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This is a version of the Konigi Wireframe Icons which may be used in wireframes, on personal and commercial web sites, and in print publications. The product includes EPS and PNG versions of the original Konigi Wireframe Icon Set, and are suitable for use in vector drawing applications such as Adobe Illustrator, as well as for use in Microsoft Visio.
The entire set totals 368 files. You'll find a standard set of 8 cursors, and 180 icons in 2 grayscale colors. The icons include rich text editor controls, file system actions, social interaction symbols, ratings and voting controls, and a host of other icons for most of the behaviors you may want to communicate with an icon. And because the icons are in vector format, you have full control to resize without loss of fidelity, color, and effects as you please.
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Proof Reading Marks
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I use these characters lifted from http://www.google.com/googlebooks/chrome/ when I need to do a quick and dirty storyboard. Version 1.
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Last year mobile web usage increased 148% worldwide. In the near future as smarthpones become more and more ubiquitous this number will continue to shoot up. As a developer, the time has arrived for you to seriously consider whether you should begin accommodating your mobile audience.
Today we’ll look at a few quick ways to make your site a little friendlier for mobile devices.
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In English, we use many different words to describe the same basic objects. In one survey, researchers Dieth and Orton explored which words were used for the place where a farmer might keep his cow, depending on where the speaker resided in England. The results include words like byre, shippon, mistall, cow-stable, cow-house, cow-shed, neat-house or beast-house. We see the same situation in visualization, where a two-dimensional chart with data displayed as a collection of points, using one variable for the horizontal axis and one for the vertical, is variously called a scatterplot, a scatter diagram, a scatter graph, a 2D dotplot or even a star field.
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After being inspired by people’s UI sketches for almost a year now, only naturally, my own approach to drawn user interactions with pen and paper began emerging. This personal compilation of the various techniques which I find relevant, is being published as the so called Interactive Sketching Notation. The general idea behind this notation is the desire to visualize user interface states as well as user actions in a clear and rapid manner. This of course, as the version number implies, is an emerging visual language for sketching interactions which I hope to continue to evolve and improve well into the future.