All in the <head>

– Ponderings & code by Drew McLellan –

– Live from The Internets since 2003 –

About

Articles tagged "interface design"

Here you will find a selection of tasty morsels in reverse chronological order. Feel free to peruse them at your leisure, although no guarantees as to quality or satisfaction are made. (Some of it stinks.)

  1. Jumping Off Points 03 May 2006
  2. Everyone Has a Clock 10 April 2005
  3. Supermarket Usability 18 November 2004
  4. Icons for Web Applications 10 April 2004
  5. Take-out Interfaces 17 March 2004
  6. Natural Order 04 March 2004
  7. Rock the Taskbar 06 December 2003
  8. Application Interface Design 17 November 2003
  9. Tabbed browsing in Safari 25 October 2003

Photographs

Work With Me

edgeofmyseat.com logo

At edgeofmyseat.com we build custom content management systems, ecommerce solutions and develop web apps.

Recent Links

Affiliation

  • Web Standards Project
  • Britpack
  • 24 ways

About Drew McLellan

Photo of Drew McLellan

Drew McLellan has been hacking on the web since around 1996 following an unfortunate incident with a margarine tub. Since then he’s spread himself between both front- and back-end development projects, and now is Director and Senior Web Developer at edgeofmyseat.com in Maidenhead, UK (GEO: 51.5217, -0.7177). Prior to this, Drew was a Web Developer for Yahoo!, and before that primarily worked as a technical lead within design and branding agencies for clients such as Nissan, Goodyear Dunlop, Siemens/Bosch, Cadburys, ICI Dulux and Virgin.net. Somewhere along the way, Drew managed to get himself embroiled with Dreamweaver and was made an early Macromedia Evangelist for that product. This lead to book deals, public appearances, fame, glory, and his eventual downfall.

Picking himself up again, Drew is now a strong advocate for best practises, and stood as Group Lead for The Web Standards Project 2006-08. He has had articles published by A List Apart, Adobe, and O’Reilly Media’s XML.com, mostly due to mistaken identity. Drew is a proponent of the lower-case semantic web, and is currently expending energies in the direction of the microformats movement, with particular interests in making parsers an off-the-shelf commodity and developing simple UI conventions. He writes here at all in the head and, with a little help from his friends, at 24 ways.