and the winner is

Armen Thomassian Last month I held a contest for my one-year blogiversary. It was my first contest to hold, ever, and I was a little nervous to see how it would go. But after receiving over thirty comments it was my greatest post to date. It was a blast getting to read everyone's comments. Some just came right out and explained why they wanted the note books, while others quoted whole poems (not sure what that was about). It even opened the door to make some new connections. Thanks again to everyone that stopped by and left your comments.

However, there could only be one winner and that's what I wanted to share with you today.

His name is Armen Thomassian. (That's him in the picture.) Originally british born, he now lives with his wife in Tasmania, Australia where he preaches the gospel of Jesus Christ. He used to have a wonderful blog where he shared his views on his faith and life, but due to some unfortunate events decided to take it down. His site now exist as merely a portal to visit him elsewhere on the web and to contact him. But even in the face of adversity he leaves us all with a message of hope:

"Let nothing or no one steal your joy."

Congrats again to Armen for winning the Field Notes 3-Pack of notebooks and I hope they come in handy for him.

interview: nectar

Nectar: A fresh look at you interview If you were to look up Nectar in the dictionary you'd find a picture of the six sexiest guys you've ever seen, along with the definition: "A company built upon strong relationships with an even stronger commitment to serving up the best in personal branding on the web."

I first met the men of Nectar back in August, well one-half of them anyways. Josiah, Caleb, Aaron and myself got to know each other at the Dallas Museum of Art. Then I met Dave for lunch the following week and that just seemed to really open the door to working with these guys. But it wasn't until Nectar Hackathon 2.0 that I got to meet the rest of the team, Brett and Charles, and work right along side of them. These guys are the real deal with a lot of heart and a lot of passion for what they do. So without further ado, it's my pleasure to present you with an in depth look at the minds behind Nectar.

To make things more accessible, I've added links to each Nectar team member's response.

Aaron Harp

1. What is your current role at Nectar and how did you first get involved in that field?

I'm lead (only) PHP developer of Nectar.  I also handle most of the frontend JavaScript goodness.  Actually, when I first met Josiah years and years ago he encouraged me to learn PHP and that's what I did.  I have done freelance development since then and I'm happy to be settling into Nectar.

2. Since you all are a team working together, please describe your view on the importance of team-work.

This is the first project I've worked on that has been a true team scenario.  Working with guys that you love hanging out with really makes staring at a computer all day (or through the night before a launch) much more enjoyable.  We've crammed a lot of work into the last couple of months and everyone has been vital in making this thing happen.  I'd say the best part of teamwork is that if there's something you don't wanna do, there's likely someone to pass it off to.

3. If you could be anything else in the world what would it be and why?

Though I enjoy web development, my passion is in music.  It's my goal to make a career of performing and eventually settle into a job conducting choirs at a liberal arts university.

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Brett Tilford

1. What is your current role at Nectar and how did you first get involved in that field?

I'm currently focused on the sales and marketing aspect of Nectar. We love the new social media technologies and the opportunities they bring to create conversations and meaningful relationships with people. With this in mind I've really thrown myself into the world of blogging and micro blogging. It's really been such a cool journey to begin building the Nectar community from the ground up and I'm really excited to see the conversation expand in the weeks and months following our launch.

My first experience in utilizing these tools was as a youth pastor at New Hope. I was trying to email all my student leaders information and they weren't responding. I tried calling them... that didn't work either. I was baffled. How on earth do I communicate with these kids? That's when I figured out Myspace and Text Messaging. After that I had no problem at all. It was then that I realized that our world was changing in drastic ways. I call a kid and get his voicemail. I text that same kid and I get a response within seconds. I think this has huge implications for how businesses connect and communicate with customers.

2. Since you all are a team working together, please describe your view on the importance of team-work.

The importance of team work can't be overestimated. I think this is one of the reasons woman make such amazing leaders, they are so relational and skilled at building consensus that they just make great team leaders. As a company of all males we really have to work hard at building relationships with each other that foster trust, encouragement, and accountability. Another beautiful thing about teams is the way it allows you to play to your strengths and leave your weak areas to someone else. For example, at Nectar you don't want me designing or coding out your website but lucky for you, I don't have to! We'll leave that to the Josiah, Caleb, Charles, Aaron, and Dave who are experts at that stuff.

3. If you could be anything else in the world what would it be and why?

Definitely a professional surfer. Just chilling at the beach all day. Are you kidding me?!

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Caleb White

1. What is your current role at Nectar and how did you first get involved in that field?

I'm primarily focused on front-end web development (XHMTL / CSS / Javascript) for the Nectar page as well as the various tastes. I've been doing web development since I learned it in middle school back in 1996, and I absolutely love it. I'm also very involved in writing a lot of the copy for the site, which I love equally as much.

2. Since you all are a team working together, please describe your view on the importance of team-work.

Team-work has been absolutely vital for this project. All six of us have very different strengths and skill sets, and I firmly believe that Nectar would not be a reality if any one of the other members of the team wasn't involved. Feeding off of the other guys' energy, passion, and humor has been a complete blast and made this truly the best project I've ever been a part of.

3. If you could be anything else in the world what would it be and why?

Professionally speaking, this is it. I love the web, I love people, and I love running a business. Nectar is absolutely perfect. I also love studying and performing music, but I think it would lose a lot of it's allure to me if I was ever doing it professionally. Maybe I'll define a new professional field; something like "Semi-professional musical web-development hobbiest" And maybe drop "lumberjack" in there just for fun.

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Charles Williams

1. What is your current role at Nectar and how did you first get involved in that field?

Right now I head up everything on the Nectar design frontier. A good 90% of my work day is spent hacking away in Photoshop. The last few months at Nectar has been a blast and I'm really excited to see how people take to the look and feel of everything.

For as long as I can remember I've had an unexplainable passion for design. Not particularly web design, but just design in general. I found myself spending tons of time cruising around the web admiring the work of other designers and wanted to give it a shot myself. I love it.

2. Since you all are a team working together, please describe your view on the importance of team-work.

Solid teamwork is absolutely paramount for the success of any team. The passion and energy that each of us bring keeps us going strong day-to-day (well, that and lots of coffee :D). I've been friends with most of the guys for years, so we work pretty cohesively together. We may be talented people individually, but without the backbone of clear communication we'd be lost.

3. If you could be anything else in the world what would it be and why?

I'm gonna go with photographer on this one. Traveling the world with a camera at my side has always been something I've dreamt of doing. Maybe someday.

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Dave Onkels

1. What is your current role at Nectar and how did you first get involved in that field?

I'm a bit of a jack of all trades. My background is in business, design, and technology so I weigh in on the strategic aspects of our marketing and business plans, dabble in design, and look for holes in our user interface/customer experience.

I had been fleshing out the business plan for a personal branding service that leverages best-practices employed by the top web design experts. I met Josiah through a chance encounter for a separate business opportunity which ultimately turned into a partnership with six specularly-talented guys from the Dallas area.

2. Since you all are a team working together, please describe your view on the importance of team-work.

Teamwork in any organization is critical but it's vitally important in a small company such as ours. Our creativity and business ingenuity relies heavily on our ability to feed off each other and leverage the team's strengths. The beautiful thing about Nectar is we operate more as a family than just business partners. This isn't to say we don't have conflicts but when we do we work through them without malice or resentment. I guess it ultimately boils down to trust.

3. If you could be anything else in the world what would it be and why?

Honestly, I'm living a dream right now. After extensive self-exploration I've recognized that I'm hard-wired to be an entrepreneur. My passion lies in emerging web technology and progressive design so Nectar truly represents the type of convergence I want within my professional life. Now that being said, if we're talking about anything in the world...being a test pilot for very light jets would be a close second, assuming my wife weren't to object. (Dave is private pilot in his rarely found free time.)

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Josiah Platt

1. What is your current role at Nectar and how did you first get involved in that field?

I'm a front-end developing, jQuery learning, standards-nut, CSS junkie. I've been involved in web design and development since I was 13 (12 years ago - sheesh), when my partner-in-crime Caleb came over to my house and taught me HTML. Since then I've been fascinated with and involved in a little bit of almost every area of the web, and specifically in love with CSS and standards-compliant markup.

I credit the majority of my growth to the incredibly inspiring community in and around this wide world we call the web. I stumbled across one Daniel Mall back in the day on Shaun Inman's Designologue, and he has since been a gracious tutor in all things CSS / markup. I want to be him when I grow up. He's also why I'm 2 degrees from Jeffrey Zeldman, Jason Santa Maria and Happy Cog, and while they don't know me from a hole in the ground, this is both bragable and awesome.

Well beyond markup and development, my true passion lies in relationships and marketing. If you see me in a room full of people and I'm not meeting those that I don't know, chances are my legs have been recently fractured.

That's the short story.

2. Since you all are a team working together, please describe your view on the importance of team-work.

As far as teams go, I'm blessed to work with people that I not only respect, but completely love and would die for in an instant. I would do anything for these guys, and I'm confident that the feeling is mutual.

I've heard horror stories about being "friends first" in a business relationship, but I generally respond with a question about the depth of the "friendship" these horror stories speak of. I work with men as close to me as my real brothers, and while we've been at our throats more times than I can remember, we always seem to come through our differences stronger than before.

We're a tightly-knit group, and I think we're stronger for it. Where one of us is weak, another is strong. I love that I can genuinely say that we have a firm foundation of love and respect beneath us. Nothing gives me more confidence as we move forward than knowing my bro's have my back.

3. If you could be anything else in the world what would it be and why?

I like to imagine a life of boundless opportunity, and while that sounds like a bottled cliche, I really do tend to look into the future with more wonder than concrete planning. I suppose if I have to give an answer, I'd be a panther. Like a panther with wings. And like a built in coffee maker for a leg. That'd be awesome.

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To learn how you can get your own sweet setup head over to tastynectar.com and see the beauty for yourself.

A special thanks to Shelby Cook for the amazing photographs.

connecting the less popular dots

Connecting the less popular dots There is a current crisis going on in the blogosphere right now where we have a lot of quality blogs that are going unnoticed due to the massive amount of junk that is out there. (sort of reminds me of the Christian music scene.) In order to find something of quality you either have to [A] already be connected with other bloggers or [B] you have to spend a lot of time searching the vast internets. Seriously, if you don't update your blog but once every two or three months then what's the point?

But it looks like there may be a new way to help connect these less popular dots together. Over at the blog of Chuck Westerbrook he proposes a simple yet effective idea. That is if the support behind it is strong enough to carry it on. And that is exactly why I am posting here today with links back to his site in full support of what he calls "Ending the Tragedy of Under-Appreciated Blogs."

Here is the battle plan:

  1. Gather some nice bloggers who believe in helping good content rise. The more the merrier. This becomes our group for the project.
  2. A good, lesser-known blog is chosen. Everyone in the group will read that blog for two weeks.
  3. At the end of the two weeks, the group moves to another blog to read.

And all you need to do:

  1. Comment here to express your interest in participating.
  2. Be willing to add only one new blog’s worth of reading to your life. (This will be a different blog every two weeks.)
  3. Subscribe to Chuck Westerbrook's Blog to get RSS or email updates.

I'm excited to see what kind of difference we can make by reaching out to lesser known blogs, like this one, and give them the attention they deserve. So if you enjoy reading my blog or have one for yourself then I would urge you to help support this effort. Thanks.

the onset of winter playlist

The Onset of Winter Playlist

the songs that make you flip your collar up and watch your breath, like smoke, escape your lungs.

redesign

kyle steed redesign As a part of this new redesign I ran across what seems to be a very common, yet seemingly frustrating problem with setting your sidebar to the full height of a page (not just the screen). It made sense in my mind to simply set the height of the sidebar div to 100%. But oh no, all that gets you is a headache and a pocket full of lint. I tried everything from setting the body and html tag height to 100% to using a min-height of 100% on the sidebar as well, but no luck. I'm still not sure whether this is a browser problem or a CSS problem. In either case I knew I was going to have to do my homework.

Type the words "full height sidebar" into google and you'll get over 300,000 results. With that many pages staring you in the face it can seem a little overwhelming. But I knew I wouldn't have to look that hard, what with Googles superb job of site indexing and all. After reading through a few forums I started to realize the problem I was having. Since my sidebar is floated right it sets the height according to the content that is inside of it, not to the height of the page itself. So for example, if I only had three lines of text in my sidebar it would only span the height according to those three lines of text. I think that worked fine in my old design, as seen below,

kyle steed old site design

but with my new design using a dark background and a light grey sidebar it didn't look so pretty. And sure there are those out there who may say they like the sidebar to be cut short, but I think they're just being lazy.

Enter our hero, the magnificent, super-duper wrapper div. To be honest I don't know why I didn't think of this sooner, at work I always wrap my content. But in this case it hadn't occurred to me. But low and behold, as soon as I wrapped my content and my sidebar and set the background color to match that of my sidebar and set the height to 100% it worked like a charm. That is to say on some pages. You see the next problem came when my sidebar would extend pass the content, then my content would have this ugly grey area underneath it. And that wasn't going to work since I'm using #ffffff as the background color for my content. But even if I changed the wrapper background to white my sidebar would end up looking cut short when the content extended longer than the sidebar, which was my original problem to begin with. UGH!

Cue sound of angels singing. While taking a break from the code, washing my face to be exact, it clicked in my brain what needed to happen. It was so simple. Why hadn't I seen it before? All that was needed was a simple background image repeated on the y-axis that matched my sidebar and to set the background color to white. Now it didn't matter the length of the content or the length of the sidebar, all my pages were covered. Yay!

So what do you think of the new design? Do you like it better than my previous theme? Would you like to see it in the WordPress theme directory?

a shared culture

If you're not already familiar with creative commons then I recommend you check them out. I first learned about them last year in a web design class when my teacher referred them as the best source for using photography in your projects without infringing on anyone's personal copyright. I use Creative Commons all the time on my flickr account. It's wonderful too because it opens the door to the whole creative community to take what another person has done, whether it be a photograph or a movie, and build upon it and transform it into something else. And it is this focus on community that really draws me in to help support them.

Communities that develop around content and the sharing enable these communities to come together.

Creative Commons is in the midst of its 2008 fundraising campaign. If you would like to find out how you can support them please visit their support site. To celebrate the campaign, Creative Commons has released “A Shared Culture,” a short video by renowned filmmaker Jesse Dylan.

blindness

Is there a certain point we reach in this technological era where we become so over-saturated with information that we become "blinded" to what's really important? And by "really important" I mean living our lives. Sure, I love coding for hours on end or posting tweets till my fingers go numb, but at the end of the day, or our lives for that matter, will we be pleased with what we've accomplished? Maybe I'm thinking too far ahead here. Maybe the work we're doing now in the age of the internet will reap great rewards in the future. I don't know. But one thing that scares me is the amount of information we're expected to keep up with. Sure things like RSS readers and Twitter are helpful. But when is it all too much? At what point do we overload? I know lately I've felt burdened by this thought. Feeling like I have to keep up with this rat race of information only makes me feel less and less apart of reality.

When I go home at night and spend time with my wife and two dogs, this is what reality looks like.

But I understand why some people build their whole lives online. Look at me for example. If it weren't for the internet I would not have met my wife. And I would not be celebrating three wonderful years of marriage this year. But I also currently socialize online at more than ten different locations and spend all day on twitter talking to friends both far and near. Not to mention the amount of time I spend working on this website. Then factor in all the incalculable hours I spend thinking about new ideas for my blog, or new designs for work. Sharing our lives online has become the new standard. If you don't have a myspace or facebook or your own blog then you're considered out of touch with reality. Am I missing something?

I saw a movie a couple of weeks ago where people all of a sudden went blind, not in the Ray Charles sort of way, but they could only see bright white (a mixture of all colors in the light spectrum). The movie is based off the novel "Ensaio Sobre a Cegueira" (literally "Essay About Blindness") by Portuguese author José Saramago. It had really beautiful cinematography, but that's not the point. Throughout the movie I asked myself, "what would I do if I suddenly went blind?" I mean with so much of my life dependent on a computer, it was semi-frightening to think about. How would I go on? (And please don't say screen readers.) But thinking like that is silly right? I mean it's pretty unrealistic to think I'll wake up one day and be blind. However, examining our lives and the value of what we do and whether or not it's relevant to reality I think IS a valid question to ask ourselves.

Please don't mistake me here though, I love what I do. Being able to create an image or a brand for someone that represents who they are in colors and shapes is what gets my heart pumping. My desire though is to see the design community, as a whole, think for themselves and not just follow "blindly" those who are already well established. We each have a voice/design of our own and that's what the world needs. Not just more cookie-cutter/assembly-line design. So how do we do this? I'm not exactly sure. But I think stepping outside our comfort zones and unplugging from the overload of information once in a while is a great place to start.

We need to be a part of reality in order to put something real back in our designs.

I'd love to hear what you think about the information overload in today's world or how you think we as designers can break away from the cookie-cutter way of life.