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Posted: 1/9/2010 by kabogo in Working Together
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Working Together

K3 Design provides ASP.NET development expertise to design a website that helps promote your organization, informs visitors and encourages them to return. Consultation is a very important part of all of my projects as it provides the opportunity to consider and explore your requirements. As an organization, K3 Design is driven by standards and practices that emphasize quality, effectiveness and honesty. Each project I work on pays attention to three important questions.

  1. How successfully are your needs interpreted?
  2. Is the solution effective and efficient?
  3. What will it cost?

Laying the Foundation

Projects begin with an information-gathering questionnaire that outlines milestones, budget and job specifications, your preferences, target audience, and objectives. This evaluation provides opportunities to identify all the user features and benefits sought from the project. These crucial processes help define the focus and scope of the project while ensuring that your solution is creatively excellent and strategically targeted.

Developing The Right Ideas

Good creative work is a process of considering concepts, working them through, and trying them out. Then revising them. After the development of an initial concept, a design meeting is scheduled to begin the process of revising the concept into a finished one. Revisions normally take a week or two and culminate in another meeting to finalize the production timetable and discuss any additional services you may need.

Ensuring Your Satisfaction

A project workspace is used to keep you informed of all progress. Any activity that affects schedules or budgets is clearly described in writing and emailed to your attention. My commitment is to keep your project moving along smoothly without unexpected costs.

Charges

Like all service organizations my invoices are based on the time invested in a project. Clients find me quite flexible and willing to work within budgetary constraints. A detailed proposal and estimate is always provided before starting any project and it is adhered to unless project specifications change. Learn more about my charges here.

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Comment posted by Raymond Mbugua
on Tuesday, May 04, 2010 8:26 AM
It is a good and straight to the point article.

Web Syndication

Try jquip for lighter weight code

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Try jquip for lighter weight code.

  • The core jquip.js is only 4.28KB (minified and gzipped) which is only 13% of the size of jQuery.
  • jquip has 90% of the good parts of jQuery including;
    • the main $(selector)
    • DOM traversal (eq, first, last, slick, prev, next, etc)
    • DOM modification methods (append, prepend, remove), and
    • CSS class modification methods, event methods and utility functions.
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Inspired Infographics

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Like most anything else Internet users place on a pedestal, infographics have almost been done to death – which would truly be a shame if it plays out that way. Originally used to represent important data and statistical information in a more visually pleasing and more easily consumable way than plain text, infographics have become an excuse for creating increasingly larger, less useful and oftentimes incomprehensible art projects.
Simple tips for well-designed infographics:

  1. Create something unique without losing the message in the translation;
  2. Visualize the data you are trying to convey and then tell the story through your design;
  3. Use the most readable fonts possible for numerical data, and
  4. Save the fancy typography for eye-catching titles
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SEO Meta Data Mechanics: Titles & Descriptions

Inbound links and personal connections carry the strongest influence in search results listings, and today you will discover several tactics to increase both of those counts. There’s a lot more to securing first-place and first-page rankings, however, than links and personal connections. For that you’ll need to delve into the...

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In November 2011, Microsoft AdCenter representatives indicated that impression share reporting would be coming soon; and, after much anticipation from the advertising community, it has finally arrived. Advertisers on AdCenter can now create impression share reports and access statistics about the percentage of ad impressions they may be losing...

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TechDays in Belgium and Netherlands

I’ll be presenting at the upcoming Belgium and Dutch TechDays next month.  I’ll be doing three tech talks at each of the events:

  • Overview of Windows Azure
  • A look at ASP.NET MVC 4
  • ScottGu Unplugged

I’m particularly excited about the “A look at ASP.NET MVC 4” talk as it will be the first time I’ve presented on it (and it is shaping up to a really great release – more blog posts on that soon).

For more details on how to attend the event visit the Belgium Techdays and Dutch Techdays websites. 

Hope to see some of you at the conferences!

Scott

P.S. In addition to blogging, I use Twitter to-do quick posts and share links. My Twitter handle is: @scottgu

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Getting Started with Windows Azure

This is the second in a series of posts I’m doing on Windows Azure – which is Microsoft’s Cloud Computing Platform.

In today’s post I’m going to cover how to sign-up and get started with Windows Azure using a no-obligation 3 month free trial offer.  This free trial costs nothing and doesn’t obligate you to buy anything at the end of it.  It provides an easy way to try out and get started with Windows Azure.

Windows Azure Website

The http://www.windowsazure.com web-site provides everything you need to get started with Windows Azure – including overview content, developer tutorials and documentation, account management, and more:

image

On the www.windowsazure.com home page, as well as in the top-right hand corner of every page of the site, is a “free trial” link.  Clicking it will take you to a sign-up page that enables you to quickly register a new account and get started with Windows Azure:

image

The free trial provides everything you need to get started with Windows Azure.

Three Month Free Trial Offer

We recently refreshed our Windows Azure free trial offer to make sign-up easier, ensure it is always risk/obligation free, and enable more services with it.  You can click the “Sign up now” button above to register and have an active Windows Azure subscription ready to use in under 2 minutes.

What the Free Trial Provides

The free trial offer allows you to build and run applications on Windows Azure at no cost (and with no obligation to buy or pay anything at the end of the three month free trial).  It includes a number of compute, database and storage services that you can use to build your applications.  Some of the resources include:

image

I’ll cover more about what “750 small compute hours per month” means in a future post – but essentially it means that you have enough hours to continually run an application you build in a virtual server – dedicated and isolated just to you – on Windows Azure each month (there are 744 hours in a 31 day month: 24 hours x 31 days = 744). 

The trial also includes a 1GB SQL Azure Database that you can store data within.  SQL Azure Databases run on dedicated servers we manage and cluster (for high availability and scale-out).  This means you don’t need to worry about installing, managing, or running your own database servers (which makes life easier).  The trial also includes 20GB of high availability storage that you can use to store blobs, queues and non-relational tables. 

What is Required to Sign-up for a Trial

When you click the “Sign up Now” button on the free-trial page you’ll walk-through a sign-up wizard that will ask you to provide three things:

  • The Windows LiveID account you want to use to use to sign-in and manage your account
  • A mobile phone number where we can send (via SMS) a verification code for you to enter
  • A credit card

We use the last two items for proof of identity.  The credit card is not billed and during the free trial you’ll have a spending limit set to $0. 

Free and No Risk

Spending limits are a new feature we added to Windows Azure last month, and ensure that you never have to worry about accidentally going over the resources included in a free offer and being charged.  If you end up building an application that exhausts the monthly amounts included in the free trial before the month ends, and you have a spending limit set to $0, then we will by default disable the application for the remainder of the month (leaving your data in read-only mode) until the next month starts.  This ensures you are never billed anything during the free trial.

You can optionally turn off the spending limit feature if you want to go beyond what the free trial provides (and pay for the incremental resources on top of what is provided in the trial) – but by default the spending limit is on (and set to $0) when you sign-up for a free trial to ensure that you never inadvertently get charged anything.  This provides a no-risk way to evaluate Windows Azure.  You can learn more about the spending limit feature here.

Tracking Usage

You can easily track what resources you’ve used on Windows Azure by clicking the “Account” tab of the www.windowsazure.com web-site.  This is another new feature we added to Windows Azure last month, and it allows customers (both free trial and paid) to easily see what resources they’ve used and how much it is costing them.  You can download the usage data as either a CSV data file (which you can open in Excel or other tools), or visualize the usage data within the browser:

image

You can also use the account tab to easily change payment methods (both to setup a new credit card or to switch to invoice-based billing), create new subscriptions, as well as optionally cancel subscriptions. 

What if you don’t want to use Windows Azure at the end of the trial?

There is no obligation to use Windows Azure (nor buy anything) at the end of the three month free trial. So if at the end of it you aren’t ready to buy anything (or just want to hold off a few more months) there is no obligation to pay anything.  At any point during the free trial you can also click the “account” tab of the www.windowsazure.com website and explicitly cancel your subscription.

Summary

The above post covers how to quickly sign-up for a subscription with Windows Azure.  Its easy to do – and takes less than 2 minutes to complete.  Once you are signed up you can build and deploy high-scale cloud applications.  In future posts we’ll look at the steps to do this, and some of the cool features and options that Windows Azure enables for you.

Hope this helps,

Scott

P.S. In addition to blogging, I use Twitter to-do quick posts and share links. My Twitter handle is: @scottgu

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