Mozilla Foundation Looking for Quality Design Help

The Mozilla team is looking for some help with some design work. The work would involve a variety of design tasks for the web and for print. For example, banner ads, small HTML page designs, print ad layout/design, etc.

What we’d like to do is assemble a loose team of people to whom we can throw out a quick piece of work and have someone who’s able speak-up and take on each piece of work.

Here are some of the conditions:

  • It’s all volunteer – no cash, sorry.
  • Be prepared to work within an existing defined (if still evolving) visual style – we’re not looking for people to put their personal stamp on any given piece of work.
  • Accept direction and vetoes – you will be given direction and iterations may be required.
  • Timelines are tight and notice is short.
  • We’re looking for experienced designers with demonstrated abilities.

If that doesn’t sound too terrible and you are an experienced designer, please send a brief introduction, overview of your interest, information on your availability, and a selection of portfolio URLs to: blake at cs dot stanford
dot edu
and bart at decrem dot com.

We’ll be choosing a small team from those interested to help us out. Thanks!

 

The CBC’s Olympic Athelete Diaries are pretty much weblogging olympians – cool

 

Photos from my trip to the Îles de la Madeleine – while I was gone, my “friends” had some fun with my car

 

An Engaging To-do List

  1. Fall in love (check)
  2. Get engaged (check – July 27, 2004)
  3. Get married (to do – Summer 2005)
 

Firefox on the front page of the Sydney newspaper – cool!

 

I got to ride a Segway today thanks to the guys at Great Hobbieshere are some photos – more details soon

 

Simple Desktop Innovation: Gnome Calendar

Gnome/Evolution Calendar Applet ScreenshotSoftware is often used in ways not envisioned by its creators. Sometimes this is the goal of the original creation; to create a platform upon which others can create in ways the platform builds can’t even imagine. Some developers build tools and enable others to build. Such is the case with the technologies behind the Internet and the Web. Tim Berners-Lee, for example, is unlikely to have foreseen independent personal web authors covering political conventions (or perhaps he did – I get the impression he’s a pretty smart guy).

Most creations, though, are built with a simple purpose in mind: move a person from point A to point B, playback audio signals transmitted via radio waves, etc. Even more specifically, some tools have a single, even more narrow focus. Even so, such tools are often put to use, for better or for worse, in ways never intended by their creators. We use books to hold open windows, we stir paint with a screwdriver, we use newsprint to get a fire going.

Such is the case with a simple software tool on most PCs. In the corner of the screen (usually the bottom or top right), there is often a little clock. On Windows system, double-clicking (or right-clicking and selecting a menu item) will display a dialog for changing the time/date. This dialog includes a small calendar.

When in front of a computer planning some travel with a friend recently, I noticed that she would frequently double click on the little clock applet of her Windows PC and use this tiny configuration calendar to do quick planning. The Windows Time/Date Properties window (screenshot) is her calendar.

I was struck by how it seemed second-nature for her to call up this window. I recalled that I too had used this time/date settings window for the same reason in the past (What is the date next Tuesday? Is August 5th a Thursday or a Friday?).

I suspect the Microsoft engineers, quite understandably, were not thinking that this window would be used for anything more than setting the date. The dialog doesn’t seem to have changed since Windows 95. However, I’m sure thousands of people use it for for planning and for reference every day.

As part of their efforts to integrate the email/calendar application, Evolution, with the rest of the desktop (via the Evolution Data Server which makes calendar and contact information available throughout the desktop), the Gnome developers are making calendar information from Evolution (meetings, tasks, appointments, holidays, etc.) available in the desktop clock applet. The Gnome calendar is easily accessible in one click from the panel clock, and is just as easy to dismiss when you’re done with it.

This is the type of thing I might have expected Apple or Microsoft to pull off thanks to their strong control over the operating system and popular calendar applications. Instead, it is a small innovation from the open source development world. Bravo to the Gnome and Evolution developers for this smooth bit of integration.

 

A prescient sound file from the computer game Counter-Strike (6Kb MP3)

 

A new category in my photo gallery: Signs of the Times – it turns out I have a lot of pictures of signs

 

Notes from my first Linux conference

My Badge from DDC 2004

I was at the Desktop Developers’ Conference in Ottawa this week. The DDC was for developers working on Linux on the desktop and it started off a week in Ottawa that also includes the Linux Kernel Summit and the Ottawa Linux Symposium (neither of which I stuck around for – both being way over my head).

Here are some observations from the conference:

  • T-Shirts and golf-shirts with project/company logos are the war-paint. Despite having a lot of these shirts myself, I resisted wearing any of them to the conference.
  • Where the ladies at? (about 75 people and no women)
  • Even though everyone has a cell phone and a laptop with IM on WiFi, there are almost no annoying phone/IM sound interruptions
  • There is a constant, but not distracting, pitter-patter of laptop keyboards
  • There was lots of debate and productive discussion – people were getting work done
  • People seem to like Canada
  • Lots of people knew of Prince Edward Island, and think of it as a idyllic vacation destination (true for a few months of the year)
  • Traveling is much better when you have friends to drive your around, feed you, etc.

For those interested in the details and contents of the conference, here are some details other attendees have posted:

I’m on my way to the airport to catch a flight back home in a few minutes.