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Posts Tagged ‘featured’

5 June 2011

Buk U – Year 2

Over the last couple years we have had the opportunity to speak to various classes and programs full of folks enamored with the sort of work we get to do, and clients we get to do it for.  What’s funny is that we are always beside ourselves and left slightly confused with how enamored they are.

Just about this time every year, I get several emails from local, national, and some international folks looking for a summer internship.  And for the last nine we did not offer anything.  The truth is we never saw the value, for them at least, in having a handful of young people running errands, and handling miscellaneous to-do’s.  Nor did we believe we had the time to really offer the hopeful lot what they might be looking for.  But that was then, and this is now…

This is now our 2nd year providing an alternative kind of program.  One not for the faint of heart, lazy, or half-assed.  If you are looking for an internship that sends you on coffee runs, or where most of your time is spent on your own Facebook page, this isn’t for you.  If you are looking to get a first-hand, and hands-on perspective into what and how it all really goes down, this is for you.  It will be fast-paced, stressful, fun, exhilarating, you will want to pull your hair out, you will want to dance in circles.

WHAT YOU WILL LEARN
Over the course of six weeks, a select group of six interns will be fully immersed in one fast (normal in the real world) paced project. You will be a part of client management, pitching ideas, and complete digital strategy including web, mobile, social and experiential…as well as all of the production headaches and home runs that we get to experience in a full day here at the Buk.  All of this will be done for of a real BKWLD client and if your work makes the cut, the client loves it, your work may even be used in the real world.

WHO WE ARE LOOKING FOR
We are looking for a small group of dedicated and hard-working people.  We have no age limits, experience requirements, or education minimums.  However, we are looking for people with an inherent interest in marketing, design, and digital (duh). The right candidates will be interested in careers as producers, creative directors, technical directors, art directors, developers and storytellers. We expect this group to take it serious.  100% attendance, attention, and effort is required.

THE CALENDAR
In a nutshell, the weeks will look a little like this:

Week 1 – Immersion

  • Introduction
  • What is the process
  • Client introduction
  • Product discovery

Week 2 – Conception & Planning

  • Story boards
  • IA / Wireframes
  • Revisions & Approvals

Week 3 – 5 – Production!

Week 6 – Case Study

  • Document strategic analytics
  • Write & submit case study

INTERESTED?
Sound good, want to see if you make the cut? Head over to bkwld.com/u to take the next step.

22 September 2010

FITC 2010 and An Event Apart

Here’s an update on our BKWLD goes to conferences initiative, where I attempt to suss out the merits and value of conferences.  We went to FITC SF the other month and I realized I never posted about An Event Apart Seattle back when we went to it (in April), so I’ll cover both in this post.

An Event Apart was great.  At the time I didn’t fully realize it’s value.  I felt like for every hour plus session there were only a couple nuggets I took away.  For the two days spent, a handful of moments didn’t seem worth it.  But I’ve really gotten my mileage out of examples of CSS2 techniques that were still relevant, CSS3 properties I didn’t realize had reached wide adoption, and ammo to argue the importance of planning for mobile.  I hadn’t made time to dig my hands into HTML5 canvas at that point and I can attribute the conference with spurning the ideas that went into an article in the latest issue of .Net magazine.  The speakers were also as entertaining as they were informative.  So I’ll recommend we go to An Event Apart again.  Oh, the food was really good also.  And the seats were super comfortable (with desk surfaces and power for laptops), although it was a tad oversold.

FITC had it’s ups and downs.  There were a number of engaging presentations that weren’t very educational.  These were things like speakers showing off portfolio work and experiments.  It was fun (even inspiring) eye candy, but with little discussion of how the work was done.  There were also some presentations we walked out on because the concepts being addressed were too novice-y.  On the other hand, there were some great panels concerning technical explanations of tools I’d heard about but hadn’t tried out yet.  Joa Ebert showed off his Apparat tool for optimizing and compressing swfs.  Colin Moock explained Union, a platform for creating multiuser web apps in Flash and JS (I’m very excited to use it on a project).  I also saw an interesting presentation on doing voice recognition in Flash, an overview of Unity 3D, and tracking colored dots with a webcam for augmented reality style stuff.  The location wasn’t great, it was really off the beaten path in the Mission Bay area of San Francisco.  So getting back into town was a cab ride.  And cabs were slow to show up.

So on the whole, I think we’ll do a careful reading of what the panels are before we decide whether to attend FITC next year.  If it was located closer, that would sway things as well.  Perhaps part of the reason An Event Apart struck a cord with me was because it was also more convenient.

16 September 2010

Testing sites in mobile browsers

On a project we have in development now, we’re deploying a site that must work across mobile devices.  Not just iPhone, but Android, Nokia, Blackberry, and Palm.  Rather than purchasing a bunch of test devices, you can install emulators for each platform and then run the phone’s web browser.  Here’s some places to look and some instructions about how to build up your own testing suite.  These are instructions are for Mac.  Except for where they’re not.

iOS
1. Install the iPhone SDK which you can get from developer.apple.com.  You’ll need to signup for a developer account.
2. After install, it will be at /Developer/Platforms/iPhoneSimulator.platform/Developer/Applications/iPhone Simulator

Android
1. First, download the Android SDK from their site for your particular platform (developer.android.com/sdk) and unpack it.
2. Open the Android SDK and AVD Manager. On the Mac, this is done by opening the directory where you unpacked the SDK in Terminal (cd/path/ to/sdk) and running tools/android. On Windows, just launch SDK Setup. exe within the SDK directory. The result is the same – the Android ADK and AVD Manager application opens up.
3. Click the Available Packages link.
4. Tick the checkboxes that are for packages with SDK Platform in the name.
5. Click Install Selected and confirm that choice in the dialog that opens up on your screen next.
6. After installing, in the manager, go to Virtual Devices and click new.  Choose a name (I typically choose name them after the skin (or resolution), so HVGA, for example.  Choose a target (SDK version).  I’ve been doing 1.6 for browser testing.  Click create.
7. Launch by running `tools/emulator @<NAME>` from the sdk directory, where <NAME> is the name you chose in step 6 (such as HVGA).

Palm
1. Go here and follow instructions: http://developer.palm.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&layout=page&id=1545&Itemid=55
2. The Palm Emulator will be installed in your Applications directory
FYI, I found the Palm browser the least web standards friendly

Blackberry
1. Go to http://na.blackberry.com/eng/developers/resources/simulators.jsp and download.  Choose the Torch phone.  It must run their OS version 6.0
2. Fill out form
3. Download
4. It is a windows executable, so put it in a location that is accessible by Windows.
5. Run the executable and the subsequent steps.  Eventually you have an emulator app you can run.
6. Go to setup within the phone in the emulator and turn on it’s wifi.  I had to do that to test web pages.

Nokia
1. Go to http://developer.symbian.org/wiki/index.php/Symbian_Emulator and follow the install instructions, which require installing several supporting layers onto a windows machine.  I used Windows XP, which seems like the most likely to be supported.
2. It took awhile to install everything, but the instructions worked as promised

3 June 2010

“These are a few of our favorite… Apps”.



Here at BKWLD we like to keep things such as our everyday work flow and culture as transparent as possible. I thought it would be a fun idea for everyone whom wanted to take part to list their top 5 or so most used apps.

Some of the apps listed are pretty standard and some not so much. We are always interested in exploring new apps so, please recommend away!


Photoshop - “Open and running every day, all day.”
TextEdit – “I get grief for using this but it’s lightweight and simple, simple, simple. I’ll start using a more robust text editor sometime soon. I use it for writing quick storyboards and concept explanation etc. ʻPagesʼ is upon the horizon…”
xScope- “Covers my ass for screen resolution guides at the very least.”
iChat- “Communicating with our Seattle office and random jackasses.”
iCal -“I’ve been getting better and better with my organization.


Pages - “I haven’t touched MS Word in over 2 years and haven’t looked back. I love how it handles styles, it’s like easy CSS in a word processor.”
OmniOutliner - “For taking notes on conference calls.”
MAMP Pro“Powers My LAMP dev environment. Makes it easy to setup additional testing vhosts (test dev rather than local host).”
TextMate“When is 2.0 gonna come out?! I’ve been flirting with switching to Coda, but I miss some of the hotkeys.”
Socialite -“Aggregates feeds from Facebook, Twitter, Google Reader, and Digg all in one place, plus allows me to post comments/tweets.”


Safari -“The Activity Window and Web Inspector alone are enough to make me feel like the king of the Internet.”
TextMate“Lots of power for so little toolbar.”
Sequel Pro“This is phpMyAdmin’s gorgeous, sophisticated sister. Unbelievable that this app is free!”
Spot Color + Developer Color Picker“Slick way to grab colors from the screen, tweak them in your favorite gamut, and spit out hexadecimals.”
Quick Look“Not really a stand-alone app, but I’ve definitely forgotten what it’s like to use a computer without it.”


Flash + AS3“Although thereʼs a steep learning curve, learning object-oriented AS3 has opened up so many doors, and is such an intricate and expansive programming language. Itʼs allowed me to create some kick-ass web designs.”
Coda“Once a site project is completely set up, the complete integration is incredible, and so intuitive. Once I made the switch I’ve never looked back.”
MAMP“Helped me do PHP dev on my local machine. Extremely helpful in every way.”
Things - “Awesome to-do app. Easy to set up and manage. So simple, and It’s what’s not included that makes it great. plus syncing over dropbox has make this invaluable. That said…”
DropBox“Awesome cloud storage. If I point my apps there, than they sync on all my computers (iTunes, Things, etc…). Plus online file recovery is very easy.”


Eclipse w/Flash Builder 4 Plugin“Paraphrasing a Josh Reddin-ism, ʻItʼs a text editor for fully grown men.ʼ Upgraded from Flex Builder 3 stand alone and my opinion of Eclipse has greatly increased. Eclipse also has plugins for PHP dev, Unfuddle (our ticket tracking software) and Ant (for oneclick builds)- all this allows for a one-step development environment for Elastic.
Calculator“Boring, I know, but good for doing quick math. I use this a lot when programming Uls. Bonus: it has a “programmer” view for doing fancy binary math.”
Last.fm“I like its music picks better than Pandora and the artist bios and photo streams are freaking sweet.”
Photoshop“What doesnʼt it do?”
Adium - “A slick IM client that supports just about every IM service in existence.”


Chromium“Browser of choice, nightly version of web inspector is as good as firebug without the performance hit.”
TextMate - “Code keeps me paid, and TextMate keeps me sane.”
iChat - “Remote communication, PM requests.”
MailPlane - “Multiple Gmail accounts? Like to keep ‘em separate? Notifications? Native web app feel with label and everything? Gets me into GCal, too.”
Terminal - “I gotta ssh into servers to push code, so I use some sweet aliases to keep it all organized.”


Adium
OmniOutliner - “Great for taking notes.”
FontLab Studio - “Converting fonts.”
Justinmind Prototyper - “Havenʼt really used this yet, but Iʼve heard great things.”
Adobe Media Player - “Checking/watching native flv.”


Linkinus - “Best IRC client for a mac. irc.freenode.net, #jquery is a great place to learn and ask questions.”
Alfred - “Quicklaunch application for which aims to save you time in searching your local computer and the web. Replaced ancient Quicksilver app!”
Snippley - “Basic text and organization app.”
Beyond Compare - “Easily compare files, folders, images, anything. Itʼs great!”
TextMate - “The best text editor for Mac and a powerful abbreviation engine for HTML and CSS. Saves hours!”


DropBox - “Best app for managing projects between projects. I also use it for freelance in getting assets.”
Adium/iChat - “Adium manages contacts better but iChat actually sends files.”
Coda - “My favorite app with FTP for html/css.”
Wordpress - “ Where I’ve spent most of my last year and a half.”
TweetDeck - “Nice for managing my tweets…”


TweetDeck - “Best way to stay informed of Chad Ochocincoʼs daily workouts or Snoop Doggʼs ʻbreakfast activitiesʼ.”
iChat - “Instant messaging: extreme convenience and extreme inconvenience all wrapped up into one.”
Garageband - “Now anyone can be a MC, and youʼll probably be better than 99% of radio hip-hop.”
Pages - “Iʼd rather be using Word, but close enough.”
Solitaire - “The best way to play with yourself.”


Stickies - “Nice way to save on physical sticky pads, and info that I need on a daily basis is easily accessible.”
TaskMate - “Great for keeping my to-do’s in order.”
Numbers - “I like to make spreadsheets, I’m a total nerd.”
Preview - “Makes things easy, easy, lemon squeezy.”
iChat - “Because, duh.”


Chad Taffolla – Art Director

The Hit List – “Awesome and free GTD app to keep my days/life organized.”
Transmit – “Gorgeous UI and experience to easily upload my files.”
Adium – “My favorite chat client especially when used with the iPhone message style.”
Cicero – “Dashboard widget that fulfills my Lorem Ipsum needs. Used and abused daily.”
Photoshop – “There is a light on under this icon all day. Content aware fill has come in handy on more than 1 occasion.”

18 May 2010

Value of Face to Face

Central Park

Yummy Dinners

Racking up loads of frequent flyer miles for personal use…..

All sweet  perks of tireless travel, however the insights gained and personal bonds created with my clients far out way the value of my deep and diverse Gowalla passport!

Over the past three years BKWLD has cultivated a fairly rich stable of retail clients; challenger brands that need to create a one on one relationship with consumers through a truly “branded” web experience in order to grow market share and earn relevance in saturated vertical categories.  A brand website, not to be confused with a B2C e-store (even though they can work in cohesion) in the one chance brands have to, truly tell a story especially when we are dealing with minimal media dollars  limited to aspirational life-style shots and cheesy headlines for half page ad in the typical industry pubs. To truly look  and the DNA of the brand, the common thread of products sold and the motivation of the consumers purchase decision is a healthy and sometimes eye-opening exercise I enjoy conducting at our now custom and mandatory brand discovery kick-off meetings.

So now myself, the assigned CD, PM and often times CEO Ryan Vanni (he picks great restaurants) all shlep out to: Boulder or Carlsbad or MorrisTown New Jersey to meet with our new clients and learn everything there is now know about these brands and why people actually pay full retail for the stuff they sell.  We start out asking what we think are pretty simple questions: Who is your target,what does your brand stand for, what other brands do they wish to emulate etc. Often to blank stares and confused looks around the table!  Not only is this shocking but exciting as we begin to peel back the layers of what really makes these brands special.  This exercise had lead to some of our best work and would have never happened had we not got off our ass, and pushed these brands to think a little.

Currently we are “getting personal”  with Gregory packs on some product launch strategies, Smartwool on a new brand site, and Chobani Greek yogurt on a new social media platform, that being said my next three weeks are booked with face to face meetings that will lead to  some new Discovery Gold!

My Two Favs:

Gravis http://www.gravisfootwear.com/
Status Quo: T&A, Tats and killer tubs.
Discovery:  Gravis is smart, stylish and interesting to people who just like to be rad.
Results: an award winning brand site that makes the killer product the star, not the killer backside 720 the sponsored athlete can boost.

Red Ledge: http://www.redledge.com/
Outdoor Industry: Beards, Fleece, and snoot bubbles as we climb K2
Discovery: Red Ledge is real, honest, functional and funny as hell!
Results: a site the pokes fun of the industry and speaks to the real consumer, and a tagline that says it all: “Functional, Affordable Clothing – For Those Who Exist in Reality.”

0 All sweet perks of tireless travel, however the insights gained and personal bonds created with my clients far out way the value of my deep and diverse Gowalla passport! Josh Reddin,Vice President

May 18th, 2010 at 03:32 PM
Posted By: Josh Reddin in General

23 February 2010

Working Against Ethics

Recently both Jeff and I were asked to contribute to an article in this month’s How Magazine about working on projects that conflict with your personal ethics. Although I was just ever-so-slightly misunderstood by the writer who summarized that my “primary motivation is making money”, says article, I was thrilled to contribute. Now do not get me wrong, I like many other business people am excited by a healthy margin, but for crying in the night it is not my motivation, let alone my “primary” one.  If that were the case wouldn’t I be dealing in hedge funds or commodities or something like that?  But hell, how often do you get asked to contribute to such a great magazine, and maybe even more valuable to me, I now get to complain about being misrepresented (the italics represent a sort of douche bag tone in my voice).  So that’s something too.

Thankfully for the internet I have the luxury of publishing what was sent to them as my true views on the subject, and thankfully for my not-so-very-prolific-blogging-career, I have an article “in the can”.  So here goes:

Quite simply put, it is the designer’s job to visually convey the message they are hired to deliver.  A lot goes into doing that well, and being diametrically opposed to a project’s purpose definitely would not help.  So then even if a designer did try to set their personal beliefs aside in the spirit of “gettin’ the job done,” at what point does that become irresponsible and a disservice to the paying party?  No matter how much you loath the purpose, to me that plain disservice becomes its own isolated case of ‘wrong’ as a business value.

To me I think a number of things go into considering an assignment, and certainly personal morals and values are not the least of which that would play a part of that filter.  Obviously the more typical filters for me as the CEO are, will it enhance our brand, is it financially responsible, will it burn out the team, do we like the idea, etc…Normally the project’s nature is much more innocuous then offensive to any set of morals.  You know, selling a backpack, an mp3 player, a piece of software, and so on.

Being of the more independent mind set, I would provoke any designer, or anyone else for that matter, to simply turn down what they want to turn down for opposing any personal moral or value.  Certainly freelancers have that liberty, and as an employer I give my team that same liberty.  Now sometimes we disagree on whether a project is good for the company, and we listen to those opinions as well.

Earlier on in our history we did get approached to do a couple projects that did in fact oppose my personal beliefs.  I think I’d prefer to not get into the nitty gritty as to what and why, but they started somewhat harmless.  We took the projects, and as they progressed through development, the projects became more and more opposing.  At first I simply personally backed-off from offering my help.  One of which we finished, although I would argue not our best project ever (serving my earlier point), and the other we resigned.  From those experiences I know now to stay away from projects I do not believe in.  But again, that encompasses much more then morals and values these days.

2009 had been a challenging year for all of us.  And in a year that I would of expected to take any paying project, we have turned down more then we ever have.  That does not mean every project is a party, but it does mean to choose whether or not to accept it through some sort of filter that you (either as an independent or agency) have defined so that you, your team, your portfolio, or your bottom line is served, and then in turn the client is best served.