Kyle’s Brash Thoughts

11Nov09/Yes, I am that damn cheap: Why I’m not getting Typekit just yet

Update: When I take a stand, I take a stand; I got Typekit just a few weeks later.

First let me start of with saying that I think Typekit and services are much needed in the web world. I truly appreciate what they are doing to improve the landscape of type for the web. I believe that it is because of Typekit that we are seeing a push for WOFF and .webfont formatting that will revolutionize typography on the web. I am sure that there are plenty of great uses for this service and the other services that are coming out like it.

Since I got my invite relatively early, I’ve had a fair amount of time to play around with the free account that they provide. I even used one of the fonts in one of my posts. Overall the experience was great. Typekit was easy to use and implement.

There were only a few annoyances with the process. First you need to enter your stacks into their web site to be deployed on their style sheet. Which means that there is one more step in the way of changing the design. I’m pretty sure there is a way to override this but it wasn’t very obvious. Second, the delivery relies on Javascript. Poo on you if you don’t have Javascript turned on. I wasn’t too worried about either.

I was very close from getting off my cheep ass and finally laying down the $50 for the year so that all future blog posts could be decorated with a unique font. In all my glee and anticipated typographic glory, I paused and thought about it. A couple of question piled up in my mind. When the year was up would I be forced into a monthly payment plan that they have set up? If I decided to stop the service or if the service halts what will happen to my designs? Will I need to go back to every one of my blog posts and replace the font or write a new stack? The doubt set in.

In the end I don’t think it really works well for me and this blog at this time. For now I am holding off and saving my $50 for a rainy day or maybe even a new typeface. I wish that the pricing structure was more permanent. Much like buying a typeface, you would pay one fee upfront to use that typeface on whatever your heat desires. I understand that the current pricing scheme is probably brought on by a combination of profitability and the agreement they have with the foundries. Maybe in the not so distant future I can put this cost on a client project or somehow make money on off blog to get close to the monthly bill. Until then I will gladly look on as some great designers create beautiful sites with the new library Typekit is offering them.

29Oct09/Browser testing

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It is not a web designer/developer’s job to fix or improve a browser. That is a browser developer’s job, plain and simple. Not only is it impractical and uneconomical to attempt to make a site look visually identical across browsers, it also discourages browser makers from improving or to implement new CSS.Andy Clarke, What does browser testing mean today?

19Oct09/A Design Solution

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A design solution, in the grand scheme of our universe, rarely solves any matter of great import forever. The limits of our efforts are delimited by years, if not minutes. But for this brief period of time, designers can express the change desired in the world.David Sherwin, The First Law of Design Dynamics

14Oct09/Make something great

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Make something great. Tell people about it. Do it again.

That’s it. Make something you believe in. Make it beautiful, confident, and real. Sweat every detail. If it’s not getting traffic, maybe it wasn’t good enough. Try again.Derek Powazek, Spammers, Evildoers, and Opportunists

11Oct09/Its about the little things

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I am getting increasingly frustrated with some of the little thing that Photoshop cant do. Specifically, the fact that the shapes in Photoshop don’t snap to the pixel. Everytime I transform a shape I need to zoom in to the max so that I can make sure that the shape is not sitting in between pixels. You think with all the bloat that Photoshop comes with it would get this simple thing right.

02Oct09/Pink For October

If you haven’t noticed already, I’ve turned kylefiedler.com to a nice tone of pink. It’s in honor of Breast Cancer Awareness Month and Pink for October.

Pink for October is urging you to turn your site pink and learn a bit more about Breast Cancer. This is its 4th year and its goal is to top last years count of over 15,000 sites.

Please take the time to read about Breast Cancer the effect it is having on women, men and their families all across the world. After you’ve learned a bit join the fight and transform your blog, site, Twitter, MySpace or whatever interweb to pink and encourage other people to do the same.