveys and 5,000 responses per form)

Have you tried other HTML form building services? Which ones would you recommend?

Design Festival: 5 Questions Every Logo Designer Should Ask

via SitePoint Blogs » Design by Jennifer Farley on 2/25/11

Before a designer goes on to create a logo, there are two basic questions that need to be answered: Who is the client? and, who is the audience? In this article Jennifer will examine which questions to ask in order to better understand your client and the work at hand.

Read more over at Design Festival.

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