iPhone application design and the righteous retina display App design is pretty new ground for us at Frontend, but damn we're loving it! Here's a few tips and useful resources we've picked up so far.


Application design is huge right now. Whether you're designing for the relatively mature iPhone market, slightly greener Android market, or adolescent tablet market theres a lot of fun to be had!

Our experience at Frontend with apps has been an exciting and challenging one. Web is our bread and butter, but those web things we're so good at don't necessarily translate to a good user experience on-device. The first place to start is here: the iPhone Human Interface Guidelines. There is a lot of usability material in here that comes in so handy at all stages of app design. When you are squeezing so much into such a small area, usability and user interaction define the line between a frustrating user experience and a brilliant one. These User Experience guidelines are especially valuable.

The iPhone's retina display displays a whopping 640 x 960 pixels. Thats wider than this blog column, but on a 3.5" screen. This really opens up a new level of detail for designers. every pixel difference you make may seem small, but combined they form such a sharp and polished interface you just can't get on a computer screen (yet...). Consider a texture that is usually too fine to be seen on a phone screen, this is a perfect example of there you can really push these tiny details to your hearts desire.

Tip 1 - Use Adobe Photoshop! We are big fans of Adobe Creative Suite here at Frontend. Illustrator is an invaluable tool, but when you want to form a pixel perfect, easily dissectible group of graphics without vector output being required - photoshop comes out on top.
- Apply all your styling through the styles panels, you will change things over and over again to get it exactly how you want it. Even colour objects using the 'color overlay' style. It will save you tons of time!
- Keep your layer structure organized! If you don't already, make the effort.
- Set up a nice boiler plate which you can iterate to add new views to your application design
- Save a selection of 640x960 pixels at the perfect place for screenshots (read below)!

Download the Retina Display version of this iphone mockup template Tip 2 - Use the excellent resources available to you - There are excellent resources available for designing on the iPhone. A prime example is the Teehan + Lax interface sheet. This contains a bunch of vector based standard iPhone elements for you to use during mock-up phases! This file provides you with actual size elements you can drop into your own file and rapidly prototype with. Just keep in mind that its only for Mock up purposes.

Tip 3 - Test your designs on the iPhone as plain images. It's so simple to see how your interface will look at its actual size and colour. Simply load up your 640x960 selection (mentioned earlier..) and copy a merged version of your design. Email this to yourself and opening it with your iphone. hit 'Save image' to save it. Go into your iPhone's photos section, open up the screenshot, tap on the screen to dismiss the top and bottom bars. Voila! perfect representation.

Be open to the challenge that app design brings. It brings with it bucket loads of strategy, thinking and innovation which can often be put on the backburner in web. We're looking forward to more!

That's all the tips we have time for this week folks, please tune in for a later post on app design. Any questions, comment below or flick us a message on the contact page

#happyweekend!

Kelly


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One of our team recently gave a talk on the use of grids in web design


During the course of this talk, the term 'golden section' inevitably came up and how it played an integral part in calculating the grid. Like most of us, I know a little about this 'golden section' but decided to try and find out a little bit more...

Firstly, it seems that the purpose of this 'golden ratio' is to give a sort of harmony and beauty to what ever art form it is applied to. It's application can be found in art, sculpture, photography, design and even music. It is said to naturally appear in nature (although this has been disputed) and has recently been found to exist even on a molecular basis!


It is said to have been “discovered” by the greeks back in 500BC and can be found in their architecture and sculptures. Along the way, it has also been utilised by the Egyptians and Aztecs in their pyramids, and Renaissance artists and composers such as Leonardo Da Vinci and Mozart. It has also recently been made famous in movies and programmes such as “The Da Vinci code” and “Num3ers”.


So what exactly is this golden section (also known as 'phi') and why all the fuss? Basically, 'phi' can be described in a mathematical formulae where 'a line that is divided into unequal segments will always (when calculated) equal the sum of the length' or '1.6180339887...' for short. This formula can then be applied proportionally to 2D & 3D objects and space. Of course for those of you keen to investigate the intricacies of this formulae, there is a wealth of information out there on the internet...


For those of us more interested in it's practical applications, it seems that you can apply this formulae to practically any artistic endeavour you are working on and we sometimes intuitively do it without even realising. It does however appear that when you consciously apply the golden section, you will achieve a more harmonious outcome which will evoke a more emotive and aesthetically pleasing reaction in your audience... Strangely enough, it doesn't appear that we know exactly why it causes this emotive reaction, just that it does.


So before you start your next artistic endeavour (whatever that may be) it might be a good idea to think about your old friend 'phi' and what it can add to your project. :-)

[With thanks & acknowledgment to Tony Xia and of course the interweb!]


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Browser wars, first there were none, then one, now many.
Can't we all just play together nicely like our mums told us to?


The web has a long history of browsers competing for market share. Many of us will remember the old Netscape vs IE browser war. Early web pages were often designed to look correctly in one or the other, rarely both.

The solution to solving webpages looking different across browsers was to implement industry standards for how browsers should display/render HTML and CSS. Unfortunately many of these standards were not finalized by the time IE6 was released in 2001. Leading to some of today's biggest cross browser headaches.

Lack of competition during IE6's life-cycle allowed it to dominate the market share of browsers. This started to change in 2004 with the release of Mozilla's browser Firefox. This heralded the next round of the browser wars (which is ongoing). This new competitor in the browser market prompted Microsoft to update their browser, releasing IE7, IE8, and most recently IE9.

Mozilla and Microsoft aren't the only players in the modern browser market. The modern web landscape is viewed by a multitude of browsers such as the previously mentioned Firefox and IE, but also includes browsers such as Chrome, Safari, and Opera.

The web is constantly evolving and currently the industry is finalizing the next set of standards for HTML5, and CSS3. All major browsers are going through and implementing these standards, with vendors preferring to prioritize between getting more of the standards implemented, rather than waiting till the standards are completely finalized before adding them to their browsers.

What does this mean for the future web developers and web users?
With stronger adherence to standards it means web developers will spend less time working on getting webpages to look and work correctly across multiple browsers, and focus more on pushing the boundaries of what's possible with the web.

Ultimately it means getting the best experience from the web regardless of what browser you're using. No longer will some users miss out on content and functionality from website simply because they use one browser over another.

So who will win the browser wars? Besides rendering the pages correctly, browsers will still complete for speed and extra functionality that adds to the user experience

In the end, if all browsers render webpages exactly the same as each other, isn't that a win for all of us?
If you want to learn more or want to have a chat about something in this blog, drop a comment or contact us through the website and we can have a good ole chit-chat (fish and chips not guaranteed, though likely).

James

The fantastic illustration at the top is from,Galit Weisberg you can see more of Galit's artwork at: http://shoze.blogspot.com


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