Pebble IT

Blue Circles — so hot right now!

The latest version of iTunes hasn’t been getting a lot of good press since its launch recently, especially of the design front. There’s the vertically-orientated close/minimise/maximise buttons, the monochrome icons in preferences and the sidebar, and the new application icon.

Dan Benjamin and John Gruber talked about these points in the latest episode of The Talk Show (highly recommended podcast by the way). At 42:55 John Gruber said this:

“…the problem is it’s yet another blue circle…it’s unbelievable how many icons in my dock are blue…and most of the blue ones are blue circles.”

This was an curious observation, and one I hadn’t hit on before. I worried for a moment as our logo is…a blue circle!

The pebble.it branding in its current form is a little over a year old. The remit for the design was for it to reflect our technical savvy and Mac leanings. So, in light of this revelation it looks like we were successful (could even say prescient)! As we’re not talking about an application icon here, we’re not battling to distinguish ourselves in a crowded Dock, so I don’t think it’s of any concern. Interesting convergence though.

To illustrate the point, please enjoy the slideshow of blue, circular application logos. I could of gone on, but thought 10 was enough!

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You are the designer

shapeshed Posted by shapeshed on 15th June 2010

New websites and tools for browsers are showing that users have more control over design than ever.

With the release of Safari 5 Apple added a Reader feature that takes a web page and formats it for easy reading. This type of feature has been around for a while in Chrome and Firefox via the Readability Extension (Chrome & Firefox) and gives users the option to reformat the page in a more readable format. Here’s the pebble blog reformated using Readability.

'pebble Blog Reformatted'

At pebble we’ve really been enjoying using these tools to get rid of unnecessary navigation and adverts, and correct poor typography.

What do websites need to be able to take advantage of this? Not much - providing you have used well-formed HTML your web pages will be neatly formatted by these extensions.

APIs also free content from design

Another project that caught our eye this week was the reformatted Guardian site created by Phil Gyford. This takes content from the Guardian API and reformats it for easy reading. We have found it works particularly well on the iPad and is a great example of how publishing your content via an API can give it new contexts without any effort from the creators of the content.

Where does this leave the designer?

We are the first to admit the importance of UI design but these examples show that, like it or not, you the user will have greater control over how content looks. Browsers are offering users more options to assign custom styles, turn parts of the page on and off or to change the layout entirely.

In our opinion this is a good thing. The web should be open and users should be able to choose how content appears.

And.. don’t change our reader

Shortly after the Safari 5 feature several users began publishing custom styles for the Reader page allowing Safari users to change the way the reader page looked and Apple had intended.

This provoked unhappiness from Apple employees including Faruk Ateş who wrote:

Don’t risk unwitting users’ safety or their user experience with your hacking suggestions.

I’ll leave you to mull on the irony of that.

Using the browser to customise web pages will become more popular so expect designers to throw their toys out of their prams and users to rejoice that they can view pages how they want to.

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We do inspirational software & support.

We blog (rss) and tweet about Macs, software, hardware, the web, development, business & technology in general, (see the archive for past posts).

Also, in the spirit of sharing, listed below are some of the websites pebble has found consistently helpful.

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