About the An Event Apart conference in SF
August 20th, 2008
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I attended the An Event Apart conference in San Francisco (AEASF08) this week, a pretty well known conference “for people who make web sites”, mostly designers and developers. I had the pleasure of speaking to Eric Myer and Derek Featherstone which was way cool. I took the Caltrain from Sunnyvale on the first day and drove all the way up from Cupertino on the second day (found early-bird parking for only $10!). There’s a nice Flickr AEASF08 album which has pictures of people, venue (The Palace Hotel), and the delicious food.
Here are some tidbits from the conference:
- Empathy for the user is what a designer needs most.
- The average headings sizes from nine CSS frameworks from H1 to H6 were (in em): 2.33, 1.8, 1.45, 1.25 1.11, 1.05
- Use visual weight (through size, color, texture, etc) to create a hierarchy of elements on a web page which creates meaning for the user.
- Modern web design (like jazz music) is about creating frameworks where users (musicians) can improvise and participate.
- Pixel/em value make more sense when using the 62.5% method (body font size).
- “Progressive disclosure” is a new term which refers to progressive enhancement used with hiding/showing content.
- Eric Myer discusses debugging in CSS and his CSS reset file.
- Web accessibility checklists are only a starting point.
- Google was lazy in not making Google Map controls keyboard accessible.
- “Math is easy; design is hard.”