Showing posts with label resources. Show all posts
Showing posts with label resources. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Portfolio Day 11 | AIGA San Francisco

The San Francisco chapter of AIGA invites you to Portfolio Day. Known as the best portfolio review on the West Coast, this is an opportunity for students to get valuable one-on-one feedback on their portfolio and career goals from some of the Bay Area’s best designers. Over 90 top Bay Area designers will serve as reviewers.

info here

Saturday, September 25, 2010

print project calculator

http://www.re-nourish.com/?l=tools_projectcalculator

"The Re-nourish Project Calculator helps you minimize waste on any print project, "

Friday, June 11, 2010

40 Sites for Finding Web Design Jobs

In the current economy there are a lot of designers and developers looking for work, whether it is full-time employment, contract work, or freelance opportunities. Fortunately, there are a number of great places to find these types of positions. In this post we’ll look at 40 sites that include specialized job boards that include web/graphic design and web development opportunities.

http://vandelaydesign.com/blog/business/web-design-jobs/

Monday, May 31, 2010

Searching via Web Directories

On her site The Spider's Apprentice, Linda Monash talks about online search resources including Web or subject directories – which she compares to using the "subject" option of a library card catalog.
Monash explains:
Think back to the library card catalogue analogy. In the old card files, and even in today's computer terminal library catalogues, you find information by searching on either the author, the title, or the subject. You usually choose the subject option when you want to cover a broad range of information.

Example: You'd like to create your own home page on the Web, but you don't know how to write HTML, you've never created a graphic file, and you're not sure how you'd post a page on the Web even if you knew how to write one. In short, you need a lot of information on a rather broad topic—Web publishing.

Your best bet is not a search engine, but a Web directory like the Open Directory Project, Google Directory or Yahoo. A directory is a subject-tree style catalogue that organizes the Web into major topics, including Arts, Business and Economy, Computers and Internet, Education, Entertainment, Government, Health, News, Recreation, Reference, Regional, Science, Social Science, Society and Culture. Under each of these topics is a list of subtopics, and under each of those is another list, and another, and so on, moving from the more general to the more specific.

Example: To find out about Web page publishing from Yahoo, select the Computers and Internet Topic, under which you find a subtopic on the Wide World Web. Click on that and you find another list of subtopics, several of which are pertinent to your search: Web Page Authoring, CGI Scripting, Java, HTML, Page Design, Tutorials. Selecting any of these subtopics eventually takes you to Web pages that have been posted precisely for the purpose of giving you the information you need.

If you are clear about the topic of your query, start with a Web directory rather than a search engine. Directories probably won't give you anywhere near as many references as a search engine will, but they are more likely to be on topic.

Web directories usually come equipped with their own keyword search engines that allow you to search through their indices for the information you need.
Monash offers many other valuable insights on search strategies. Check them out at The Spider's Apprentice.

from Q&A!

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

SFSU AIGA Student Group meetings for the Spring Term

The SFSU AIGA Student group will be meeting Tuesdays 12-1pm in FA115. If you're a Vis. Comm. major, and not an AIGA member come and find out more of what you can do and take advantage of as a student member. If you are a member, come and find out more and what you can do to participate.

You can check out the group's website and the AIGA and AIGA SF websites.

Thursday, September 3, 2009

Bargain Fonts!

10 fonts at $10 or less, with further discounts if you order a family, or several fonts from the same foundry.

http://new.myfonts.com/newsletters/sp/200909.html