January 2010, Dayton Web Guys Round-Up

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Dayton Web GuysWe had a fantastic meeting this month at Panera at the Greene. Our numbers seem to keep increasing each month and there are plenty of topics to discuss. Here’s a list of folks that made it to this meeting:

We got started off with a great conversation about how difficult it is to stay current with all the RSS we’re following. Mike and Grant both use Delicious tagging. While most of us are avid fans of Google Reader, we do get behind because of the rapidly changing industry we’re a part of. Shaun Inman has a beautiful little application called Fever that helps with this problem by tracking which articles are popular and bringing these to the top of your reader. Comment below if you have other ideas…

This month Jeff suggested that we each bring something to discuss. Here are a few of the items we discussed:

Andy Rossi did a quick review of Expression Engine, a PHP based content management system released by EllisLab. This is a platform he’s been reviewing and playing with. Things he likes: solid add-ons available, extreme customization ability, you don’t have to hack at PHP to use it.

Jeff Friend brought up a great conversation about designing in the browser. There has been a lot of talk about this lately on some pretty respected sites and even at An Event Apart. We had mixed reviews in the group about this work-flow. Most concerns centered around the difficulty in finding a web-designer who could code to the standard we all strive for. The opposite is also true, it’s not east to find coders that have a solid grasp of design principles.

Ryan Clark gave us a quick overview of Mail Chimp, a newer bulk email management system. It offers a great interface for managing your lists and emails, extreme flexibility in the structure of your lists and some great RSS integration features.

Rob Harr demo’d a super cool jQuery plug-in called AJAX Upload. It handles the selection and upload of an image with jQuery, allowing you to do this without a page refresh. Beautiful. [will add links when I can get Rob to provide them - he's surfing in Florida right now]

Grant actually brought HAND-OUTS and therefore wins the award this month for “Best Dayton Web Guys Presentation”. The article was from his blog, discussing @font-face integration with a site he manages. Some of the guys use other services to help, Font Squirrel and Typekit were two.

I demo’d a web-based design presentation tool I found called Vyoopoint. It allows you to upload images (or movies, swf’s, pdf’s) of designs for submission to your client. The client can then comment on the designs. It also handles versioning of your designs. There is a free account you can use to test the service.

As we were wrapping up, Jeff called out something called Primer CSS, which will parse your mark-up and generate a skeleton CSS file based on ID’s and Classes found in the document. Very interesting idea. We all recognized the difficulty of organizing a large CSS file and pitched around a few ideas for solving these problems. How do you handle CSS confusion as your sites grow? Leave a comment!

Thanks all for a great meeting. Look forward to the next…

2 Comments

  1. Posted January 28, 2010 at 5:46 pm | Permalink

    Great wrap-up, and a great group of developers! Good to see Grant and Mark this time around, And I am actually older than Mike Ward, but only by a few short years!

  2. Posted January 28, 2010 at 5:57 pm | Permalink

    Definitely a content-heavy meeting this time. Glad to be a part of it!

    Any method to parse a huge amount of RSS feeds would be helpful. I dig Gruml, but that Fever web app looks pretty nice!

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