1. Free Editable Vector Maps
So what do you get when you marry design and travel? Beautifully detailed Free Vector Maps by Ted Grajeda, of course! Ted has an affinity for maps as he loves to travel and explore, and so he has designed a few he wants to share with you. The maps have been created by designers using consistent color, fonts and strokes.
GIS data is used to create these clean vector maps which are all digitally handmade without tracing or copying any images. The maps are layered with different details and all the elements are on separate layers. These maps are so easy to customize by using the different layers that there's almost an entire world of maps waiting for you! (sh)
2. How Much To Make An App?
You have this awesome idea of what kind of app the world is still missing? You want to get it out there? But how should you get started? To connect creativity with professional knowledge and know-how is one of the goals ooomf pursues. They offer help with one of the basic steps: estimating the costs of your app.
In only ten steps you can get an overview of how much an app with your desired features costs. There are many options to choose from, such as device, type of interface, required login system, and a few others. Of course, the total you receive in the end is just an estimate but it might give you a sense of direction of what kind of budget you should be expecting or seeking for such a project.(kv)
3. Discover The Best Comments In Source Code
Leaving a personal mark for others to discover seems to be a human urge. Humans in the stone age left cave drawings, today's students are known to leave doodles on their desk, and tourists love to leave the obligatory “X and Y were here, 03.10.2013" in almost every famous landmark they can access.
I always treated code as a deadly serious business (maybe because I'm German), but some developers love to leave goodies for the few people that may stumble across their source code. Read all 518 creative comments written in code by developers who have left their personal marks behind, for themselves and for those who may have to maintain a particular code in the future. (ml)
4. Don't Be Dumb, You're Smart!
While more and more designers focus on typography and readability, there are still some common issues which are so easy to avoid yet are often overlooked. However, Jason Santa Maria promotes one simple feature which won't need any special knowledge and can make your content better — today.
Jason's little side project “Smart Quotes For Smart People" was made for the National Punctuation Day 2013 and promotes the usage of elegant Curly Quotes instead of the simple Straight Quotes. The website gives you a quick overview on how the English language uses quotes correctly. Furthermore, it presents shortcuts for Mac and Windows users, as well as HTML entities. Improve your practical typography knowledge today — your English teacher will love you for it! (ml)
5. New Workflows For Your Digital Butler
Do you know Alfred, the digital butler? Discreetely sitting in our Mac menu bars, he is always at our service, untiredly waiting to be woken by a keyboard shortcut. Over time, this little guy has spared us countless clicks and enhanced our productivity. Now, Alfred has attended special training in catering for Web developers and designers, and guess what? He has gotten even smarter. With the nifty Alfred workflows that front-end engineer Zano Rocha compiled on GitHub, the program has the makings of becoming your new best digital friend — if it hasn't been until now.
In the collection of new workflows, you will find cool features such as opening files and folders in Sublime Text, searching for browser compatibility support, converting color values, finding processes by name and killing them, searching for questions on StackOverflow, and many, many more. Once you get used to them, you'll never want to work without them anymore. (cm)
6. Automatic Background Adjustment For Better Readability
You know how it is: you have a large, prominent feature area in your layout, usually with a quite large background image, and you have to put either an illustration or text on top of it. The problem is that the feature image is likely to change in the future and you don't really know whether a light or dark foreground text (or illustration) will still stay readable once the content manager has made some changes.
What do you do? Well, what if you used a script that would detect the brightness of background images as well as their dark and soft spots, and then automatically switch the brightness of your foreground text or illustration to a darker (or a lighter) version of an element? That's exactly whatBackgroundCheck does. This library gives you two extra classes,
.background--dark
and .background--light
that you can use to change an element's style in your CSS. Simple and easy. The script weights 3.82 Kb and is available on GitHub as well. Worth bookmarking! (vf)7. A Maps Experiment Made With Chrome
Map Dive is a game that lets users free fall to famous monuments from around the world, such as the Statue of Liberty. But wait a second, it's Pegman from Streetview — do you recognize him? The whole aim is to earn your wings by navigating Pegman through a series of gates and gaining points by collecting stars along the way and hitting the bonus objects by using the arrow keys on your keyboard.
The game is actually a celebration for reaching the landmark achievement of one million Maps API integrations. It also demonstrates the immersive experience of Maps in the browser. The design of the user interface has been kept simple and reflects the new Google Map design. (sh)
8. The Beauty Of Corruption
If you're a person who finds beauty in the faulty and distorted things in life, or if you just like to break things, then maybe you'll enjoy glitch images — a script which lets you mess around with bytes in a JPEG image. Simply import your own image and try it out yourself!
This script was inspired by Smack My Glitch Up and created by Georg Fischer. Sometimes it's good to break things to discover something new, unexpected and perhaps even a bit innovative. (ea)
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