Directions
7:30 pm
PARC's George E. Pake Auditorium
3333 Coyote Hill Road
Palo Alto, CA
Directions
Rashmi Sinha
rsinha@baychi.org
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7:30 pm
Designing for
Ajax
Bill Scott, Yahoo
The first 100k
users are always the hardest
Matt Mullenweg, WordPress
Bill Scott, Yahoo
Trackback URL: http://www.baychi.org/trackback/1228
(?)
With the advent of Ajax, new patterns have emerged for designing
web applications. Yahoo! recently released its design pattern
library as a way to capture best practices on the web. However,
patterns by themselves are not enough.
In this talk Bill will present 7 core design principles for rich
interaction with a specific emphasis on Ajax. Each principle is
explored with illustrating patterns along with lots of current
examples—both good and bad from the land of Web 2.0.
Bill Scott is ajax evangelist and design
pattern curator at Yahoo! where he spreads the rich and sane Ajax
design. Before Yahoo!, Bill led user experience at Sabre and
co-founded Rico, an open
source Ajax framework. For 20 years, Bill has designed and created
interfaces in a variety of areas, including video games. His
musings can be found at Looks Good Works Well.
Matt Mullenweg, WordPress
Trackback URL: http://www.baychi.org/trackback/1230
(?)
The first hundred thousand are always the hardest and in this
session Matt Mullenweg will discuss strategies for scaling your
community from 1 to 100,000 users and beyond. Matt will describe
his 12 rules, including the importance of obsessing about details,
doing your own support, blogging every step of the way, and being a
pain-killer, not a vitamin.
Matt will be speaking from his experience with WordPress, WordPress.com, Ping-O-Matic, and Akismet.
Matt Mullenweg is the founding developer of
WordPress, the blogging software that runs thousands of sites
around the world. He enjoys photography, writing, and playing the
saxophone and piano.
Mullenweg also founded Ping-O-Matic and the nascent Global Media
Protocols Group.
Matt Mullenweg blogs at: www.photomatt.net.
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