Archive for April, 2009

Tech Tips: How to fix fuzzy pixels in Flex

What are fuzzy pixels? Semi-transparent lines that appear on the edges of your Sprites that make them appear fuzzy or blurry. This is the result of positioning a custom drawn Sprite (using the graphics property) on non-whole number pixels (for example myObject.x = 1.5).

Your probably wondering why anyone would set a Sprite to an decimal number of pixels? Well, most of the time this occurs when the positioning is based off of a mathematical equation. For example: myObject.x = this.width / 2. This would produce 50.5 if the width of the container is 101. One of the biggest problems with this is that the fuzzy pixel problem has a waterfall effect. Everything contained within that sprite placed at a decimal number position will have semi-transparent edges. Another reason would be designers that set positioning of items to half pixels in Photoshop and attempting to reproduce the design pixel perfect in Flex.
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Filed under Technology

Staying true to the integrity of the design

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Friday afternoon I had a chance to sit down with Fallon’s Chris Wiggins, Creative Director and Brenda Fogg, Interactive Producer and talk about Skimmer. While I skim through the copious notes about advertising and design, I just had to share a few choice quotes from the interview. Besides, it’s Monday and I know I could use some motivation.

Anyway, it’s kind of nice when you can get partners to offer up these kinds of soundbites just by asking them, “So what was it like to work with the nerds?”

“Oh,” Fogg said. “I have a huge nerd crush now.”
“Obviously we couldn’t have done this without Sierra Bravo,” Wiggins said and turned to Mike Woods, who worked as the SDM on the Skimmer project. “I just want to run up and hug you. I can’t say enough about the team that came together to make this happen.”

One of the things Wiggins was most impressed by was the care taken with Skimmer’s design.
“From the very first briefing, every person had an understanding about how important the design of Skimmer was to us,” he said. “Not a single time was there ever a frustration on our end that you were falling short there. You could very easily tell how hard they [the nerds] were working on staying true to the integrity of the design and creative side of it.”

Filed under Agency Partner

Friday Links: Some work, some play, all good

Filed under Links

Profiles in Nerdery: Thomas Bishop, DJ and data miner

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  • Astrological Sign: Aries, adventurous, energetic, quick-witted, accurate enough.
  • Time at the Nerdery: 7 months.
  • Area of expertise: Leading projects as a programmer and creating complex algorithms. I absolutely LOVE data mining (ex. clustering).
  • When people ask you what you do, how do you respond: My passion lies in planning and creating solutions to complex questions, whether it deals with programming, shooting an independent film, or DJing at a party.
  • Favorite kinds of projects to work on: Those that deal with analyzing and restructuring large amounts of data. I love working with seemingly useless data and transforming it into extremely wealthy results. Sounds boring but it’s awesome. Specifically, working with thousands of records of individual’s music collections to create amazing marketing worthy results.
  • What one thing about The Nerdery surprises people the most when you tell them about it: How relaxed it is: the dogs, flex time, casual dress, and freedom of project interest.
  • Seven dream Jeopardy Categories: 1. Chess Tactics; 2. Warcraft III; 3. Lovecraftian Mythos; 4. Things That Do Not Work in IE6; 5. Sub-genres of Electronic Music; 6. Japanese Horror Films; and 7. The Subconscious of Thomas Bishop
  • Favorite Fictional Nerd: Mouse from The Matrix.
  • According to the Wikipedia entry on Nerd, some nerds show a pronounced interest in subjects which others tend to find dull or complex and difficult to comprehend, or overly mature for their age, especially topics related to science, disambiguation, mathematics and technology. Do you know what disambiguation is: Of course I do.

Students Today Leaders Forever like jet fuel at Overnight Website Challenge

BEFORE
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It doesn’t take a web nerd or a design whiz to look at the old site for Student Today Leaders Forever (STLF) and see that this Minnesota nonprofit’s online presence could use a bit of freshening up.

“We had some pretty serious problems with the old website that had really compounded over the past year or so,” Brian Peterson, STLF Co-Executive Director and Director of Operations and Finance, said. “It was a site built on Dreamweaver and none of us had ever received any type of training. The Dreamweaver for Dummies book definitely carried us through, but as our organization grew, the importance of a website to keep it all connected and to engage people in the organization became a high priority – a necessity.”

Peterson said the new website provided by Pollywog Stew is going to make a world of difference for his organization.

“It’s hard to describe how much this means to us and how much we appreciate the work of Pollywog Stew and Sierra Bravo for making this happen,” he said.

AFTER
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The admiration Peterson has for his web challenge team, Pollywog Stew, matches the admiration the team has for STLF. Pollywog Stew was a team was made up for volunteers from Sierra Bravo, Zeus Jones, and the Minnesota Institute of Arts, and they drew a lot of inspiration from their nonprofit.

“The passion and energy of Nick and Brian from STLF was like jet fuel for Pollywog Stew during the overnight website challenge,” Tom O’Neill VP of Development at Sierra Bravo and Pollywog Stew member said. “It’s no surprise that their organization is so strong with such powerful leadership.”

But it wasn’t just the leadership of STLF that impressed O’Neill. He was also amazed by the dedication of the students themselves.

“The commitment of the STLF volunteers blew me away,” O’Neill said. “When we requested subjects for testimonial videos at midnight a dozen excited members appeared within minutes to help. I am truly inspired by STLF.”

Which only seems fitting, considering the new site that Pollywog Stew will be responsible for inspiring and organizing young people across the country.

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“I know there are thousands of young people who are excited and appreciate this beyond words,” Peterson said. “The new site solves all of the problems we had and adds a whole lot more than we could have imagined. As an organization lead by and consisting of young people, it is of utmost importance for us to have the ability to engage and connect people through technology. This website is a critical component of that and provides an entirely new identity and level of credibility for the organization. Not only will this help to engage students, it will help to gain the credibility and respect needed for parents, community members, and donors to trust and support the organization.”

While Peterson had a lot of great things to say about his new and improved website, and his challenge team, he saved his highest praise for the Overnight Web Challenge event itself:
“This is the coolest and best ways for a tech company to give back to the community,” he said. “The creativity and energy put forth in making this event happen and making it possible for nonprofits to have new websites was incredibly impressive and showed a lot about the character and personality of the company. The amount of time, energy, and money they put into this I think says a great deal about the company’s genuine interest in making a difference in this community.”

On the creation of iMapWeather

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About nine months ago the Balcom Agency’s Chip Hanna, Interactive Account Director and Brian Blankenship, Interactive Creative Director were given a problem to solve.

“We actually had an existing relationship with one of the guys at Weather Design Technologies,” Hanna said. “He told us about this product they had that was really cool, but that they were missing the mark on how to bring it to consumers.”

Once they were given the problem, Hanna and Blankenship spent some time thinking about the challenge and then holed themselves up in a Starbucks. After many, many cups of coffee, the idea for iMapWeather was born.

“After all that coffee, we finally thought about making a social version,” Hanna said. “We didn’t want to create another social network or do what every one else was doing. They all own their markets. But here’s a different way to look at what’s going on, a way for people to connect through the weather. There’s nowhere else that you can share pictures, videos, and short messages that’s just focused on the weather.”

When Hanna and Blankenship had a concept they set to work on the design and turned to the nerds at Sierra Bravo to help them implement their idea.

“Sierra Bravo helped us get our ideas more focused and get them on paper,” Hanna said. “They’ve been able to find a lot of areas where we can be more efficient, and offered great solutions on how to serve the weather data better. They’ve been a big help with the planning and then implementing every single bit of it.”

And though the nerds were all about helping implement this brilliant idea, the great design of the site sprung from the head of Blankenship.

“I have to say, I got a lot of inspiration from Obama’s site. I’m not exactly sure why, but this was while the debates were going on,” Blankenship said. “His site was so much better than anything out there, and they were doing a better job than anyone else on the social aspect.”

Blankenship said he really is proud of how the social aspect of iMapWeather, especially things like the embedded map (soon you’ll be able to adjust the map’s size) that you can grab and put on your website. Design-wise really digs the sprouts

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He also really likes the “sprouts” (the orange pluses) that sprout out different icons as you mouse over them to indicate the kinds of content that has been shared about that location.

“One of the things I think is pretty cool is the background,” Blankenship said. “It autodetects what the weather is like in the visitor’s area and reflects the weather and time of day. We thought it would be difficult to do, but Ben [Dolmar, a Programmer/Analyst at Sierra Bravo] made it work.”

This is the second part of a three part series on iMapWeather. Part 1 is here. Part 3 will focus on some of the challenges the project faced and how iMapWeather brings geo-targeting ads to a whole new level.

Filed under Agency Partner

Skimmer on WCCO

WCCO ran a story about Skimmer on the news last night. Sadly, I can’t embed it here. But you can go watch the video on their site.

Friday Links: Three stories you should be paying attention to

We’ve had so much going at The Nerdery we haven’t posted any Friday Links. We’re still pretty busy, but there have been a few stories popping up that really deserve your attention:

  • If you have not been following the fall-out from Tropicana’s new packaging, you’re missing out. The new packaging is being blamed for 20% drop in Tropicana sales. It’s a study in consumer behavior and brand loyalty.
  • Today’s Future Tense, talks about how the Internet has “shattered” advertising, by giving consumers a new way to gather information on goods and services. It’s a thought-provoking listen and well worth a couple of your minutes.
  • And finally, it appears as though Google is in talks to buy Twitter. Wowee! There’s never a dull moment, is there?
Filed under Links

Profiles in Nerdery: Jeff Klawiter, .NET ninja

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Before we get started you should know Jeff is going to be speaking on April 4, 2009 (that’s Saturday, folks) at Twin Cities Code Camp. Jeff will be talking about Increasing Your Productivity with Visual Studio. Jeff will also be speaking May 14th at the Twin Cities Languages User Group on Small Basic.

Now, on with the show.

  • Astrological Sign: Virgo and for some reason I tend to date Scorpio’s which are my worst match.
  • Time at the Nerdery: 4 years, 2 months, 21 days since Jan 3rd 2005 (I’m an old fart)
  • Area of expertise: If you asked any new programmers at Sierra Bravo they would say .NET, which is a large area itself. I could be considered an expert in .NET Compact Framework, WinForms and ASP.NET. Before being a .NET developer I worked for 6 years as a PHP developer which is how I started my career at Sierra Bravo. I’m also well versed in Linux and Windows administration and ran my own computer repair business for a while too.
  • When people ask you what you do, how do you respond: I talk too much covering all the different things I do. Then I shut up and try to elaborate upon the cool things like vending machines that order themselves full. See Mark Seeman’s response for more detail.
  • Favorite kinds of projects to work on: It changes, these days I’m really digging working with Rich Interactive Apps in Silverlight or on Surface. Normally I enjoy working on behind the scenes projects like tweaking a custom TCP protocol client or doing fancy things mining data from various sources.
  • What one thing about The Nerdery surprises people the most when you tell them about it: I had some family over recently that were surprised we got any work done with all the toys laying around.
  • Seven dream Jeopardy Categories: 1. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles; 2. RPG Video Games; 3. Astrophysics; 4. Anime; 5. Obscure Metal Bands; 6. Maple Syrup; and 7. Polish Cuisine.
  • Favorite Fictional Nerd: Donatello, even the smart one can kick some ass.
  • According to the Wikipedia entry on Nerd, some nerds show a pronounced interest in subjects which others tend to find dull or complex and difficult to comprehend, or overly mature for their age, especially topics related to science, disambiguation, mathematics and technology. Do you know what disambiguation is: Yes I do; The process of separating specific items out of a common term or group (yes, that’s my totally made up, trying to sound like a dictionary response).

YEA Corps gets pie in the sky from Overnight Website Challenge

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“My team finished in 23:30 minutes — under budget,” Mary Helen Franze, the Founder and Executive Director of YEA Corps, said. “They totally nailed it. I got pie in the sky. There was not one thing I didn’t get.”

Franze and her organization, YEA Corps was one of the twelve lucky Minnesota nonprofits who won a new website during this year’s Overnight Website Challenge. On the morning of February 28th, 2009 Franze was teamed up with The Mighty Polymorphin Power Rangers: Extra Awesome to build the YEA Corps website from scratch.

There was nothing to redesign, no content to plan around, YEA Corps was starting fresh. In fact, it was only a matter of months since the nonprofit started. “Building a nonprofit from scratch at the speed of light in three months is really quite amazing,” Franze said.

Franze chalks it up to cosmic synergy

Finally starting the nonprofit after years of research, electing a board, and getting chosen for the web challenge, all synergy. “The credibility of the judges and the professionalism of the people at Sierra Bravo really was, to me, the world saying, ‘yes, this is it.’”

With a background in business and marketing, Franze fully understood the importance a good website would have in her brand-new nonprofit. She also knew that quality might come at a high price.

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“A first impression is a lasting impression,” Franze said. “Getting a professional website free just brought me to my knees.”

Franze described her experience at the web challenge as both trying and fun. “I have honestly never had so much information come into my head in a twenty-four hour period,” she said. “I can’t say enough about these people I worked with. Most of the guys on my team were Sierra Bravo people, and they kept telling me that this doesn’t end today. ‘We’re going to help you.’ I might be the webmaster, but they’re going to be my help desk.”

David Simmer, one of the non-Sierra Bravo volunteers on Franze’s team, designed card and letterhead for YEA Corps. “He did all this design work pro-bono,” she said. “We’re so set now, I don’t even know what we’re going to do.”

What they’re going to do is empower youth to implement their ideas through community connections for job preparation by offering youth an entrepreneurial experience through projects they conceive and image providing framework, material, and training to execute youth-generated enterprises.

Franze who is excited to get the ball rolling with her new website and nonprofit is just as excited by her whole Overnight Web Challenge experience.

“I can’t say enough about the fact that Sierra Bravo has identified a need in the community that most people don’t recognize,” she said. “Most nonprofits are just working hard to get their pennies in, they don’t think about the ROI of a website because they can’t. That you [Sierra Bravo] have given this gift of a website, is beyond the call of duty of any tech company. It’s going to create more movements than you know and trickle down to the good of society.”

“Plus,” she said, “You were fun every step of the way and so professional.”