How do you know that no one complains about them?
I see it more of what areas are designated as dynamic versus static. There
are tons of recommendation systems out there (Amazon) and no one complains
about the change of the content, because it's pretty much never moving. The
content changes,
No, not necessarily. Why would you state such a thing?
You give the user the option to accept recommended changes to the interface
based on their history. This way you could reveal or suggest things that they
might not know how those selections worked but you coud present them contextual
to a
I have been designing pre-trade, trading, and research applications for
financial institutions for a number of years, and negative values have been
handled in a number of fairly consistent ways, based on user feedback and also
the standard for certain types of reports in a given business venue:
I look at the following regularly and read various items from each:
www.reuters.com
www.bloomberg.com
www.yahoo.com
www.nytimes.com
www.huffingtonpost.com
www.iht.com
www.guardian.co.uk
http://drudgereport.com
www.nypost.com (oh, just because it's the Post!)
www.elpais.com (I do not know Spanish
I like it quiet.
-Original Message-
From: Jeff White [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Feb 26, 2008 1:49 PM
To: Bryan Minihan [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: IXDA list [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [IxDA Discuss] Offtopic: What music do you
Everyone should have a portfolio in print form.
It just speaks to a level of preparedness and covering as many bases as
possible, which exemplifies what this type of work is about. My online presence
runs a gamut of the different things I do. I am less likely to update that for
each and every