15toFame – Become an Instant Celebrity

15tofame.com, a website that allows users to be world-famous for 15 minutes. 15tofame realizes the prophecy of the American artist Andy Warhol made in February 1968 : “In the future everybody will be world-famous for 15 minutes“.

15tofame allows users to have a video shown continuously for 15 minutes chosen to play their chances of being [...]

15 minutes of fame

15tofame.com, a website that allows users to be world-famous for 15 minutes. 15tofame realizes the prophecy of the American artist Andy Warhol made in February 1968 : “In the future everybody will be world-famous for 15 minutes“.

15tofame allows users to have a video shown continuously for 15 minutes chosen to play their chances of being famous, so during those 15 minutes everybody all over the world can see the same video simultaneously. In fact the home of the site is simply a “Polaroid” including a video which appears for 15 minutes, after that another user will have his 15 minutes of fame. A user on 15tofame can only have 15 minutes of fame in his life.

“15tofame is the tool to make a video a cut above the rest so it’s the best place for new talents to be discovered.” said Stefano Mendicino, co-founder of 15tofame.

Another outstanding feature is the simplicity with which users share their favorite videos seen on 15tofame. Users can instantly share them via the main social networks like Facebook and Twitter creating a viral buzz immediately. Registered users can also ‘clap’ their favorite aspirants famous people, so those with true talent will rise to the top.

15 minutes of fame

The video that the user wants to use for his 15 minutes of fame has to be on YouTube so after his minutes of fame people who have appreciated his performance can continue to enjoy his video. In fact the details and the link to the video remain on the ‘clapsboard’ of the users who liked it and on the ‘Wall of fame’ that reminds everyone that got 15 minutes of fame.

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Wadja Makes Networked Activity Hyper-Local and Mobile

Wadja.com, a unique social networking site that uses labels to create people-to-topic connections, has introduced a technology innovation that uses basic email to deliver real-time updates to your community.
This powerful feature allows users to send email updates to any label directly from (and to), mobile handsets. This creates extreme relevance for instant news updates, and [...]

Wadja.com, a unique social networking site that uses labels to create people-to-topic connections, has introduced a technology innovation that uses basic email to deliver real-time updates to your community.

This powerful feature allows users to send email updates to any label directly from (and to), mobile handsets. This creates extreme relevance for instant news updates, and can be highly targeted to any hyper-local neighborhood.

A label created for a local nightclub, corner shop, or musician can be directly updated from your handset (by opening any email client), while you’re on the go. Imagine an unexpected special guest appearance at your neighborhood pub, a discount at a corner shop, or a surprise incident at a concert… you can update all the people that follow your label instantly. Is your favorite coffee shop giving away a free cup? Inform all your friends and followers right away with one simple email, and they will receive instant updates straight to their handsets.

The innovation lies in its simplicity. No sign ups, no logins, no downloads of APIs, no connections to the Web, no installations on your phone. Simply write and send an email to your label, and it will automatically update all your followers instantly.

Wadja’s labels allow individuals to follow very specific topics and group discussions without all the ‘noise’ usually associated with the Internet and real-time information flow. Communication that takes place under the umbrella of a label leads to a real-time conversation stream focused around an individual or community’s precise interests.

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Essential Habits Of An Effective Professional Freelancer


  

There’s very little to stop anyone becoming a freelancer. In a highly competitive and, in most places, saturated market, you need to make sure your reputation as a freelancer is well-managed and continues to grow. It’s very possible to get a good reputation without being the best in the world, and it’s even easier to lose that reputation.

Screenshot of Elliot Jay Stocks website

In this article, we’ll explore 15 habits that are essential in helping freelancers effectively safeguard and grow their reputation, and we’ll also discuss how to make freelancing work for you. The habits are split into 3 sections:

  • Marketing
  • Business and time
  • Specific business areas

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There’s very little to stop anyone becoming a freelancer. In a highly competitive and, in most places, saturated market, you need to make sure your reputation as a freelancer is well-managed and continues to grow. It’s very possible to get a good reputation without being the best in the world, and it’s even easier to lose that reputation. In this article, we’ll explore 15 habits that are essential in helping freelancers effectively safeguard and grow their reputation, and we’ll also discuss how to make freelancing work for you. The habits are split into 3 sections:

  • Marketing
  • Business and time
  • Specific business areas

Marketing and Relationships

1. The Presentation Habit

Your website should be at the centre of your marketing strategy. It’s where people go to see who you are, what you’re about, whether you know what you’re talking about and what work you have done. It’s your silent 24/7 salesman, and it needs to be right. Fortunately, what your website needs is straightforward:

  • Well-presented work with a good description of the roles you played
  • A brief history of who you are and why you’re where you are
  • Contact details that are easily accessible
  • Content that is continually tweaked, added to, and updated

Other than that, you can go wherever you want with your own website — and so you should. Personality is key. Some great examples:

href="http://elliotjaystocks.com/" title="Elliot Jay Stocks website"> src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/cdn_smash/wp-content/uploads/images/effective-professional-freelancing/ejs.jpg" width="500" height="298" alt="Ejs in Essential Habits Of An Effective Professional Freelancer" class="imgrob2" /> />Elliot Jay Stocks carries a very clear message on his site

href="http://iancoyle.com/" title="Ian Coyle website"> src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/cdn_smash/wp-content/uploads/images/effective-professional-freelancing/iancoyle.jpg" width="500" height="298" alt="Iancoyle in Essential Habits Of An Effective Professional Freelancer" class="imgrob2" /> />Ian Coyle goes for pure simplicity

href="http://jasonsantamaria.com/" title="Jason Santa Marias website"> src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/cdn_smash/wp-content/uploads/images/effective-professional-freelancing/jsm.jpg" width="500" height="298" alt="Jsm in Essential Habits Of An Effective Professional Freelancer" class="imgrob2" /> />Jason Santa Maria goes the whole hog with a new design for each post — a lot of work but he stands out from the crowd as a result

2. The Networking Habit

src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/cdn_smash/wp-content/uploads/images/effective-professional-freelancing/sm.jpg" width="500" height="100" alt="Sm in Essential Habits Of An Effective Professional Freelancer" class="imgrob2" />

They say that within 6 degrees of separation, everyone knows everyone. So you need to make sure that everyone within your 1st degree (i.e. people you know), know exactly what you do. It needs to be exact as well. If you’re a developer you don’t want people saying you’re a website designer, and so on. Your current network of friends, family, and associates are your free word-of-mouth marketing – so get them talking about you right now.

Once this is done, your network needs to be extended and enhanced. Register with any social networking platforms that can work for you — LinkedIn, Facebook, and Twitter. Within those places, start getting into the right circles. On LinkedIn you may join some appropriate discussion groups that are either local or skill based. On Twitter you may start tweeting and including appropriate hashtags so more people can see your tweet on that subject.

There are many ways to network and connect with people, so it’s crucial that a freelancer not be afraid to talk to people and share information and contacts. Learn the networking habit and get yourself known.

3. The Niching Habit

src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/cdn_smash/wp-content/uploads/images/effective-professional-freelancing/niche.jpg" width="200" height="223" alt="Niche in Essential Habits Of An Effective Professional Freelancer" class="imgrob" />Freelancers can get into the habit of not only finding their niche, but creating niches. A niche in this case is an area in your overall field of work in which you particularly specialise. If you’ve become very good at creating websites for golf courses, for example, then that’s a great niche.

The reasons having a niche is valuable are simple: It’s easier to become an expert in a niche. It’s easier to sell to other prospects within that niche as they can see what you have done before. As an expert in that niche you can charge a premium for your depth of knowledge.

The key to this habit is to proactively build your own niches. Seek out profitable areas in which you can work and concentrate on building niches.

4. The Pricing Habit

src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/cdn_smash/wp-content/uploads/images/effective-professional-freelancing/money.jpg" width="200" height="301" alt="Money in Essential Habits Of An Effective Professional Freelancer" class="imgrob" />How you price your projects can easily be the difference between winning and not winning some work. Your pricing needs to be transparent at all times and should be agreed upon up front. Things go wrong when hidden costs appear later on. Clients like to know how much they’re paying, when they’re going to pay it, and what they’re paying for. So make it clear from the start.

Second part of the pricing habit — protect yourself. It’s easy to get so wrapped up in winning a project that you forgot some simple rules. If you have never worked with a client before, ask for a small percentage of the fee before you do any work. At this early stage, you won’t know whether they will pay! Reduce your bad debt by either only working for clients you trust or having some remuneration first.

Third part of the pricing habit — be flexible. Make sure you find a way to make the commercial deal a win-win for both parties. This could be:

  • Monthly payments (regular cash flow over the course of the project)
  • Payment when you hit certain project milestones (e.g. project performance)
  • Deposit and balance on completion (best avoided for cash flow reasons)
  • Possible exchange of services

5. The Growth Habit

It’s been claimed that it costs seven times as much in resources to acquire a new client than it does to grow an existing one. So the growth habit is about proactively looking at your clients in detail so you can discover new ways to help them.

One practical way to do this is to cross reference. Write all your services across the top of an excel sheet, then put your clients down the left hand column. Now place an X in the box where a service you have done matches a client. The boxes without X’s are potential growth opportunities and should all be explored before spending too much energy trying to acquire new clients.

Business and Time

This section is less screenshot, more serious business.

6. The time management habit

src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/cdn_smash/wp-content/uploads/images/effective-professional-freelancing/cal.jpg" width="157" height="135" alt="Cal in Essential Habits Of An Effective Professional Freelancer" class="imgrob" />

Lacking good habits in time management could cause you to over-committing yourself at certain times, which could lead to:

  • Missing a deadline and disappointing a client
  • Producing sloppy or inaccurate work
  • Causing yourself stress because of the pressure to get everything done

The solution to this is an effective planning mechanism. Estimate how long the work will take you, then add a buffer to your estimation. This will ensure that, if it does take longer, it won’t eat into other projects. A 50% buffer works well. That may sound like a lot, but if you go over by 25% and then there are additional client emendations, you’ll need it. Once you have the total time allocation, add it to your diary. Now, here’s the crucial part: Do not move it, shrink it, or change it in any way. If you have to do something urgent that will interfere with that scheduled work, make sure the time is reallocated elsewhere.

A simple calendar application like href="http://www.google.com/calendar/">Google calendar or Outlook can help you plan your time as a freelancer. If you struggle with where all that time goes and want to get serious about making improvements in time management, something like href="http://www.rescuetime.com/">Rescue Time can really help.

7. The Flexibility Habit

src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/cdn_smash/wp-content/uploads/images/effective-professional-freelancing/flex.jpg" width="200" height="133" alt="Flex in Essential Habits Of An Effective Professional Freelancer" class="imgrob" />Being flexible, responsive, and effective at what you do will allow you to handle unexpected situations, such as when a client contacts you with urgent needs and expects you to help. Having set aside time in advance for such urgent situations will ensure that you earn a reputation as a flexible worker.

What happens if nothing comes up to fill that pre-allocated time? Well you might finish that other project early and can add something special. What happens if the whole day is taken up by urgent project? No problem, you had already planned this might happen, so you won’t let anyone down.

Of course you’re not going to be able to foresee everything, but a certain level of flexibility will allow you to please your clients and be relatively free of stress because of time constraints.

8. The Honesty Habit

Agencies will not use you again if you let a client down, and your chance of repeat work is slim to none. In the same way, you should not over commit your time, but stay within your capabilities. We all need to stretch ourselves on new projects and learn new techniques and practices — that’s not what this is about. This is about promising to do a task in a specified time when, in actuality, you don’t have any idea whether it’s feasible or not. Above all else, people appreciate honesty. You’re better off being honest about whether you can handle a project rather than taking the risk of letting them down.

So how can you grow your skills and help your clients? By being honest and asking some good questions:

  • “I don’t think this project is right for me. I don’t have much experience in [insert technology here]“
  • “I can really help you with the [insert service here] part of this project, but I know another freelancer who can help with it. Would you be happy if I managed the project for you but outsourced this other work?”
  • “I’ll need more information before I know how long this project will take. Would you mind if I spent a couple of hours doing some research so I can give you an accurate timescale?”

9. The Over-Delivery Habit

Do not deliver your projects early. Sound strange? It’s not. If you deliver early, there’s a possibility the client will think you overcharged, and may expect part of his payment to be returned. They might also expect future work to be completed ahead of schedule, which may set a bad precedent.

Instead, use the extra time to focus on whizz-bang elements — those extra bits of polish and creativity that will gain you the reputation you deserve and let you grow. For a designer this might mean spending time adding nice touches to your graphics; for a developer, it could mean more time to implement a cool piece of JavaScript to replace the plain functionality you originally settled for. The “over-deliver” will earn you a solid reputation, whereas finishing early could get you into trouble.

10. The Business Advice Habit

Although as a freelancer you’re skilled at what you do, don’t assume you’ll be able to do your accounts and bookkeeping, fill in tax returns, produce an invoice or write a proposal all by yourself.

Seek regular advice from respected professionals to help you with these aspects of running your business. This might include speaking with people who run their own operations and understand the ins and outs better than you do. Learn as much as possible from their experiences and mistakes.

Specific Business Areas

What’s out there to help you run your business and what areas do you need to focus on? In this section, we’ll discuss some applications that have earned reputations for helping freelancers do their jobs and be more professional.

11. The Email Habit

Email is toxic. As a freelancer you can easily become what’s commonly known as a busy fool. You might spend a significant part of your day just sending and receiving email without ever getting any work done. Instead, be in the habit of controlling email, and not letting it control you.

To do this you need to:

  • Turn off all the little reminders, message counts, and other indicators that may catch your eye
  • Configure your email client to run a “send and receive” at longer intervals, maybe as little as once per hour
  • Set aside blocks of time in the day to deal with all email, then switch it off; if something is urgent, people will use the phone
  • Use the ‘touch it once’ philosophy; fully read and deal with every email you open, instead of half-reading some and coming back to them later

12. The Project Management Habit

Some clients will want you to fit in with their processes, while others will not enforce this. You need to have very clear processes for how you start working with a client and start a new project. What questions do you ask a new client? Where do you store the information they tell you? How do you keep track of how close the deadline is? Where do you store all the files they send you?

Email is not sufficient for this! Things will get lost, forgotten or overlooked. You might prefer cardboard folders or ring binders or whatever works for you — but use something and stick to your own system. There are applications like href="http://basecamphq.com/">Basecamp and href="http://www.activecollab.com/">activeCollab that can help with this.

href="http://basecamphq.com" title="Basecamp project management application"> src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/cdn_smash/wp-content/uploads/images/effective-professional-freelancing/basecamp.jpg" width="500" height="296" alt="Basecamp in Essential Habits Of An Effective Professional Freelancer" class="imgrob2" /> />Basecamp is used by many to manage their projects at low cost

href="http://www.activecollab.com" title="ActiveCollab project management application"> src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/cdn_smash/wp-content/uploads/images/effective-professional-freelancing/activecollab.jpg" width="500" height="269" alt="Activecollab in Essential Habits Of An Effective Professional Freelancer" class="imgrob2" /> />activeCollab is a source code editable alternative to Basecamp

13. The Research & Development Habit

Sounds like a big company thing to do but R&D is essential to a good freelance operation. You need to be ahead of the curve or at the very least on it to be servicing your clients most effectively. Be in the habit of investing time for research and development. Expand your current skills and learn new ones.

Never designed a billboard before? That’s development.

Don’t know which email marketing system might help your clients? That’s research. /> ( href="http://www.campaignmonitor.com/" title="Email marketing system - Campaign Monitor">Campaign Monitor and href="http://www.mailchimp.com/" title="Email marketing system - Mailchimp">MailChimp are good options).

Set aside time every week to do R&D. Build up a list of blogs that feed you new thinking and new ideas. Listen to informative podcasts ( href="http://boagworld.com/" title="Boagworld podcast">Boagworld is a good one).

14. The Sales and CRM Habit

How can you allocate your time and resources and figure out whether or not you need to be hunting for new work or concentrating on servicing current clients? You should know at any given time what your work pipeline looks like, how likely is it all to materialize, and at roughly what value.

There are various applications out there to help, such as href="http://www.salesforce.com/" title="Salesforce">Salesforce, href="http://www.sugarcrm.com/crm/community/sugarcrm-community.html">SugarCRM (open source edition), as well as 37signals’ popular href="http://highrisehq.com/">Highrise.

href="http://highrisehq.com" title="Highrise management application"> src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/cdn_smash/wp-content/uploads/images/effective-professional-freelancing/highrise.jpg" width="500" height="223" alt="Highrise in Essential Habits Of An Effective Professional Freelancer" class="imgrob2" /> />Highrise is used by many to manage their sales and leads at low cost

15. The Accounts Habit

Making sure you have any easy way to produce, send, and track invoices is essential, as is getting into the habit of running your accounts professionally, because such habits will ensure regular cash flow. Applications like href="http://www.blinksale.com/">Blinksale, href="http://www.freshbooks.com/">Freshbooks or href="http://www.simplyinvoices.com/">Simply Invoices can help formalise the accounts side of your business and give a good professional feel to how you operate. Clients will need invoices for their accounts — make sure they’re not hand written or unbranded.

href="http://www.blinksale.com" title="Blinksale Invoicing application"> src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/cdn_smash/wp-content/uploads/images/effective-professional-freelancing/blinksale.jpg" width="500" height="231" alt="Blinksale in Essential Habits Of An Effective Professional Freelancer" class="imgrob2" /> />Blinksale can help you create, send, and track professional invoices

Further Resources

  • href="http://www.freelanceuk.com/">Freelance UK />Host of articles to help freelancers.
  • href="http://bestwebgallery.com/">BestWebGallery />Inspiration for those times of creative block.
  • href="http://www.elance.com/">Elance />A place to get freelance work – referral work is better though!

About the author

Rob Smith is the digital director of href="http://www.blue-leaf.co.uk" title="Blueleaf - digital marketing">Blueleaf – helping clients with their digital needs from their website to email marketing to analytics. He also writes in his href="http://rob-smith.info" title="Rob Smith's blog">own blog on digital media and ecommerce

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Live-blogging the Google Chrome OS event

I’m sitting in a room at Google waiting to hear more about Google Chrome OS. You can watch the webcast along with me if you like.
For starters, here’s what Google announced about Chrome OS back in July. At that time, Google called out “speed, simplicity and security” as the key ideas behind Chrome OS. Google [...]

I’m sitting in a room at Google waiting to hear more about Google Chrome OS. You can watch the webcast along with me if you like.

For starters, here’s what Google announced about Chrome OS back in July. At that time, Google called out “speed, simplicity and security” as the key ideas behind Chrome OS. Google released Chrome a little over a year ago with a novel idea–a comic book to describe the features and design decisions behind Chrome.

Looks like Danny Sullivan is live blogging too.

Google OS just noticed that the source code for Chrome OS is available. (Maybe they’ll call the open version “Chromium OS”?)

Sundar Pichai (a Vice President of Product Management at Google) is talking about the progress of Google Chrome over the last year, and the progress of HTML5 as well. Pichai notes some large-scale trends:
- Netbooks are becoming more popular.
- Hundreds of millions of users are living in the cloud. [Yup, I went Microsoft-free as a challenge and I haven't looked back. I do almost everything I need to do in a browser.]
- Innovation in computing devices. For example, phones are getting smarter and more capable–more like mini-computers.

MG Siegler is live-blogging over on TechCrunch.

Every application in Chrome OS is a web application. Sundar Pichai repeated this for emphasis. That means “don’t expect to be able to run .exe files.” :)

Pichai emphasizes that Speed, Simplicity, and Security are the pillars of Chrome OS:
- Speed: the goal is that boot and execution is blazingly fast. The OS currently boots in 7 seconds.
- Simplicity: the browser is the front-end. If you can run a browser, you should be able to use Chrome OS.
- Security: no code is installed on the system, so detecting malicious processes is easier.

Demo time! 7 seconds to boot. Ooh, they’ve been running the demo on a Chrome OS machine. :) The UI is still in flux (final machines might not appear for a year).

Chrome OS looks very much like Chrome. There’s an extra pinned tab on the left-hand side to open web applications. When you open up a web application, up pops a “mole” (because it comes from underground) that’s a persistent small window. These “moles” are expected to be called “panels” in the external release. The panels persist as you move between tabs and can be minimized down to the bottom right or they can be closed.

You can also have different windows or workspaces, so you could have a set of tabs for some work and a set of tabs for blog post and switch between them easily. You can drag and drop tabs just like with Chrome.

You can plug in a phone and browse pictures or video files. Then from there you could upload stuff to the web. They showed Flash working. Everything is web-based, e.g. they took a Excel file and loaded it into SkyDrive and viewed it using a Microsoft web app for viewing Excel files.

I want this OS, like now. Matt Papakipos, an engineering director at Google, just announced that they’re releasing the Chrome OS. They’re also releasing a bunch of design docs, not just code. Everything is flash-memory-based–no hard drive.

Matt Papakipos is talking about verified boot. It looks like the Chrome OS team is working hard to verify that code is secure via cryptographic signatures. If you get typical malware, you just reboot–seven seconds later, you’re clean again. Chrome OS does a lot of work behind the scenes to make sure that from the firmware upwards, everything is secure and has the latest patches. The application security model changes in Chrome OS. Instead of running with the privileges of “you” (e.g. administrator capabilities). Under Chrome OS, web applications can’t change your underlying hardware settings, so things are safely sandboxed (chroot, namespaces, stack protection, toolchain). The root partitiion in file system is read-only, including the Chrome executable, which is unusual.

User data is encrypted on a Chrome OS machine. If you lose your laptop, the attacker gets nothing of value. Aside: what will people call these machines? Netbook? Chromebook? Webbook? Webtop? Chrometop? I don’t know what people will decide to call these machines. I like “chromebook.” :) User data and settings are synced to the cloud. So if you have a wifi network you’ve configured, that data is stored in the cloud. If you dunk your “Chromebook” in a pool or lose it, it sounds like you can pick a new one off the shelf, log in, and it will be as if you never lose your machine.

You can’t download Chrome OS and be guaranteed it will work on a random machine. Target time is end of next year. Google will work to ensure that these machines will be a good experience (good keyboard, resolution). They want compelling devices.

Google is going to be good open-source citizens and contribute code upstream (e.g. to Linux, Ubuntu, Moblin). [I've seen this with Chrome and it's worked well.]

We’re watching this video which is on the Google Chrome channel on YouTube:

Okay, it looks like Google has released a ton of Chromium OS videos on the Chrome channel on YouTube.

Question: How much will it cost?
Answer: You’ll hear that from our partners. Expect prices in the range of what people expect for computer products today.

Question: What are machine you running?
Answer: Sundar Pichai says that the demo was running on an off-the-shelf EEE PC.

Question: Standards?
Answer: MattP: Google is going to be a good citizen on pushing web standards forward, but standards take a while to be finalized. They want e.g. HTML5 to run in multiple browsers.

Questions: Drivers and hardware?
Answer: We’re looking for high-quality components with open-source drivers wherever possible.

Question: Applications?
Answer: Use case is web only. Again, don’t expect to run .exe files on a “Chromebook.” Web-based applications (e.g. photo-editing) can do most of what you want. If you’re a lawyer and editing Word files all day, this wouldn’t be your preferred machine. Sundar mentions that this might be your “backup” machine in that you might want a “primary” machine that can run Windows or Mac apps, but your Chrome machine might actually be your “primary” machine in terms of the time you spend.

Question: Compatibility between Chrome and Chrome OS?
Answer: Everything that works in Chrome works in Chrome OS. Things like Native Client are an important of this story.

Question: Will it run different browsers?
Answer: “Chrome is the OS.” End-to-end is/will be open-source. If someone wanted to make a similar OS with a different browser, they can. But don’t expect e.g. Opera to run under Chrome OS.

Questions: Is this netbook-only?
Answer: Initially focused on netbook-type form factors because they want a compelling experience. Can go bigger later, but for 2010 focusing on netbook.

Questions: Call out hardware partners?
Answer: Probably in the middle of next year?

Question: Size of the code base?
Answer: It’s open, so people can check it out themselves. They want to simplify things, so they don’t want a huge code base.

Question: Any offline access?
Answer: Primarily intended for wifi connectivity. If you use HTML5 you could in theory do offline. You could plug in media and run (say) a Flash game off of the media too. [For example, I played Machinarium, which is a Flash-based game, offline on a plane with my vanilla Ubuntu machine on a recent trip.]

Questions: Wide-band or other unusual networking?
Answer: Mainly focused on 802.11n.

Question: Can it be run in a virtual machine?
Answer: Yes.

Question: Can Android apps run?
Answer: No, only web apps.

Question (Mike Arrington): No plans for native executables?
Answer: Current plan is to only support web apps.
Arrington: That’s exactly what Steve Jobs said, and he changed his stance within a year.
Sundar Pichai: But even the

Question: Native Client implies an Intel processor. Do you plan to support ARM? < - [Smart question from InfoWorld.]
Answer: (Pichai) we want to work with a wide variety of possible partners. MattP seemed to indicate interest in ARM.

Question: timeframe for non-netbooks?
Answer: Focused on netbook for 2010.

Question: Business model?
Answer: Just people using the web more can be really good for Google. Every app is the same web app (seemed to imply no additional ads). The OS is free/open-source, so you could always strip out ads. But the demo didn’t show any ads. [This question reminded me of the people who claimed that Android would be a mobile phone OS that would show ads everywhere. That clearly didn't happen.]

Question: Reliability? e.g. Gmail down for two hours stalls me.
[My answer: Cloud-based services are still more reliable than client-based solutions ]

Sergey Brin just showed up.

Question: storage devices?
Answer: Anything that identifies itself as storage should work. They’re taking a new approach to printing (Chrome OS will be able to print) but will share details later.

Question from Niall Kennedy: With Chrome, the release was a stake in the ground and about inviting the community in to help out. This event seems similar?
Answer: Exactly. Officially supported hardware will take a while, but the community can come and join in.

Question: Is this a “War of the Clouds”?
Answer from Sergey: We focus on user needs rather than obsess about strategy. There’s a real user need to use computers easily. You could buy a bunch of netbooks, but managing the software would be unwieldy. If your machine is “stateless” then they’re much easier to use.

Ten Stunningly Fresh WordPress Themes From November

You do not have to be able to design or code if you want to use WordPress, that’s the beauty of it. Anyone can grab a domain, get a theme and start blogging. If you want to separate your blogs theme from the other thousands that exist in a crowded niche, then paying a small amount for a premium WordPress theme can be a very rewarding for you in the long term.

Here are Ten Stunningly Fresh WordPress Themes From November 2009, enjoy!

You do not have to be able to design or code if you want to use WordPress, that’s the beauty of it. Anyone can grab a domain, get a theme and start blogging. If you want to separate your blogs theme from the other thousands that exist in a crowded niche, then paying a small amount for a premium WordPress theme can be a very rewarding for you in the long term.

Here are Ten Stunningly Fresh WordPress Themes From November 2009, enjoy!

Chromatique – $25

Information & Demo

Chromatique is a Premium WordPress Theme designed and hand coded from scratch, to meet the highest needs of a Business/Blog and Portfolio Site.

The theme is fully featured and loaded with lots of configurable options, which enable a high level of simplicity and usability.

Chromatique

Interfaces – $30

Information & Demo

This theme is a complete WordPress Theme, designed from the ground up with custom fields, functions. This theme is built to function first and foremost as a news/folio/business, then it can be used for just about any site that needs a beautiful layout.

Interfaces

Network WP – $30

Network WP is a WordPress template inspired by big TV network sites. It is packed full of features including featured slider, image resizing to fit in with the template, social bookmarking, threaded comments, breadcrumb, JQuery efftects, widget ready.

Information & Demo

Network-WP

DesignNews Community Template – $25

Community theme is an easy to use, configurable theme with features oriented on community blogs, where posts are published by multiple authors.

Information & Demo

DesignNews

Marketplace – $25

Marketplace is a both clean and stylish WordPress theme with the intent and focus on creating a community site for industry news, tutorials, etc. This theme includes many popular built in features seen in today’s industry leading community sites. This themes comes with 5 different color options to choose from.

If you’ve ever thought about starting a community based site, then this is your theme. Purchase today and be up and running in no time at all. Themes features include: Advertisement Slots, Tabbed Sidebar Navigation, Flickr Group Integration, Post Images, Clean Comments, Social Links, RSS For Posts and Comments, and many more.

Information & Demo

Marketplace

Headlines – $70 (Woo Themes subscription)

Headlines continues where our old magazine themes left off. It has tons of requested features like featured area, social bookmarks, author highlighting, flexible layout to name a few. It’s the perfect platform to launch your magazine or blog and reach out to the world!

Information & Demo

Headlines

Manilla – $25

Manilla is a 4 in 1 WordPress theme that was designed to be a simple to use platform for your personal portfolio, as well as, working blog. After getting your site setup your new homepage will be populated with the most recent projects from your work section and queried with an AJAX carousel.

Information & Demo 

Manilla

IMaxell – $30

This theme is a Portfolio and / or a Corporate template for companies, portfolios, webdesigners, eBooks sites, etc, to showcase your services and work. This theme comes with CU3ER a brand new 3D slidereasy to customize, IMaxell also has an added 2 more sliders for your customization, s3Slider and jQuery innerFade.

Information & Demo

iMaxell

The Furniture Shop – $45

Designed especially for online shops The Furniture Store features a plugin free localized ecommerce system, a membership area, creating and saving a wishlist, an informative customer service area, unique “Shop by…” widgets, lots of independent widget ready areas and sooo much more!

Information & Demo

The-Furniture-Store

London Creative – $30

London Creative + comes with fully working contact form, awesome slider for your featured images, nasty spinning slider buttons (never saw them anywhere else, so you can call it unique), 2 message buttons under the slider and PrettyPhoto plugin (better clone of Lightbox).

Information & Demo

London-creative

Glassical: A Free WordPress Theme


  

We love our readers. We respect the hard work of designers and developers across the globe. And we do our best to make the web design community stronger and the Web a little bit prettier. Therefore we ask talented artists and creative professionals to showcase their skills and release something unique and beautiful as a gift to the community. And when designers agree, impressive works see the light of day.

Screenshot

Today we are glad to release Glassical — a free professional Wordpress-theme created by Abdullah Ibrahim. This theme was designed with the main focus being on typography, clean look and simplicity. Hopefully, you will be able to use it in your projects or at least use it as a foundation for your next projects. The theme is released especially for Smashing Magazine and its readers.

width="650">
width="650"> style="width:650px;"> src="http://creatives.commindo-media.de/static/smashing-magazine-advertisement.gif" alt="" border="0" /> /> href="http://creatives.commindo-media.de/www/delivery/ck.php?zoneid=56" > src="http://creatives.commindo-media.de/www/delivery/avw.php?zoneid=56" border="0" alt="" />  href="http://creatives.commindo-media.de/www/delivery/ck.php?zoneid=63" > src="http://creatives.commindo-media.de/www/delivery/avw.php?zoneid=63" border="0" alt="" />  href="http://creatives.commindo-media.de/www/delivery/ck.php?zoneid=64" > src="http://creatives.commindo-media.de/www/delivery/avw.php?zoneid=64" border="0" alt="" />

src="http://imp.constantcontact.com/imp/cmp.jsp?impcc=IMP_DIMPBPRSMASHRSS&o=http://img.constantcontact.com/lp/images/standard/spacer.gif" alt="" border="0" width="1" height="1" />

We love our readers. We respect the hard work of designers and developers across the globe. And we do our best to make the web design community stronger and the Web a little bit prettier. Therefore we ask talented artists and creative professionals to showcase their skills and release something unique and beautiful as a gift to the community. And when designers agree, impressive works see the light of day.

href="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/images/glassical-wordpress-theme/glassic-fullpreview.png" title="Visit the demo"> src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/images/glassical-wordpress-theme/glassic-release.jpg" width="450" height="500" alt="Screenshot" />

Today we are glad to release Glassical — a free professional WordPress-theme created by href="http://www.symmetricweb.com/">Abdullah Ibrahim. This theme was designed with the main focus being on typography, clean look and simplicity. Hopefully, you will be able to use it in your projects or at least use it as a foundation for your next projects. The theme is released especially for Smashing Magazine and its readers.

Download the theme for free!

The theme is released under GPL. You can use it for all your projects for free and without any restrictions. Please link to this article if you would like to spread the word. You may modify the theme as you wish. The theme supports the WordPress 2.8 nested comment system and it is also customized for the WP Pagenavi plugin. Also, Cufón is used for embedding the Nevis font into the theme.

href="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/images/glassical-wordpress-theme/glassic-fullpreview.png" title="Visit the demo"> src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/images/glassical-wordpress-theme/preview.jpg" width="450" height="548" alt="Screenshot" />

  • href="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/images/glassical-wordpress-theme/glassic-fullpreview.png">large preview 1 (front page)
  • href="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/images/glassical-wordpress-theme/post-preview.png">large preview 2 (post page)
  • href="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/images/glassical-wordpress-theme/glassical-wordpress-theme.zip">download the theme + PSD source (.zip, 2.1 Mb)
  • Blogger version: href="http://glassical-blogger-template.blogspot.com/">Demo, href="http://bloggerfaqs.blogspot.com/2009/11/glassical-free-blogger-template.html">Release post (incl. download link)
  • href="http://dcing.net/theme-release-post">release post

Screenshots

Below you’ll find more screenshots of the theme. You can click on an image to see the enlarge version.

“Filed under” and “Comments”-section

href="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/images/glassical-wordpress-theme/post-preview.png"> src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/images/glassical-wordpress-theme/filed-under.jpg" width="572" height="746" alt="Wordpress Theme" />

“Categories”-section

class="showcase"> href="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/images/glassical-wordpress-theme/glassic-fullpreview.png"> src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/images/glassical-wordpress-theme/categories.jpg" width="399" height="490" alt="Wordpress Theme" />

Design of a <blockquote>

class="showcase"> href="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/images/glassical-wordpress-theme/glassic-fullpreview.png"> src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/images/glassical-wordpress-theme/post.gif" width="572" height="624" alt="Wordpress Theme" />

Last but not least…

Thank you, Abdullah! We appreciate your work and your good intentions.

We are regularly looking for creative designers and artists. You may not know it yet, but we might feature you in one of our upcoming posts.

If you want to release a high-quality free font, a WordPress-theme, some wallpapers or an icon-set, please href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/contact/index.php/form">contact us — we would like to support you.

You may be interested in the following free WordPress-themes as well:

  • href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2008/09/08/agregado-a-free-wordpress-theme/">Agregado: A Free WordPress Theme
  • href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2008/08/08/infinity-a-free-wordpress-theme/">Infinity: A Free WordPress Theme
  • href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2008/07/16/wordpress-fun-a-free-wordpress-theme/">WordPress.Fun: A Free WordPress Theme
  • href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2008/08/05/fervens-a-free-wordpress-theme/">Fervens: A Free WordPress Theme
  • href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2007/12/21/dilectio-a-smashing-wordpress-theme/">Dilectio: A Free WordPress Theme
  • href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2007/09/07/smashing-freefont-and-wordpress-theme/">Smashing: A Free WordPress Theme
/>

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Google Pushes Fading Home Page Test To More, Adds Instructions

Earlier this month, Google began testing a simplistic fading in home page. Some loved it, but mostly, I have seen complaints about it. It seems like Google has pushed this test home page to many more people. I have seen a spike in posts about this in the Google Web Search Help discussion area, plus a new thread at WebmasterWorld.

The new push seemed to have one minor, but significant change to the fade home page test. As the SEW blog reports, Google added instructions, informing users to “Press enter to search.” Here is a screen capture:

Google Home Page "Press Enter"

Now, if you need instructions on how to use a simplistic design, does that mean the simplicity is simply not there?

Forum discussion at WebmasterWorld and dozens of threads at Google Web Search Help.


Earlier this month, Google began testing a simplistic fading in home page. Some loved it, but mostly, I have seen complaints about it. It seems like Google has pushed this test home page to many more people. I have seen a spike in posts about this in the Google Web Search Help discussion area, plus a new thread at WebmasterWorld.

The new push seemed to have one minor, but significant change to the fade home page test. As the SEW blog reports, Google added instructions, informing users to “Press enter to search.” Here is a screen capture:

Google Home Page "Press Enter"

Now, if you need instructions on how to use a simplistic design, does that mean the simplicity is simply not there?

Forum discussion at WebmasterWorld and dozens of threads at Google Web Search Help.



Seth Godin: Sliced Bread

Malcolm Gladwell: Outliers

Anthony Parinello: Your Price is Too High

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