Friday, April 30, 2010

Google Docs wireframe

I've been playing around with the newest addition to Google Docs, Google Drawings, and I'm quite liking it. I tried drawing a few diagrams and even a wireframe, and it turns out the basic drawing interactions are just as good – in some cases even better – than what I'm used to in Omnigraffle and Fireworks.

5 reasons Google Drawings beats Viso and Omnigraffle

We know the cloud computing arguments, and they certainly apply to wireframes

  1. It's live. The entire team can work on the same document and see each other's work instantly
  2. The wireframes live in the cloud, no sending files around, no outdated documents
  3. The risk of losing data is zero. It saves for every edit you make
  4. It's free
  5. Most people already have a Google account, so no sign up required

We need stencils

One thing was missing though: Stencils. Omnigraffle has stencils coming out of its ears, and Fireworks has some excellent built-in ones. But Google Drawings in its current early and simple form simply doesn't have it. So I made one.

Leaving the stencils in the gutter

An interesting limitation is the fact that

  • there's no stencil library function and
  • you can't easily copy and paste from one document to another.

One solution, it seems, is to clone one of the wireframe kits and thereby also cloning the stencils into each document. To not print or export the stencils, I've left them in the gutter area of the document. Seems to work quite okay.

Kind of blue

I've been wanting a blue kit since I left a project years ago where we used blue stencils (the idea was Peter's). As you may have experienced, some customers simply don't understand wireframes. The blue color gives that well-known blueprint feel, and shouldn't prompt questions like "I like it, doesn't it need a splash of colour?"

The templates

To make it even easier for you (ehm, me) I've begun making simple starting point templates.

Main blank template

Product detail page

Landing page

Item list view

They're all in this shared folder on Google Docs, and it will be updated when there are new templates. If you make one, let me know and I'll add it to the folder so everyone can use it.

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

blue diamond auction in Hong Kong today April 7

Sotheby's will auction next month a rare, large blue diamond that was once part of the legendary De Beers Millennium collection, with fierce bidding expected on the $4.6-$5.8 million estimate price.

The 5.16 carat, pear-shaped internally flawless Fancy Vivid Blue gem is the first diamond of its kind to appear at an auction from the collection that De Beers, the world's largest diamond producer, presented in 2000 to celebrate the millennium.

It is being put up for sale by a private collector and is the star lot at Sotheby's Hong Kong jewels and jadeite 2010 spring sale on April 7.

The auction's location is not surprising: China is one of the world's largest and fastest growing diamond markets, with jewellers forecasting it will be the next big purchaser of rare jewels as its economy surges as the rest of the world still grapples with the fallout from the global financial meltdown.

Blue diamonds are among the rarest of all gems and owe their natural blue colour to the presence of the chemical element boron during the stone's formation.

In May 2009, a 7.03-carat cushion-shaped internally flawless fancy vivid blue diamond set the world record price per carat for any gemstone at a Sotheby's Geneva auction when it was bought by a Hong Kong collector for $9.48 million dollars.

source