Posts Tagged ‘mootools’

50 Free Tools and Apps for Web Designers and Developers

Over the past year or so I have bookmarked hundreds of various tools and resources covering all aspects of web & mobile development – There are tools that will improve your work-flow, resources that will clean and validate code, apps that will allow you to collaborate with any number of colleagues, bookmarklets that let you create mockups within your browser, productivity checklists, sites that will track and keep a watchful eye on your sites… and on … and on.

So, having all of these amazing bookmarks, I thought I would share my 50 favorites with you.

I have split the article into the following sub-categories for easier browsing: General Web Development Tools, Web Typography Apps, Browser Tools, Web Site Analysis Apps and, finally, Productivity Apps & Tools.
The apps also don’t include frameworks, Javascript plugins nor template tools, they are all strictly small tools that can help with your development productivity.

Compiling an article about my favorite free web development apps from the past year or so, as you can imagine, was not an easy task, and the chances are that I may have missed a few, so why don’t you tell us about your favorite free development apps within the comment section below. You never know we might collate enough for a part 2 of this post!

ProCSSor – Advanced CSS Prettifier

ProCSSor - Advanced CSS Prettifier
ProCSSor is a useful tool that will 'prettify' and format CSS files on the fly.
ProCSSor – Advanced CSS Prettifier →

ScriptSrc.net

ScriptSrc.net
Tired of hunting down the script tag for the latest version of your Javascript Library of choice? ScriptSrc allows you to copy the latest library (jQuery, MooTools, YUI…) script tags.
ScriptSrc.net →

HTMLform.com

HTMLform.com
With HTMLform.com all you have to do is design your HTML form and you will get a Zip file that can be very easy installed in your website, with everything needed to make it work: a form that can be embedded in any webpage, a small but very potent database to suit your needs, a tool for checking data online and a button for exporting to CSV and Excel formats.
HTMLform.com →

Spritebox

Spritebox
Spritebox is a WYSIWYG tool to quickly and easily create CSS classes and IDs from a single sprite image.
Spritebox →

HTML Purifier

HTML Purifier
HTML Purifier is a standards-compliant HTML filter library written in PHP. It will not only remove all malicious code (better known as XSS) with a thoroughly audited, secure yet permissive whitelist, it will also make sure your documents are standards compliant.
HTML Purifier →

Tiny Fluid Grid

Tiny Fluid Grid
Tiny Fluid Grid is a super-simple CSS grid framework generator, inspired by the 1kb Grid, that ships with an index.html with demo code, and the grid.css containing the CSS for the grid you created.
Tiny Fluid Grid →

TABLEIZER!

TABLEIZER!
TABLEIZER! is a quick tool for creating HTML tables from spreadsheet data.
TABLEIZER! →

Try Ruby! (in your browser)

Try Ruby! (in your browser)
If you haven't as yet tried Ruby, with Try Ruby! you can take the quick and painless Ruby tutorial and then test your knowledge directly in your browser.
Try Ruby! (in your browser) →

Plupload

Plupload
Plupload allows you to upload files using HTML5 Gears, Silverlight, Flash, BrowserPlus or normal forms, providing some unique features such as upload progress, image resizing and batch uploads.
Plupload →

Favigen: Favicon Generator

Favigen: Favicon Generator
Favigen: Favicon Generator →

Super Conversion Button

Super Conversion Button
A call-to-action is one of the most important parts of any web page, displaying the primary action you want people to take. With this simple tool you can create a beautiful, effective call-to-action button in seconds
Super Conversion Button →

Subfolio

Subfolio
Subfolio is made for creative types to share their work online with speed and elegance – publicly or privately. It’s good for freelancers, studios, agencies, enterprise or even the classroom.
Subfolio →

jsFiddle

jsFiddle
JsFiddle is a playground for web developers, a tool which may be used in many ways. One can use it as an online editor for snippets build from HTML, CSS and JavaScript. The code can then be shared with others, embedded on a blog, etc.
jsFiddle →

A/B Split Testing Calculator

A/B Split Testing Calculator
A/B Split Testing Calculator →

Frame Box – Lightweight online tool for creating mockups

Frame Box - Lightweight online tool for creating mockups
Frame Box does not have an extensive list of features (like the web based apps above). You can drag and drop, re-size and copy/paste the UI units, but its main focus, and why we like it so much, is that it allows you to create your mockup/prototype very, very quickly
Frame Box – Lightweight online tool for creating mockups →

App Inventor for Android

App Inventor for Android
To use the Android App Inventor, you do not need to be a professional developer, instead of writing code, you visually design the way the app looks and use blocks to specify the app's behavior.
App Inventor for Android →

HTML-Ipsum

HTML-Ipsum
HTML Ipsum is a great tool that gives you lorem ipsum snippets with HTML markup to help test your CSS.
HTML-Ipsum →

CSS3 Button Maker

CSS3 Button Maker
CSS3 Button Maker →

CSS3 Click Chart by Impressive Webs

CSS3 Click Chart by Impressive Webs
Each examples on the CSS3 Click Chart visually displays the CSS3 feature, with a clickable heading that opens a box at the bottom of the page for information on that particular feature.
CSS3 Click Chart by Impressive Webs →

CSS3 Generator

CSS3 Generator
CSS3 Generator is a useful tool that generates the CSS3 properties for the likes of @fontface, border-radius, multi-column
CSS3 Generator →

CSS3 Menu

CSS3 Menu
You can build a cool rounded navigation menu, with no images and no Javascript, and effectively make use of the new CSS3 properties border-radius and animation. This menu works perfectly well with Firefox, Opera, Chrome and Safari. The drop-down also works on non-CSS3 compatible browsers such as IE7+, but the rounded corners and shadow will not be rendered.
CSS3 Menu →

0to255

0to255
0to255 is a simple tool that helps web designers find lighter and darker colors based on any color.
0to255 →

Wordmark

Wordmark
Wordmark is a tool that allows you to preview any word with the fonts already installed on your computer.
Wordmark →

Awesome Fontstacks

Awesome Fontstacks
With Awesome Fontstacks you can create bundles of matching, free web fonts, with fail-safe font stacks to back them up.
Awesome Fontstacks →

Google Font Directory

Google Font Directory
With the Google Font Directory you can browse all available fonts, learn about the font designers who created them, and then copy the code required to use them directly on your web page.
Google Font Directory →

Fillerati – Faux Latin is a Dead Language

Fillerati - Faux Latin is a Dead Language
If you are tired of using Lorem Ipsum, then Fillerati is for you. You can choose text from the authors Jules Verne, H.G. Wells, Lewis Carroll, L. Frank Baum, Edgar Rice Burroughs or Lewis Carroll.
Fillerati – Faux Latin is a Dead Language →

Wirify: The Web as Wireframes

Wirify: The Web as Wireframes
Wirify is a simple bookmarklet that will turn any web page into a wireframe mockup with only one click.
Wirify: The Web as Wireframes →

maki

maki
Just drag the maki bookmarklet to your toolbar, go to a page where you're working on the HTML/CSS, and click the bookmark. You'll then be directed to a version of your site where you can upload the mock-up image, adjust the transparency of the overlay, and reload your changes seamlessly.
maki →

Browize – Online Browser Resizer

Browize - Online Browser Resizer
Browize – Online Browser Resizer →

The HTML5 Test

The HTML5 Test
The HTML5 test – how well does your browser support HTML5? This tool will let you know.
The HTML5 Test →

Support Details

Support Details
Support Details →

resizeMyBrowser

resizeMyBrowser
resizeMyBrowser →

iPad Peek

iPad Peek
iPad Peek is a handy app that allows you to view how any website will be rendered on the iPad.
iPad Peek →

Moniitor BETA

Moniitor BETA
Moniitor is a FREE website stat monitoring tool, it will allow you to monitor multiple sites and check for stats such as Pagerank, Alexa Rank, Feedburner Subscribers, Twitter mentions and more…
Moniitor BETA →

Uptime Robot

Uptime Robot
Uptime Robot monitors your websites by pinging your site every 5 minutes and alerts you if your sites are down.
Uptime Robot →

WooRank

WooRank
WooRank →

Clue

Clue
Clue is a tiny app, from ZURB, that allows you to test your web pages so that you can find out exactly what parts are memorable and will potentially stick in the minds of your users.
Clue →

Wridea.com

Wridea.com
Wridea is a free tool that stores your ideas, allows you to manage and organize them, collaborate with your friends and colleagues over your ideas, etc. It provides you with all necessary tools and services for organizing your ideas.
Wridea.com →

Domainr

Domainr
When you want a short URL or something big, Domainr will find it, fast and helps you explore the entire domain name space beyond the ubiquitous—and crowded—.com, .net and .org. Inspired by jish.nu, burri.to and del.icio.us.
Domainr →

Thoughtboxes

Thoughtboxes
Thoughtboxes is a simple tool that helps to organize your thoughts so you can make things happen.
Thoughtboxes →

Create Free Privacy Policy

Create Free Privacy Policy
With GeneratePrivacyPolicy.com you can create professional privacy policies agreements tailored specifically to your website or your business.
Create Free Privacy Policy →

Recurse

Recurse
Recurse is a simple solution to show clients your spiffy new design. By emulating a website with multiple flat images clients will have a better idea of what the composition will look like ‘in the wild’.
Recurse →

Launchlist

Launchlist
Launchlist is cool tool to help and encourage web designers and developers to check their work before exposing it to the world at large by going through an essential list of web development requirements. When you click 'Submit Report' you will be either given a 'Go For Launch' or, if issues found, 'Not Advisable'.
Launchlist →

TitanPad

TitanPad
TitanPad is the simplest of tools that allows you to collaborate on a document simultaneously. You can either create a 'public' pad or you can create a 'private' pad for your team with a custom URL.
TitanPad →

CeeVee

CeeVee
Not only specific for developers, CeeVee allows you to create a themed professional resume, giving you the option to make it either public or private.
CeeVee →

Billable

Billable
If you don't likes the tedious task of invoicing, then you will love Billable. It really doesn't get any simpler than this.
Billable →

Bounce

Bounce
Bounce is a tiny app that allows anyone to give feedback on the design of any given webpage.
Bounce →

TinEye Reverse Image Search

TinEye Reverse Image Search
TinEye is a reverse image search engine. It finds out where an image came from, how it is being used, if modified versions of the image exist, or if there is a higher resolution version.
TinEye Reverse Image Search →

CopyPasteCharacter.com

CopyPasteCharacter.com
CopyPasteCharacter is a very useful tool for copying & pasting those impossible to remember HTML entities.
CopyPasteCharacter.com →

NounProject

NounProject
The Noun Project collects, organizes and adds to the highly recognizable symbols that form the world's visual language. The symbols can be downloaded completely free.
NounProject →

You might also like…

A Review of Web Design Trends from 2010 →
The Trend of Minimalist Graphic Design →
How To Control Flow Within Your Web Designs →
Accessibility Principles for the Modern Designer →
Professional Structure and Documentation in Web Design →
Clear Your Mind to Focus on What Matters →
What the Future of Cloud Computing means for Web Designers →
Beginners Guide to Using the Power of Color in Web Design →
Understanding and the Meaning of Color Within Design →


45 Free eBooks for Developers and Designers

Over the past year or so we have published several articles featuring a selection of the best free ebooks for web designers, with each post proving very popular and highly resourceful. Sadly, since then some of the fantastic ebooks we previously featured are no longer available or are no longer been offered as a freebie. But looking on the positive side many new web design ebooks have been released and, as you will see within this post, there are also a few ebooks, recommended by our readers, which we missed in those previous articles.

Just as we did with the previous posts we have not offered a critique of each book only a description of the content, as we feel that if someone spends so much valuable time writing an entire specialized book and then offer it for free, in our eyes they deserve only praise and appreciation.

All of the 45 books in this post are completely FREE and can be either downloaded in digital format (PDF) or viewed as a web page (HTML).

Introduction to Good Usability by Peter Pixel

Introduction to Good Usability by Peter PixelThis guide is especially handy if you haven’t done a lot of webdesign yet or if you are involved in webdesign but don’t do any of the real work. I hope to shed some light on some common interface elements and mistakes people often make with them.
A lot of books have been written in the past but the threshold for reading them, especially if you have never built a site, is quite big, hence this short guide. This is by no means a complete guide or solid set of rules, but it is definitely a good start.
Introduction to Good Usability →PDF →

Web Accessibility Checklist by Aaron Cannon

Web Accessibility Checklist by Aaron CannonWritten by Aaron Cannon, blind web developer and accessibility consultant.Aaron explains in his article “The Accessibility Checklist I Vowed I’d Never Write”, that the problems with a “simple checklist that, when followed, will give you an accessible site without fail.” No such checklist exists or likely ever will. He believes that this list is not the perfect solution, nor is it the only solution, but believes it is a good first step, and it gives our developers and designers a place to start from.
Web Accessibility Checklist →PDF →

CSS Systems For Writing Maintainable CSS by Natalie Downe

CSS Systems For Writing Maintainable CSS by Natalie DowneA CSS System is a reusable set of content-oriented markup patterns and associated CSS created to express a site's individual design. It is the end result of a process that emphasizes up-front planning, loose coupling between CSS and markup, pre-empting browser bugs and overall robustness. It also incorporates a shared vocabulary for developers to communicate the intent of the code.
This ebook elaborates on this concept, and also describes a number of tricks used to preempt maintainability issues.
CSS Systems For Writing Maintainable CSS →PDF →

Better CSS Font Stacks by Nathan Ford

Better CSS Font Stacks by Nathan FordBetter CSS Font Stacks →PDF →

Faster, and More Secure Webfonts by Bram Pitoyo

Faster, and More Secure Webfonts by Bram PitoyoFont embedding for the web is a great step in making the web look better and become more functional, but what about security and load times?
Bram Pitoyo’s ebook takes the top layer off font embedding and shows us how things work, and ultimately how to improve performance and make it more secure.
Faster, and More Secure Webfonts →PDF →

Designing for the Web by Mark Boulton

Designing for the Web
A Practical Guide to Designing for the Web aims to teach you techniques for designing your website using the principles of graphic design.
Featuring five sections, each covering a core aspect of graphic design: Getting Started, Research, Typography, Colour, and Layout. Learn solid graphic design theory that you can simply apply to your designs, making the difference from a good design to a great one.
Designing for the Web →HTML Version →

Building iPhone Apps with HTML, CSS, and JavaScript by Jonathan Stark

Building iPhone Apps with HTML, CSS, and JavaScript
If you know HTML, CSS, and JavaScript, you already have what you need to develop your own iPhone apps. With this book, you’ll learn how to use these open source web technologies to design and build apps for both the iPhone and iPod Touch.
Building iPhone Apps with HTML, CSS, and JavaScript →

UX Storytellers – Connecting the Dots

UX Storytellers - Connecting the Dots
UX Storytellers – Connecting the Dots →Google Docs →Scribd →

Essential JavaScript And jQuery Design Patterns by Addy Osmani

Essential JavaScript And jQuery Design Patterns
Design patterns are reusable solutions to commonly occurring problems in software development and are a very useful tool to have at your disposal. Addy Osmani wrote this mini-book because he felt that patterns were an area a lot of new and intermediate JavaScript developers may not have had a chance to explore just yet and I’m hopeful my book will encourage you to check them out as they can be quite powerful.
Essential JavaScript And jQuery Design Patterns →

20 Things I learned about Browsers and the Web

20 Things I learned about Browsers and the Web
Essential JavaScript And jQuery Design Patterns →

Taking Your Talent to the Web by Jeffrey Zeldman

Taking Your Talent to the Web
This book was originally written in 2001 for print designers whose clients want websites, print art directors who’d like to move into full–time web and interaction design, homepage creators who are ready to turn pro, and professionals who seek to deepen their web skills and understanding.
The dot-com crash killed this book. Now it lives again. While browser references and modem speeds may reek of 2001, much of the advice about transitioning to the web still holds true.
Taking Your Talent to the Web →PDF →

Dive Into HTML 5 by Mark Pilgrim

Dive Into HTML 5
Dive Into HTML 5 is an ongoing book that seeks to elaborate on a hand-picked Selection of features from the HTML5 specification and other fine Standards. The final manuscript will be eventually published on paper by O’Reilly, under the Google Press imprint.
Dive Into HTML 5 →HTML Version →

jQuery Fundamentals

jQuery Fundamentals
The purpose of this book is to provide an overview of the jQuery JavaScript library; when you're done with the book, you should be able to complete basic tasks using jQuery, and have a solid basis from which to continue your learning. This book was designed as material to be used in a classroom setting, but you may find it useful for individual study.
jQuery Fundamentals →HTML Version →

Data Structures and Algorithms

Data Structures and Algorithms
Put simply this book is the result of a series of emails sent back and forth between the two authors during the development of a library for the .NET framework of the same name. The conversation started of something like "Why don't we create a more aesthetically pleasing way to present our pseudocode?" After a few weeks this new presentation style had in fact grown into pseudocode listings with chunks of text describing how the data structure or algorithm in question works and various other things about it. At this point we thought, "What the
heck, let's make this thing into a book!"
Data Structures and Algorithms →PDF →

Design Your Imagination

Design Your Imagination
Design Your Imagination is a one stop resource for the beginners and learners of website design. Though this e-book is mainly targeted for the beginners of website design, it might prove helpful for the experienced web designers as well. This free web design e-book is clearly divided into 28 chapters and in each chapter a specific topic is illustrated with ample examples. The language is as lucid as possible and proper care has been taken to keep intact the flow of writing.
Design Your Imagination →PDF →

Building Android Apps with HTML, CSS, and JavaScript

Building Android Apps with HTML, CSS, and JavaScript
Device-agnostic mobile apps are the wave of the future, and this book shows you how to create one product that can be used on several mobile operating systems. You'll find guidelines for using the free PhoneGap framework to converty our product into a native Android app. And you'll learn why releasing your product as a web app first helps you find, fix, and test bugs much faster than if you went straight to the Android Market with a product built with the official Android SDK.
Building Android Apps with HTML, CSS, and JavaScript →HTML Version →

The Web Book

The Web Book
The Web Book contains all the information you need to create a Web site from scratch. It covers everything from registering a domain name and renting some hosting space, to creating your first HTML page, to building full online database applications with PHP and MySQL. It also tells you how to market and promote your site, and how to make money from it.
The Web Book →PDF →

Building Accessible Websites

Building Accessible Websites
Building Accessible Websites →HTML Version →

The Elements of Typographic Style Applied to the Web (HTML)

The Elements of Typographic Style Applied to the Web
For too long typographic style and its accompanying attention to detail have been overlooked by website designers, particularly in body copy. In years gone by this could have been put down to the technology, but now the web has caught up. The advent of much improved browsers, text rendering and high resolution screens, combine to negate technology as an excuse.
In order to allay some of the myths surrounding typography on the web, this website/book has been structured to step through Bringhurst’s working principles, explaining how to accomplish each using techniques available in HTML and CSS. The future is considered with coverage of CSS3, and practicality is ever present with workarounds, alternatives and compromises for less able browsers.
The Elements of Typographic Style (Full HTML) →Chapters →

Integrating Accessibility Throughout Design (HTML)

Integrating Accessibility Throughout Design
The Web is providing unprecedented access to information and interaction for people with disabilities. It provides opportunities to participate in society in ways otherwise not available. With accessible websites, people with disabilities can do ordinary things: children can learn, teenagers can flirt, adults can make a living, seniors can read about their grandchildren, and so on.
With the Web, people with disabilities can do more things themselves, without having to rely on others. People who are blind can read the newspaper (through screen readers that read aloud text from the computer), and so can people with cognitive disabilities who have trouble processing written information. People who are deaf can get up-to-the-minute news that was previously available only to those who could hear radio or TV, and so can people who are blind and deaf (through dynamic Braille displays). Web accessibility is about removing those barriers so that people with disabilities can use and contribute to the Web.
This book helps you improve your products—websites, software, hardware, and consumer products—to remove accessibility barriers and avoid adding new barriers. One guiding principle is: just ask people with disabilities.
Integrating Accessibility Throughout Design: HTML version →Table of Contents →

Getting Real: The Book by 37signals (HTML)

Getting Real: The Book by 37signals
Want to build a successful web app? Then it's time to Get Real. Getting Real is a smaller, faster, better way to build software.
Getting Real delivers better results because it forces you to deal with the actual problems you're trying to solve instead of your ideas about those problems. It forces you to deal with reality.
Getting Real foregoes functional specs and other transitory documentation in favor of building real screens. A functional spec is make-believe, an illusion of agreement, while an actual web page is reality. That's what your customers are going to see and use. That's what matters. Getting Real gets you there faster. And that means you're making software decisions based on the real thing instead of abstract notions.
Finally, Getting Real is an approach ideally suited to web-based software. The old school model of shipping software in a box and then waiting a year or two to deliver an update is fading away. Unlike installed software, web apps can constantly evolve on a day-to-day basis. Getting Real leverages this advantage for all its worth.
Getting Real: HTML Version →Chapters →

Access by Design Online (HTML)

Access by Design Online
We design Web sites so people can use them. People doesn’t mean “some people” or “certain people.” With universal usability, our goal is to design Web sites that accommodate the diversity of people and the Web browsing devices that they use. To design Web sites that people can use, we must work within the flexible framework that the Web provides.
To this end, we must begin our process with a solid understanding of how the Web works. When we know its nature, we can make intelligent design decisions that uphold rather than impede its functionality. Whenever we face a decision that may impact function, we must look for other options.
Access by Design Online: HTML Version →Table of Contents →

Research-Based Web Design & Usability Guidelines (PDF)

Research-Based Web Design & Usability Guidelines
The Research-Based Web Design & Usability Guidelines (Guidelines) were developed by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), in partnership with the U.S. General Services Administration.
The Guidelines were developed to assist those involved in the creation of Web sites to base their decisions on the most current and best available evidence. The Guidelines are particularly relevant to the design of information-oriented sites, but can be applied across the wide spectrum of Web sites.
Research-Based Web Design & Usability Guidelines(PDF) →

Search User Interfaces (HTML)

Search User Interfaces
This book outlines the human side of the information seeking process, and focuses on the aspects of this process that can best be supported by the user interface. It describes the methods behind user interface design generally, and search interface design in particular, with an emphasis on how best to evaluate search interfaces. It discusses research results and current practices surrounding user interfaces for query specification, display of retrieval results, grouping retrieval results, navigation of information collections, query reformulation, search personalization, and the broader tasks of sensemaking and text analysis. Much of the discussion pertains to Web search engines, but the book also covers the special considerations surrounding search of other information collections.
Search User Interfaces: HTML Version →Search User Interfaces: Table of Contents →

Dive Into Accessibility (HTML & PDF)

Dive Into Accessibility
This book is entitled "Dive Into Accessibility: 30 days to a more accessible web site", and it will answer two questions. The first question is "Why should I make my web site more accessible?" If you do not have a web site, this book is not for you. The second question is "How can I make my web site more accessible?" If you are not convinced by the first answer, you will not be interested in the second.
To answer the second question,the book presents 25 tips that you can immediately apply to your own web site to make it more accessible. Although these concepts apply to all web sites, the focus is on implementation using popular weblogging tools. If you use some other publishing tool or template system, you will need to determine how to implement the tips in your tool of choice.
HTML Version →PDF Version →Chapters →

Web Style Guide: Basic Design Principles for Creating Web Sites – 3rd Edition (HTML)

Web Style Guide: Basic Design Principles for Creating Web Sites - 3rd Edition
Written by Patrick J. Lynch and Sarah Horton for web site designers in corporations, government, nonprofit organizations, and academic institutions, the book explains established design principles and covers all aspects of web design—from planning to production to maintenance. The guide also shows how these principles apply in web design projects whose primary concerns are information design, interface design, and efficient search and navigation.
Web Style Guide 3rd Edition: HTML Version →Chapters →

The Woork Handbook (PDF)

The Woork Handbook
The Woork Handbook is a free eBook about CSS, HTML, Ajax, web programming, Mootools, Scriptaculous and other topics about web design.
This book is a miscellanea of articles written by Antonio Lupetti on his web design blogr. During the period form January to December 2008 “Woork” has been visited from over 4 millions visitors and has received a lot of requests to distribute a printable version of its contents.
The Woork Handbook: PDF Version →

Web Designers Success Guide (PDF)

Web Designers Success Guide
Web Designer's Success Guide is the definitive guide to starting your own freelance Web design business. In this book, Kevin Airgid gives designers a step-by-step instructions on how to achieve the following: Transition from full-time to self-employment, Freelance on the side to make additional income, Find new clients and keep them coming back for more, Market your freelance business, Manage your projects professionally and how to Price your services appropriately.
Web Designers Success Guide: PDF Version →

Eloquent JavaScript (HTML)

Eloquent JavaScript
Eloquent JavaScript is a digital book providing a comprehensive introduction (tutorial) to the JavaScript programming language. Apart from a bookful of text, it contains plenty of example programs, and an environment to try them out and play with them.
The book is aimed at the beginning programmer ? people with prior programming experience might also get something out of it, but they should not read chapters 2 to 5 too closely, because most of the concepts discussed there will probably be nothing new to them. Do make sure you read the end of the first chapter, which has some essential information about the book itself.
Eloquent JavaScript: HTML Version →Chapters →

Ruby Best Practices (PDF)

Ruby Best Practices
In 1993, when Ruby was born, Ruby had nothing. No user base except for Gregory and a few close friends. No tradition. No idioms except for a few inherited from Perl.
But the language forms the community. The community nourishes the culture. In the last decade, users increased—hundreds of thousands of programmers fell in love with Ruby. They put great effort into the language and its community. Projects were born. Idioms tailored for Ruby were invented and introduced. Ruby was influenced by Lisp and other functional programming languages. Ruby formed relationships between technologies and methodologies such as test-driven development and duck typing.
This book introduces a map of best practices of the language as of 2009.
Ruby Best Practices: PDF Version →

HTML5 Quick Learning Guide by freehtml5templates.com

HTML5 Quick Learning Guide by freehtml5templates.comThis guide introduces you to just the main elements of HTML5 that you’ll probably want to use right away. This guide is for those who want to get the basics figured out first, and worry about the finer details later on.
HTML5 Quick Learning Guide →PDF →

Web Font User Guide by FontShop

Web Font User Guide by FontShopThis Web FontFont User Guide contains information aimed at web developers, system administrators and website visitors.
Section B is for web developers, showing how to get started using Web FontFonts for display on your website. Section C contains information for system administrators about which configuration changes may be necessary to successfully serve webfonts from your web server and, finally, section D outlines some issues visitors of your website may experience in connection to webfonts and may assist site owners in answering webfont-related support requests.
Web Font User Guide →PDF →

Type Classification eBook by Jacob Cass

Type Classification eBook by Jacob CassThis book has been made to help you learn the 10 broad classifications of type. These are the basic foundations of what you need to learn to learn typography and it is essential for any designer to know how to classify type. This book goes through the 10 type classifications with a brief history as well as the key characteristics of each.
Type Classification eBook →PDF →

Typo Tips – Seven Rules for Better Typography by Erik Spiekermann

Typo Tips - Seven Rules for Better Typography by Erik SpiekermannTypo Tips – Seven Rules for Better Typography →PDF →

How to Start a Business Blog by Michael Martine

How to Start a Business Blog by Michael MartineHow to Start a Business Blog, by Michael Martine, is a step-by-step-guide to help you plan, set-up, and create content for a business blog.
How to Start a Business Blog →PDF →

Forty’s Pocket Guide to SEO by Forty

Forty’s Pocket Guide to SEO by FortyPocket Guide to SEO contains everything you could want to know about SEO. Buried deep inside its pages you’ll find tips, tricks, general information about search engines, and how you can make them work for you – in a completely ethical way, of course.
Forty’s Pocket Guide to SEO →PDF →

Why design? by AIGA

Why design? by AIGAThe “Why design?” booklet outlines the role of design in business strategy. It seeks a common framework for why design adds value to clients’ interests. It defines the power of Designing, a larger concept that includes strategy as well as artifacts across a variety of disciplines.
Why design? →PDF →

The Design Funnel: A Manifesto for Meaningful Design by Stephen Hay

The Design Funnel: A Manifesto for Meaningful Design by Stephen HayFrom the authour of this manifesto, Stephen Hay: "Would you like a process which would help translate the often vague, unclear wishes of your clients (and yourself, for that matter) into a clear and solid basis for your design? This manifesto will show you how."
The Design Funnel: A Manifesto for Meaningful Design →PDF →

How To Be Creative by Hugh MacLeod

How To Be Creative by Hugh MacLeodWritten by HughMacLeod, an advertising executive and popular blogger with a flair for the creative. He offers his 26 tried-and-true tips for being truly creative with each point being illustrated by a cartoon drawn by the author himself.
How To Be Creative →PDF →

Time Management for Creative People by Mark McGuinness

Time Management for Creative People by Mark McGuinnessTime Management for Creative People →PDF →

Who's There? by Seth Godin

Who's There? by Seth GodinWho's There is not an ebook about how to write better or how to follow the traditional conventions about formatting and building a blog. Instead, he talks about how building a blog asset can have a spectacular impact on you, your career, your organization and your ideas.
Who's There? →PDF →

A Concise Guide to Archiving for Designers by Karin van der Heiden

A Concise Guide to Archiving for Designers by Karin van der HeidenAIGA worked with the Dutch Archives for Graphic Designers (NAGO) in the Netherlands to publish an English version of A Concise Guide to Archiving for Designers. The guide provides designers with the proper ways to store and describe their collections in 10 short chapters.
A Concise Guide to Archiving for Designers →PDF →

Guerrilla Freelancing by Mike Smith

Guerrilla Freelancing by Mike SmithGuerrilla Freelancing →
PDF →

KnockKnock by Seth Godin

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Useful Calendar & Date Picker Scripts For Web Developers

Calendars can be seen frequently in most web pages today especially in blogs and personal websites. As for corporate sites or e-commerce sites, it is utilize to layout announcements, up-coming events, contest and much more. What makes a calendar almost essential? It allows users to know what is new, what to be expect on specified date and track back older information all at one glance.

preview Useful Calendar & Date Picker Scripts For Web Developers

Calendar in hotel, cinema or airlinesí website requires user’s interaction to reserve rooms and air tickets. Having calendar in this website is necessary as users need to pick a specified date to make reservation. This is where Date Picker plays its role as a navigation medium. Date Pickers which is a calendar layout allows user to navigate through days, week or year to pick a date they desire. Some date pickers also include the option to jump directly to a specific day by entering the date to convenient the users.

In today’s post, we are showing you some of the best calendar and date pickerís scripts that we have come to know. Hope you will find one that suits your demand. Full list after the jump!

iCal-like Calendar

A stunning calendar which looks very similar to iPhone Calendar application and iCal. It has smooth animations and when you hover over existing event then a tooltip fades-in with detailed information. [Demo] [Download]

ical Useful Calendar & Date Picker Scripts For Web Developers

MooTools DatePicker

Configurable Javascript datepicker with smooth animations. Works for any date format and it also supports time picking. Basic skin, Windows Vista skin, OSX Dashboard skin and Jquery UI skin. [Demo] [Download]

mootools Useful Calendar & Date Picker Scripts For Web Developers

FullCalendar

This is Google style jQuery plugin provides a full-sized, drag and drop calendar. This calendar is easy configurable and it uses Ajax. [Demo] [Download]

full calendar Useful Calendar & Date Picker Scripts For Web Developers

jPint

JPint is web-based iPhone dev which looks brilliant. Just choose Calendar and you will see the same calendar as on your iPhone. [Demo] [Download]

jpint Useful Calendar & Date Picker Scripts For Web Developers

jCalendar

Dynamic jQuery calendar which can be used with three form selects: one for day, month, and year. This calendar doesn’t have animations. [Demo] [Download]

jcalendar Useful Calendar & Date Picker Scripts For Web Developers

Datepicker

This datepicker is a simple looking datepicker which is tied to a standard form input field. Simply click on the input field and then use arrows to change between months. [Demo] [Download]

datepicker Useful Calendar & Date Picker Scripts For Web Developers

jQuery Week Calendar

Another Google style full-sized calendar, but this jQuery plugin provides a simple and flexible way of including a weekly calendar in your application. [Demo] [Download]

jquery week calendar Useful Calendar & Date Picker Scripts For Web Developers

jMonthCalendar

A full-sized calendar which supports events. Each events can be hovered over and event has a URL that links to a page which shows more details of clicked event. [Demo] [Download]

jmonthcalendar Useful Calendar & Date Picker Scripts For Web Developers

Date Picker

A datepicker which has a nice style and it is easy adjustable to fit in user’s web application. It also has a lot of features, such as multiple calendars in the component and it allows single, multiple or range selection. User can mark dates as special, weekends, special days, etc. [Demo] [Download]

date picker Useful Calendar & Date Picker Scripts For Web Developers

Simple jQuery Date Picker

Pretty neat datepicker which works on one or more text input elements and is easy styled with CSS. It is very easy to use this datepicker – just choose your year and month first and then pick some day. [Demo] [Download]

simple date picker Useful Calendar & Date Picker Scripts For Web Developers

Calendar

This is a Javascript class which is compilation of many datepickers. These datepickers include all the features that have been most useful. Their design also is very neat and good looking with smooth animations. [Demo] [Download]

calendar Useful Calendar & Date Picker Scripts For Web Developers

Vista-like Ajax Calendar Version 2

Vista-like ajax calendar is a web version of the slick and profound Windows Vista taskbar calendar. If you love the style of Windows Vista then you will also love this calendar [Demo] [Download]

vista like ajax calendar Useful Calendar & Date Picker Scripts For Web Developers

Yahoo! UI Library: Calendar

A simple YUI calendar which can be implemented in your web application. It doesn’t have a lot of options, but if you need just a datepicker then you don’t need anything more. [Demo] [Download]

yui calendar Useful Calendar & Date Picker Scripts For Web Developers

Unobtrusive Date-Picker Widget

This friendly datepicker is accessible using the keyboard, it requires no embedded JavaScript blocks and uses no pop-up windows. You can also fully modify the style with CSS. [DEMO] [Download]

unobtrusive date picker Useful Calendar & Date Picker Scripts For Web Developers

Scal

A cool datepicker which has 6 different style: Scal, Scal tinyscal, iScal, Dashblack, Googleblue and iPhonic. [Demo] [Download]

scal Useful Calendar & Date Picker Scripts For Web Developers

jQuery Interactive Date Range Picker

Very interactive component which is specifically designed for choosing date ranges. Pay attention to those smooth and good looking animations. [Demo] [Download]

interactive date range picker Useful Calendar & Date Picker Scripts For Web Developers

Basic Calendar

Try this calendar if you want to use just a basic calendar in your web application. [Demo] [Download]

basic calendar Useful Calendar & Date Picker Scripts For Web Developers

Simple Calendar

This is a simple pop-up calendar which works across browsers. Despite the fact that it isn’t the pretiest calendar, it is fully commented and customisable for language, colours and date format. [Demo] [Download]

simple calendar Useful Calendar & Date Picker Scripts For Web Developers

Tigra calendar

Tigra is a calendar which works across browsers. It is a drop-down calendar which fast and simple dates entry improves user experience. [Demo] [Download]

tigra Useful Calendar & Date Picker Scripts For Web Developers

jQuery Datepicker

Neat looking datepicker which can easily be added as a popup to a text field or inline in a division or span. It has jQuery style animations for a nice look. [Demo] [Download]

datepicker2 Useful Calendar & Date Picker Scripts For Web Developers

jQuery Date Input

Date Input is a datepicker plugin for jQuery.[Demo] [Download]

date input Useful Calendar & Date Picker Scripts For Web Developers

Unobtrusive JavaScript Date-picker Widget

Very neat datepicker with a great functionality. You can switch between years and months. [Demo] [Download]

date picker widget Useful Calendar & Date Picker Scripts For Web Developers

DatePickerControl

A simple datepicker which reminds Windows Calculator because of its look. You can easy transform your input field into this datepicker. [Demo] [Download]

datepickercontrol Useful Calendar & Date Picker Scripts For Web Developers

Jason Moon’s Fool-Proof Date Input Calendar Script

Very small and co-ordinated calendar. It doesn’t take a lot of space and it also looks good. You can’t switch between years, but you can switch between months by using arrows. [Demo] [Download]

fool proof date input Useful Calendar & Date Picker Scripts For Web Developers

Calendar Script

A simple calendar script with a good functionality. This is a good choice if you want a reliable and simple calendar. [Demo] [Download]

calendar script Useful Calendar & Date Picker Scripts For Web Developers

Dhtmlx Calendar

A lightweight cross-browser JavaScript calendar which is easy to use and fully customizable. It also has a nice style which is mixed together with its functionality. [Demo] [Download]

dhtmlx calendar Useful Calendar & Date Picker Scripts For Web Developers

Javascript Date Picker

This date picker uses DOM techniques to generate its HTML code. It supports browsers, such as: Mozilla Firefox, Google Chrome, Safari, Internet Explorer 6+. [Demo] [Download]

js date picker Useful Calendar & Date Picker Scripts For Web Developers

Rich Calendar

This is Javascript cross-browser calendar which implements the appropriate functionality with a lot of advanced options. [Demo] [Download]

rich calendar Useful Calendar & Date Picker Scripts For Web Developers

Xin Calendar

A small calendar script which doesn’t take a lot of space. It doesn’t provide an option to choose year or month. It only shows the current month. [Demo] [Download]

xin calendar Useful Calendar & Date Picker Scripts For Web Developers

Datepicker

A simple and well looking datepicker which looks like Windows integrated calculator. [Demo] [Download]

datepicker3 Useful Calendar & Date Picker Scripts For Web Developers

(bellefoong)

30 CSS and Javascript Tabs Solutions

Tabs have been around for a long time, they are nothing new, but with so many sites (blogs, ecommerce sites, web apps…) needing to show as much content and navigation as possible, they have never been so relevant.
They are the perfect web page tidying up solution for organizing cluttered content in a space-limited web page. Separating content into tabs keeps everything nice and compact, clutter free and are always at the ready should a user need it.

In this round-up we have a variety of easy to use modern tabs solutions, techniques, tutorials and plugins, most of them make use of a variety of Javscript libraries (MooTools, jQuery…), but you will also find some innovative pure CSS solutions as well.

Pure CSS Tabs Tecniques & Tutorials

Sweet Tabbed Navigation Bar using CSS3

Sweet Tabbed Navigation Bar using CSS3
Sweet Tabbed Navigation Bar using CSS3 →
Demo →

CSS3-Only Tabbed Area

CSS3-Only Tabbed Area
CSS3-Only Tabbed Area →
Demo →

Using CSS to Create a Tabbed Content Area

Using CSS to Create a Tabbed Content Area
Using CSS to Create a Tabbed Content Area →
Demo →

CSS3 Hover Tabs without JavaScript

CSS3 Hover Tabs without JavaScript
CSS3 Hover Tabs without JavaScript →
Demo →

Javascript Based Tabs Tutorials

Sweet AJAX Tabs (jQuery)

Sweet AJAX Tabs (jQuery)
Sweet AJAX Tabs →
Demo →

Animated Tabbed Content (jQuery)

Animated Tabbed Content (jQuery)
Animated Tabbed Content →
Demo →

Sliding Tab Menu for Sidebar (jQuery)

Sliding Tab Menu for Sidebar (jQuery)
Sliding Tab Menu for Sidebar →
Demo →

Organic Tabs (jQuery)

Organic Tabs (jQuery)
Organic Tabs →
Demo →

Slot Machine Tabs (jQuery)

Slot Machine Tabs (jQuery)
Slot Machine Tabs →
Demo →

Create Flipping Content Tabs (jQuery)

Create Flipping Content Tabs (jQuery)
Create Flipping Content Tabs →
Demo →

Create A Tabbed Interface (jQuery)

Create A Tabbed Interface (jQuery)
Create A Tabbed Interface →
Demo →

jQuery UI Tabs with Next/Previous (jQuery UI)

jQuery UI Tabs with Next/Previous  (jQuery UI)
jQuery UI Tabs with Next/Previous →
Demo →

Building a Better Blogroll: Dynamic Fun (jQuery & SimplePie)

Building a Better Blogroll: Dynamic Fun (jQuery & SimplePie)
Building a Better Blogroll: Dynamic Fun →
Demo →

Moving Tab and Sliding Content (jQuery)

Moving Tab and Sliding Content (jQuery)
Moving Tab and Sliding Content →
Demo →

Slick Tabbed Content Area (jQuery)

Slick Tabbed Content Area (jQuery)
Slick Tabbed Content Area →
Demo →

Sexy Animated Tabs (MooTools)

Sexy Animated Tabs (MooTools)
Sexy Animated Tabs →
Demo →

Tabbed Interface / Tabbed Structure Menu (jQuery)

Tabbed Interface / Tabbed Structure Menu (jQuery)
Tabbed Interface / Tabbed Structure Menu →
Demo →

Fancy Sliding Form (jQuery)

Fancy Sliding Form (jQuery)
Fancy Sliding Form →
Demo →

Simple Tabs (jQuery)

Simple Tabs (jQuery)
Simple Tabs →
Demo →

Javscript Based Tabs Plugins

mb.tabset (jQuery)

mb.tabset (jQuery)
mb.tabset is a useful component that lets you build a tabbed interface really quickly and easily; and you can even sort your tabs as you want by dragging and dropping.
mb.tabset →
Demo →

SimpleTabs (MooTools)

SimpleTabs (MooTools)
Small, simple and unobtrusive Tab plugin for MooTools including support for Ajax content. Overlays semantic XHTML markup with a tabbed interface without additional changes. Customise the style and behaviour by changing the simplified CSS or via various custom Events.
SimpleTabs →
Demo →

Perspective Tabs (Mootools)

Perspective Tabs (Mootools)
Perspective tabs (formerly Sliding Tabs) is a simple MooTools plug-in that allows for a lagre number of tabs to fit into a small space. Thanks for visiting my site.
Perspective Tabs →
Demo →

MooTabs (MooTools)

MooTabs (MooTools)
MooTabs is a tiny(3kb) class for MooTools. As the name suggests, it's main purpose is to help out with the creation of simple tab navigation. As of version 1.2, you can also set tab content via an Ajax request.
MooTabs →
Demo →

idTabs (jQuery)

idTabs (jQuery)
idTabs →
Demo →

DOMTab – Navigation tabs with CSS and DOMscripting

DOMTab - Navigation tabs with CSS and DOMscripting
DOMtab is a JavaScript that turns a list of links connected to content sections into a tab interface. The script removes any "back to top" links in the section and automatically hides all but the first one when the page is loaded. You can use as many tabbed menus on the page as you want to.
DOMTab – Navigation tabs with CSS and DOMscripting →
Demo →

jQuery UI Tabs

jQuery UI Tabs
jQuery UI Tabs →
Demo →

jQuery Accessible Tabs Plugin

jQuery Accessible Tabs Plugin
jQuery Plugin that generates a Tab Navigation from Markup that makes sense without Javascript. The generated Tabs are the only ones out there that work for Screenreader users without support for WAI ARIA.
jQuery Accessible Tabs Plugin →
Demo →

Tabify (jQuery)

Tabify (jQuery)
This Jquery plugin lets you easily create tabbed content. All you need is an ul-element with some li-elements and a couple of related content-divs. The major difference between Tabify and it’s competitors is it’s size.
Tabify (jQuery) →
Demo →

nanotabs

nanotabs
nanotabs →
Demo →

jQuery Pager

jQuery Pager
jQuery Pager →
Demo →

jQueryGlobe

jQueryGlobe
This tiny (2kb) slick jQuery plugin enables simple and easy creation of an interactive "Featured Items" widget.
jQueryGlobe →
Demo →

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20 Useful Free PDF ebooks for Designers and Bloggers

Over the years I have a saved a decent sized library of useful design and blogging related PDF ebooks, I love them. I have voraciously collected them, and all stored on my mobile for whenever the chance of quick read arises. In this post I would like to share my favorite 20 (freely available) ebooks with you.

All of the below books are have been written to be read quickly, they are neither very long nor are they the definitive resource on their specific subject. Having said that, they are all a ‘darn good read’, and well worth downloading. Some of the books may have been written a few years back, but the topics are certainly relevant now.
So if you are a web designer, graphic designer or even a blooger you are bound to find something worth reading in this round-up.

Introduction to Good Usability by Peter Pixel

Introduction to Good Usability by Peter PixelThis guide is especially handy if you haven’t done a lot of webdesign yet or if you are involved in webdesign but don’t do any of the real work. I hope to shed some light on some common interface elements and mistakes people often make with them.
A lot of books have been written in the past but the threshold for reading them, especially if you have never built a site, is quite big, hence this short guide. This is by no means a complete guide or solid set of rules, but it is definitely a good start.
Introduction to Good Usability →
Download the PDF →

Web Accessibility Checklist by Aaron Cannon

Web Accessibility Checklist by Aaron CannonWritten by Aaron Cannon, blind web developer and accessibility consultant.Aaron explains in his article “The Accessibility Checklist I Vowed I’d Never Write”, that the problems with a “simple checklist that, when followed, will give you an accessible site without fail.” No such checklist exists or likely ever will. He believes that this list is not the perfect solution, nor is it the only solution, but believes it is a good first step, and it gives our developers and designers a place to start from.
Web Accessibility Checklist →
Download the PDF →

CSS Systems For Writing Maintainable CSS by Natalie Downe

CSS Systems For Writing Maintainable CSS by Natalie DowneA CSS System is a reusable set of content-oriented markup patterns and associated CSS created to express a site's individual design. It is the end result of a process that emphasizes up-front planning, loose coupling between CSS and markup, pre-empting browser bugs and overall robustness. It also incorporates a shared vocabulary for developers to communicate the intent of the code.
This ebook elaborates on this concept, and also describes a number of tricks used to preempt maintainability issues.
CSS Systems For Writing Maintainable CSS →
Download the PDF →

Better CSS Font Stacks by Nathan Ford

Better CSS Font Stacks by Nathan FordBetter CSS Font Stacks →
Download the PDF →

Faster, and More Secure Webfonts by Bram Pitoyo

Faster, and More Secure Webfonts by Bram PitoyoFont embedding for the web is a great step in making the web look better and become more functional, but what about security and load times?
Bram Pitoyo’s ebook takes the top layer off font embedding and shows us how things work, and ultimately how to improve performance and make it more secure.
Faster, and More Secure Webfonts →
Download the PDF →

Type Classification eBook by Jacob Cass

Type Classification eBook by Jacob CassThis book has been made to help you learn the 10 broad classifications of type. These are the basic foundations of what you need to learn to learn typography and it is essential for any designer to know how to classify type. This book goes through the 10 type classifications with a brief history as well as the key characteristics of each.
Type Classification eBook →
Download the PDF →

HTML5 Quick Learning Guide by freehtml5templates.com

HTML5 Quick Learning Guide by freehtml5templates.comThis guide introduces you to just the main elements of HTML5 that you’ll probably want to use right away. This guide is for those who want to get the basics figured out first, and worry about the finer details later on.
HTML5 Quick Learning Guide →
Download the PDF →

The Woork Handbook by Antonio Lupetti

The Woork Handbook by Antonio LupettiThe Woork Handbook is a free eBook about CSS, HTML, Ajax, web programming, Mootools, Scriptaculous and other general topics about web design.
The Woork Handbook →
Download the PDF →

Web Font User Guide by FontShop

Web Font User Guide by FontShopThis Web FontFont User Guide contains information aimed at web developers, system administrators and website visitors.
Section B is for web developers, showing how to get started using Web FontFonts for display on your website. Section C contains information for system administrators about which configuration changes may be necessary to successfully serve webfonts from your web server and, finally, section D outlines some issues visitors of your website may experience in connection to webfonts and may assist site owners in answering webfont-related support requests.
Web Font User Guide →
Download the PDF →

Typo Tips – Seven Rules for Better Typography by Erik Spiekermann

Typo Tips - Seven Rules for Better Typography by Erik SpiekermannTypo Tips – Seven Rules for Better Typography →
Download the PDF →

How to Start a Business Blog by Michael Martine

How to Start a Business Blog by Michael MartineHow to Start a Business Blog, by Michael Martine, is a step-by-step-guide to help you plan, set-up, and create content for a business blog.
How to Start a Business Blog →
Download the PDF →

Forty’s Pocket Guide to SEO by Forty

Forty’s Pocket Guide to SEO by FortyPocket Guide to SEO contains everything you could want to know about SEO. Buried deep inside its pages you’ll find tips, tricks, general information about search engines, and how you can make them work for you – in a completely ethical way, of course.
Forty’s Pocket Guide to SEO →
Download the PDF →

Why design? by AIGA

Why design? by AIGAThe “Why design?” booklet outlines the role of design in business strategy. It seeks a common framework for why design adds value to clients’ interests. It defines the power of Designing, a larger concept that includes strategy as well as artifacts across a variety of disciplines.
Why design? →
Download the PDF →

The Design Funnel: A Manifesto for Meaningful Design by Stephen Hay

The Design Funnel: A Manifesto for Meaningful Design by Stephen HayFrom the authour of this manifesto, Stephen Hay: "Would you like a process which would help translate the often vague, unclear wishes of your clients (and yourself, for that matter) into a clear and solid basis for your design? This manifesto will show you how."
The Design Funnel: A Manifesto for Meaningful Design →
Download the PDF →

How To Be Creative by Hugh MacLeod

How To Be Creative by Hugh MacLeodWritten by HughMacLeod, an advertising executive and popular blogger with a flair for the creative. He offers his 26 tried-and-true tips for being truly creative with each point being illustrated by a cartoon drawn by the author himself.
How To Be Creative →
Download the PDF →

Time Management for Creative People by Mark McGuinness

Time Management for Creative People by Mark McGuinnessTime Management for Creative People →
Download the PDF →

Who's There? by Seth Godin

Who's There? by Seth GodinWho's There is not an ebook about how to write better or how to follow the traditional conventions about formatting and building a blog. Instead, he talks about how building a blog asset can have a spectacular impact on you, your career, your organization and your ideas.
Who's There? →
Download the PDF →

A Concise Guide to Archiving for Designers by Karin van der Heiden

A Concise Guide to Archiving for Designers by Karin van der HeidenAIGA worked with the Dutch Archives for Graphic Designers (NAGO) in the Netherlands to publish an English version of A Concise Guide to Archiving for Designers. The guide provides designers with the proper ways to store and describe their collections in 10 short chapters.
A Concise Guide to Archiving for Designers →
Download the PDF →

Guerrilla Freelancing by Mike Smith

Guerrilla Freelancing by Mike SmithGuerrilla Freelancing →
Download the PDF →

KnockKnock by Seth Godin

KnockKnock by Seth GodinKnockKnock →
Download the PDF →

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