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Displaying Your FeedStitch JSON Feed Using jQuery

Keith Muth
Keith Muth, ON THE TOPIC OF Javascript and Tips and Tricks
4/15
2009

In this post I'm going to show you how to display your FeedStitch feed on your site using a few simple lines of jQuery. FeedStitch is a site we made to allow users to aggregate feeds quickly and easily, and then offer various output options for the feeds users create. When FeedStitich first launched Mark Cornick wrote about parsing FeedStitch’s JSON feed with plain old JavaScript. As he pointed out, his example was just one way to do it and is less bulky than including the entire jQuery library, but it is a little more complex for people not accustomed to writing straight JavaScript. The designers here at Viget use the jQuery framework for most of our JavaScript needs so we usually have the library loading into most of our sites anyway. One of the great features in jQuery is that it can easily parse JSON feeds using the $.getJSON() function. This is something I have touched on before in my previous post about pulling your Flickr feed.

For this example, I made a FeedStitch feed with all the Viget blogs aggregated into single feed. If you go to a FeedStitch feed, you can grab the JSON feed at the very bottom of the page (next to the RSS feed icon). When looking at the raw JSON feed you'll probably see a mess of all kinds of variables and text, but here is what the beginning of the FeedStitch JSON feed looks like if we format it nicely:

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Cufón Font Replacement - The Good and The Bad

Erik Olson
Erik Olson, ON THE TOPIC OF CSS and Javascript and Opinions/Reviews
4/13
2009

As soon as designers got ahold of the web as a design medium (probably about 15 years ago),  they were thinking about fonts, right?  (It was at least in the top five on the "first things to think about" list).  So, in an age where tens of thousands of fonts have been invented, why are we mostly still using the same six?

Techniques like image replacement and sIFR have done us well. They remain the strongholds until something better comes along -- which may have just happened: namely, I'm talking about Cufón by Simo Kinnunen.

Cufón (I'm pronouncing it "koo-fon") is a font-replacement technique that uses javascript and vector graphics to write fonts from a font file (TTF, OTF or PFB) to your browser. It's easier/safer to use than sIFR and lighter on size than image replacement, but has the same copyright issues as both.

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Portfolio Reviewin’, Thoughts and Ideas for Design Students

Tom Osborne
Tom Osborne , ON THE TOPIC OF Opinions/Reviews
4/8
2009

jump starting your design career

Deep in the heart of Georgetown lies the Center for Digital Imaging Arts (CDIA) an extension of Boston University's applied arts school. I was recently asked to participate in a portfolio review of some of the school's upcoming web design graduates along with representatives from a few other fine agencies in the DC area. Among other options the school offers a Graphic and Web Design Certificate to help get future designers a leg up in pursuing their passions. I've been really impressed with the school's outreach into the local community. They seem to 'get it' and the students are smart to have connected with the school to jump start their careers. 

CDIA Student Portfolios:

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jQuery + Type + You.

Doug Avery
Doug Avery , ON THE TOPIC OF Javascript
4/4
2009

Once a month, two designers at Viget put together a presentation for the rest of the design team. Sometimes it's on finding inspiration, sometimes it's on new ideas or initiatives, and sometimes it's just a fun little knowledge-sharing presentation.

The following is one of the latter: A simple presentation I put together with some jQuery plugins to demonstrate the various ways jQuery can interact with type on the web.

You can view it here (click the headers to advance slides).

Topics Covered

  • Keeping a vertical rhythm
  • Removing "widows"
  • Ampersands, ligatures & special characters
  • Typographic animations
  • Font detection

Plugins & Links

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Stop Driving Your Developers Crazy

Mindy Wagner
Mindy Wagner , ON THE TOPIC OF General
4/1
2009

A few weeks ago, I had the pleasure of presenting at Refresh the Triangle with one of Viget's crazy talented web developers, David Eisinger. Our original plan was to get up there and talk about how designers and developers can collaborate effectively, but we're both pretty snarky so somewhere along the way our talk title became "10 Things Designers Do To Piss Developers Off (and vice versa)".

Slide intro

As we battled it out putting slides together and making long lists of things we hated about our web counterparts, I found myself becoming much more aware of my "designer quirks". A few of David's points rang especially true, much to my embarrassment. It's hard for a designer to admit they aren't perfection on a stick.

So what hit home the hardest? Well, for starters...

 

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