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Smashing Conference Live — Day 2

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Today is the second and last day of the Smashing Conference. As promised, we’ve collected insights, photos and highlights just for you — live from the conference venue. You can also track the tweets from the conference by following the hashtag #smashingconf and the permalink for live updates.

Smashing Conference Live — Day 2

Please note that no live stream is available, but all videos will be made available for free after the event. You might want to check out the schedule of the conference as well and the report from day 1.

Here are some of the highlights of Day 2:

Tuesday, September 10th 2013

08.15


  

Good morning everyone! Are you ready for Day 2?!

Hangover, you say? No worries, we’ve got fresh coffee ready for you! And some beautiful Bavarian accordion music:

But no, he is not the mystery speaker we had planned for the #smashingconf event. It’s only a foretaste of what’s to come! ;)

Same rules today: if you have any questions to speakers, tweet them with #smashingconf to @brad_frost — Brad is collecting the questions!

— Smashing Conference (@smashingconf) September 10, 2013

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

08.20


  

Unfortunately the weather isn’t really on our side this time (it has been raining all night and still is!)… Please don’t forget to bring along your coats and umbrellas as well as your attendee badges as you head back to the Smashing Conference venue this morning! :)

“It’s pouring rain in Freiburg, but warm and cosy inside the beautiful #smashingconf venue.” Image credits — thatpita:

It's pouring rain in Freiburg, but warm and cosy inside the beautiful #smashingconf venue.

“My ‘haus’ for the last two days #smashingconf.” Image credits — cable_ready:

My

“Historisches Kaufhaus Freiburg. Location of #smashingconf 2013.” Image credits — k41z0r:

Historisches Kaufhaus Freiburg. Location of #smashingconf 2013

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

08.36


  

https://twitter.com/Mrfredclay/status/376957374260846592

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

09.00


  

Have you guessed who the Mystery Speaker is yet? All we know is that his second name is “Klaus Schmidt”! But… WHO IS THIS KLAUS?

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

09.05


  

Dum dumm dummm dummmmmm… The moment we’ve all been waiting for… The mystery speaker is… *drumroll*… the one and only, Ethan Marcotte!

Woohoo! Mystery speaker at @smashingconf is @beep ! Godfather of #rwd #smashingconf pic.twitter.com/fhBpaCsV7t

— Rowdy Rabouw (@rowdyrabouw) September 10, 2013

@Armstrong beepBEEPBEEPbeepbeeeeeepBEEPbeepbeeeeeeeeepBEEEEPbeeepbeeeeeeeeepbeepbeepbeepBeepBEEPbeeeepbeeepbeepbeeeep

— Brad Frost (@brad_frost) September 10, 2013

The mystery is revealed… Ethan Marcotte at the #smashingconf pic.twitter.com/fXDIGEg77p

— Robert Zierhofer (@rzierhofer) September 10, 2013

Day 2 of #smashingconf just started and Ethan Marcotte @beep as Mystery Speaker. Perfect.

— re-lounge GmbH (@relounge_gmbh) September 10, 2013

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

09.20


  

“We are getting away from pages and starting to think of small layout systems.” — Ethan M.

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

09.25


  

“We’re starting with the smallest piece of design. With every responsive process we work on we are building a new map of the Web. But we are only just beginning. Our map is far from complete.” — Ethan M.

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

09.34


  

“Something is always lost in translation. There is always a gap between a thing and the representation of it.” — Ethan M.

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

09.42


  

“How can we design more sustainably for the Web?” — Ethan M.

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

09.49


  

“Maybe some problems can’t necessarily solved with more code. And maybe we can invite our users in our design and let them help us solve our problems.” — Ethan M.

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

09.56


  

“We are designers and builders, but most of all we are map makers.” — Ethan M.

“Let’s start a discussion about sustainability in web design!” Really important stuff from @beep at #smashingconf. pic.twitter.com/sWKzCEzCBC

— Elisabeth Irgens (@sortenke) September 10, 2013

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

10.05


  

Jason Santa Maria on stage explaining how to get ideas out quickly through prototyping, sketching, and iteration. Not only can that help you work and test more quickly, but it can also help you to work smarter!

@jasonsantamaria on process at #smashingconf / #Ikea pic.twitter.com/vfeD1fl8V6

— Edgar Leijs (@edgarleijs) September 10, 2013

“Use whatever you need to tell your story… Actually holding type in my hand taught me how type reacts and made me understand type in whole different way. What if I could get people understand the physicality of type? What if I could get them that same idea?” — Jason S.M.

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

10.18


  

“Good design happens around good constraints.” — Jason S.M.

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

10.42


  

Jason S.M. refers to Wally Wood’s wisdom: “Never draw anything you can copy, never copy anything you can trace, never trace anything you can cut out and paste up.”

All these different ideas & approaches by people deeply caring about their work really seam to form a bigger picture today at #Smashingconf

— Alexander Woerndl (@awenro) September 10, 2013

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

11.05


  

https://twitter.com/smashingconf/status/377347752721518592

Yes, I'm having a smashing time at #smashingconf in Freiburg :) pic.twitter.com/xsE3BgmPVn

— Sven Hofmann (@hofmannsven) September 10, 2013

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

11.15


  

Congrats to another round of poster giveaway winners!

Image credits — eldh:

#vscocam #smashingconf

Image credits — codebryo:

Cataddicted #smashingconf

Image credits — tinakesova:

#smashingconf postcard sent! Office, beware :)

Image credits — simontheis:

a lovely cat beside a waterfall in Freiburg at #smashingconf @brad

Image credits — pattydelgado:

#freiburg #smashingconf

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

11.20


  

Designers use type families all the time, but what is the logic behind developing larger type families such as the ever-growing Skolar type system? David Březina discusses various approaches of making type families functional, easy to use, and cross-platform… and also how to stay sane while doing that! ;)

@mrbrezina Rethinking Type Experience #smashingconf pic.twitter.com/HK2hcAxTlT

— Shift (@ShiftCph) September 10, 2013

Digging into type design with David Brezina #smashingconf pic.twitter.com/1XvFHzO1Vq

— Robert Zierhofer (@rzierhofer) September 10, 2013

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

11.37


  

“I’m really bad at artistic freedom. I don’t know what to do if I don’t have my guidelines.” — David B.

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

11.46


  

“Sans are like T-Shirts. They are pretty much all the same.” — David B.

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

11.52


  

“What is great type for, if you cannot use it easily?” — David B.

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

12.00


  

“How do you test your type faces before you buy them? Do you actually test them? Did you hear of temporary licenses…? Or, what we did is we thought of test fonts. So you can just go and get the font from us and test how it works.” — David B.

my notes on @MrBrezina ’s talk at the #smashingconf
http://t.co/YsghpRiGNL

— Kevin Lorenz (@verpixelt) September 10, 2013

Sketchnotes from @MrBrezina’s #smashingconf talk on designing a type family like Skolar Sans – and type service. pic.twitter.com/Px0fW7iAdR

— Elisabeth Irgens (@sortenke) September 10, 2013

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

12.10


  

The one and only Addy Osmani on stage now — yeeeehaw!!

Finally something great for JavaScript Devs at #smashingconf with @addyosmani pic.twitter.com/ItbTYe7LA7

— philjs (@philjs) September 10, 2013

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

12.19


  

“Become BFFs with how browsers work.” — Addy O.

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

12.26


  

“I’ve never built anything without a performance flaw of some kind. We all have to ship things. Face your performance demons! Don’t feel bad poking at pages. Don’t feel like you’re asshole looking at performance issues. It’s ok!” — Addy O.

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

12.27


  

https://twitter.com/turkutuuli/status/377377856328044544

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

12.51


  

“What defines a great web experience? For example, a consistent frame rate… Why should we care about it? The frame rate can directly impact engagement and conversion rate. It matter if you want engaged users.” — Addy O.

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

12.52


  

https://twitter.com/rowdyrabouw/status/377382062338375680

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

12.55


  

https://twitter.com/tkadlec/status/377384846538330112

There’s no doubt that Addy Osmani rocked the stage — and this picture says it all!

@addyosmani your shoes rock! #smashingconf pic.twitter.com/kcIlxHR3RA

— Rowdy Rabouw (@rowdyrabouw) September 10, 2013

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

13.05


  

Time for the lunch break everyone — we’ll be back at 2 PM!

Written your postcard? Bring it to our team in the Smashing Lounge and we'll post it for you! #smashingconf pic.twitter.com/V2DCHdBOMf

— Smashing Conference (@smashingconf) September 10, 2013

Hehe #smashingconf RT @studiowolf This is what a break at @smashingconf looks like. pic.twitter.com/3RVwU64wba

— Aljan Scholtens (@AljanScholtens) September 10, 2013

Setting sail for the 2nd half of #smashingconf #catcontent with @brad_frost pic.twitter.com/ys8ZSv9eDi

— Andreas Klein (@ixisio) September 10, 2013

“Great time at #smashingconf.” Image credits — k41z0r:

Great time at #smashingconf

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

14.00


  

Natalie Downe is on stage telling us all the story of Lanyrd from a two-week proof of concept to a fully-fledged startup, as well as the lessons learned along the way… Lessons like:

  • If you are not embarrassed by the first version of your product, you have launched too late
  • Learn how to take advice
  • Circle yourself with a circle of trust
  • Raise money to last for 18 months

Image credits — blumenberg:

 From Idea To Exit» by Natalie Downe aka @natbat at #smashingconf

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

14.21


  

https://twitter.com/danielmall/status/377406494402420736

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

14.27


  

If you’re a founder, Natalie suggests you to make an investor checklist including:

  • Elevator pitch
  • Executive summary
  • Pitch deck
  • Answers to common questions
  • Introductions
  • The phone number of a really good lawyer!

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

14.38


  

Check out the press pack that Lanyrd put together after LinkedIn shut down its events application.

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

14.44


  

“Trust your gut instinct.” – Natalie D.

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

14.55


  

Nicholas Gallagher starts out talking about CSS Application Architecture with some definitions:

  • Architecture – a plan about how you’re going to structure your application. Your design principles.
  • Framework – the implementation of an architecture. Like scaffolding it gives you something on which you can build out your application.
  • Toolkit – a collection of pre-built patterns that you assemble into an application.

Image credits — blumenberg:

«CSS Application Architecture» by Nicolas Gallagher aka @necolas at #smashingconf

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

15.05


  

“The freest human is the one who never has to choose.” Nicholas G cites John Gray in this article.

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

15.19


  

https://twitter.com/Emanoule/status/377420977497714688

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

15.21


  

Nicholas G provides design principles for effective CSS:

  • Single responsibility
  • Extension over modification
  • Composition over inheritance
  • Low coupling
  • Encapsulating
  • Documentation

Image credits — brad_frost:

Design principles for effective CSS, by @necolas #smashingconf

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

15.28


  

“Nothing is perfect. Nothing lasts. Nothing is finished.” — Nicholas G.

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

15.34


  

https://twitter.com/smashingconf/status/377424891835727873

And in the meantime…

Live editing at #smashingconf http://t.co/dU4yQOzir9

— Craig Lockwood (@craiginwales) September 10, 2013

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

16.25


  

Nishant Kothary is now on stage talking about everyone’s ability to understand and work with others — the project team, stakeholders, and users — that often determines the success of everyone’s work, as well as how they feel along the way.

Image credits — thatpita:

Up next, @rainypixels! #smashingconf

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

16.42


  

https://twitter.com/beep/status/377442008023195648

Image credits — blumenberg:

«The Design of People» by Nishant Kothary aka @rainypixels at #smashingconf

Image credits — rzierhofer:

Your chances are higher in russian roulette than when walking out of a design meeting #smashingconf

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

16.50


  

“Logo re-design is like attacking an identity… What do people do if we fight people’s identity? They fight back. It’s normal.” — Nishant K.

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

17.05


  

https://twitter.com/markodugonjic/status/377447733692338176

© The Smashing Editorial for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

17.06


  

A few of Nishant’s favorite cognitive biases:

Image: 

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