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by brad
2012-04-18
Update

Encroach With Caution: A Note on Collaborative Coding

If you're an artist, you've been there: applying that final touch or minor adjustment that finishes the piece off. You're done! Everything looks exactly as you'd imagined it, and you can't wait to put it out there and show your prowess to the world. In the few years that I've been working on websites, I've found the building process to be strikingly similar. My latest assignment, the recently updated Open Font Library, placed me in a position I have never quite been in before: the "Code Middleman". Along the way, I learned a lot about the process of a singular developer and how encouraging collaboration in this medium can be.

Open Font Library Screen

The task sounded simple enough. Manufactura Independente had been contracted to craft a visual upgrade to Open Font Library. They did so (and quite well). My mission was to take the series of HTML/CSS/JavaScript mockup pages and apply them to the existing work our own Christopher Adams had done in building the site in it's initial form.

What I hadn't anticipated was the hair pulling and sleep-deprived nights that would lay ahead as I began to untangle the two webs and retie them into a functioning whole.

The Open Font Library was built on an open source web software called Aiki Framework. While Aiki is continually growing and gaining in popularity, it wasn't a software that Manufactura were immediately familiar with. The visual upgrade was only one of a number of features that were to be included in the upcoming release, so it soon became necessary for an Aiki-experienced developer to apply the completed redesigns to the site as work on the additional upgrades was going on behind the scenes.

Trial and error was key. I dove in pasting some design code here, amending an existing Aiki-built widget there, as the site slowly began it's metamorphosis. Things often broke, but communication with both Chris and Manufactura Independente helped me stay on course by establishing the commonalities between the two sets of code and ways of thinking. The veil of mystery often surrounding web development began to lift, in the process.

Why is collaboration so difficult in web development anyway? I think the software, as well as our processes and perceptions are at the heart of the issue. To many in my everyday circles (parents, peers, etc), what I do is a very ambiguous thing. I've described my work process in such vague terms that I began assuming the role of a wizard holed up in a tower solemnly researching and brewing his next potion. Sites are increasingly about speedy deliveries and giving clients dynamic control. Management systems like WordPress have evolved to make these solutions easier, but nothing has excelled at allowing real-time collaboration between multiple developers. Standard procedure often involves a repetitive process of a single developer designing, setting up, and configuring a site for general use.

With the completion of Open Font Library's latest release, I found myself leaving behind my worst working tendencies. I lost the desire to forge ahead in solitude or to be overly attached to work I completed and hyper critical of other's work. The necessity of communicating between multiple groups through a new software and meeting a tight deadline has helped me grow as a developer. It stopped feeling like a competition and started being about learning from and helping others.

Is Aiki Framework the ultimate collaborative solution? Not in it's current form, but each release brings us closer, and each project is another opportunity to build together.

Category: brad

Tags: blog content strategy design Open Font Library website

by jon
2012-02-20
Update

Samantha Culp Website, Locking Down Shanghai

I first worked with Samantha when she served as the Director of RMBCity for Vitamin Creative Space here in Beijing. Samantha, like myself, had lived in the South of China, but her Cantonese far surpassed mine!

She had been working on several interesting projects like her New Territories Border Studies Tumblr and Many Mansions film, and needed a simple simple site like some others we had built for Matt Hope and others. We cranked out her simple and clean design, connected with her domain name, and her blog has been flowing since. Check out her posts!

More recently Samantha is a talent scout at W+K in Shanghai:


Recently I became the “creative talent scout” for Wieden+Kennedy Shanghai – their first in this somewhat bizarre-sounding role, I believe. I’ll be helping to expand W+K’s network of emerging Chinese talent and pool of creative collaborators (with an emphasis on China, but also across Asia and internationally).


I’ll also be curating an events program in our office here, open to the Shanghai creative community at large, to bring in cross-disciplinary inspiration and strengthen W+K Shanghai as a local creative hub.

Follow Samantha on her blog.

Category: samanthaculp

Tags: blog design minimal samantha-culp shanghai simple website

by jon
2011-01-15
Update

Libre Graphics Meeting 2011 Ramping Up

Totally inspired from seeing this great little short by Jakub Szypulka about our favorite conference that help put on, Libre Graphics Meeting (LGM), coming May 10-13, 2011 to Montreal.

Reclaim your tools. from Jake on Vimeo.

The Libre Graphics Meeting 2010.

A film by Jakub Szypulka

From the Create Project Mailing List, where LGM project is coordinated like many other plans and specs, Jakub said:


Hey guys,

I just finished editing "Reclaim your tools", a short film about the
Libre Graphics Meeting 2010 in Brussels.

Here is the link: http://vimeo.com/18568225

All the filming and editing as well as the music was done by myself.
The movie is just some two and a half minutes, but I believe it might
be a useful marketing tool for LGM.

What I'm especially proud of is that everything you can see was done a
HUNDRED PERCENT using opensource software! (minus camera firmware I
suppose, haha)

Feel free to share the movie where ever you want! The only thing I'm
asking for is that you include my name.

As I count film-making to graphics, I feel that open source video
editing software should be a part of the LGM conference. Thus, I'd be
more than happy to have a short talk about the film at the next LGM. I
would present my workflow as well as point out areas where improvement
is possible (and sometimes really necessary) compared to closed
source, commercial software, which I've been using for a longer time.
What do you guys think about that?

I really hope you'll enjoy it just as much as I enjoyed making it!
Can't wait to hear your comments!

Jakub Szypulka

Totally inspirational Jakub! We at Fabricatorz will be ramping up our involvement towards the conference, especially since we love Montreal, Status.Net, have Fab affiliate CelineCelines there, and want to put on some really great Sharism-based events on this year!

Make sure to put LGM2011 on your calendar and join us at the Create Project to get involved deeper.

Category: libre graphics meeting

Tags: art business culture design freesoftware graphics internet lgm2011 libre graphics meeting libregraphicsmeeting media montreal projects

by brad
2010-03-02
Update

Fabricatorz Helps Pump Up StatusNet

Evan Prodromou founded StatusNet Inc as a microblogging platform for communities, brands and organizations. The thousands of businesses currently using the StatusNet platform are able to easily stay connected to each other with server and software solutions that function under their own domain.

In October of 2009, Fabricatorz Founder Jon Phillips joined the StatusNet team as their Community Consultant. Since his addition, Jon has been helping StatusNet with some of their larger projects as well as growing the free and open source communities that are connected to their platform. One such project, StatusNet Enterprise Network (SEN), has just recently launched.

Through Jon, the Fabricatorz team pitched in as StatusNet Inc continues to extend it's reach and influence in web culture. Fabricatorz, along with long time ally logo-designer Andy Fitzsimon, have provided a new and improved logo design as well as the design and production of promotional marketing materials (posters, t-shirts, etc.).

The Fabricatorz team congratulates StatusNet on a successful and exciting new launch. Visit their home page to see how you can utilize this powerful platform.

Category: status-net

Tags: design fabricatorz logo production schwag