5 Designs for each question

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I’m watching the video where Bill Buxton is speaking during the key note of day 1 at Mix ’09 and one of the things that he mentions is the need to provide 5 different designs for every question posed by a client.  Worded otherwise, 5 different potential solutions to fit the needs requested. 

He continues forward showing a very crazy basic example of transition states using post-it-notes to portray his point.  But I wanted to articulate here a bit of a prerequisite to be able to do the mentioned 5 different possibilities.

Many of my design peers, however they start out in design, whether it be by going through college, by necessity because their employer saw something in them that they didn’t necessarily see for themselves and so they sort of just ended up happenstance in the design field, or because they’ve been seeking and studying design out of a pull in that direction and thrive on it – whatever the case may be, in order to come up with 5 variances to a single design request, one must have exposure to possibilities.  It is far too frequent that a layer of tunnel vision is placed over the eyes and ideas of someone in design, because that’s how the clients have requested things time and time again.  To break out of that, one must look at many other’s work or even see everything in life as a possible thing to be put into design.  Its not all drop-down menus from the top, yet most programs created today have just that.

To create these 5 variations, one must have obtained the experience either by going through the motions on the fly themselves for years and years of design, or they must go out and look at every range of programs from the gamer’s favorite game, to the college student’s final project and even watch the transitional effects seen in movies and commercials and then use every element, every visual stimulation, the bad and the good, and use that as a cue – apply the inspiration to the quick designs.

For someone like Bill Buxton who’s been in design for years, that could be easy.  But what about the newly graduated college student?  Lets hope that there is forgiveness and someone on the front lines to initiate these design concepts to the client while the design infant assists with implementation to allow them to see and experience the various differences in design put forth by the more advanced designer.

ASP.net hosting – post Vista installation

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Crazy thing that I’ve been putting off diagnosing – the inability to debug/test without debugging since the installation of vista on my home PC.

I could debug on my other computers, so I just would switch to them, but today I finally decided to see what I could do about the issue.

What I was experiencing was somehow a sort of lack of connectivity to the host, even though it was on something similar to: Localhost:50234/default.html

Cannot connect to self?  That’s odd.

My thoughts were beginning to come around to the memory of the initial setup of the development tools onto the computer.  The .net framework was already part of the installation which had a 2-sided thought process to me, that’s either really cool or really not so cool.

Everything else installed cleanly without issues, so I just moved along.

I’ve finally come to the conclusion that there’s something to the installation that is not included by default with windows vista – and that would be some of the base administrative tools, including IIS for local hosting of web services.

Sure enough – I am finding that I need to add that as an additional feature.

So if you are having the same issue where you are testing your silverlight application or ASP.net site from Visual Studio, and IE reports that it cannot connect, then head over to the control panel, open the programs and select the “Turn Windows features on or off” and get IIS.  While doing that, don’t forget to enable various features, such IIS Management console, WWW Services, and the various IIS6 management settings.  Just selecting the box for IIS won’t install the necessary items needed for serving localy hosted ASP.net services.

 Update: I still wasn’t able to get anything to run from Visual Studio.  I could go straight to localhost/ and see that IIS 7 was running, but anything at all run using the ASP.net Dev Server would return a failed connection attempt.  *sigh*

Finally I located information regarding a recent response made by Microsoft to a high threat trojan.  Their response was to wipe out the IP address information of the LocalHost.

So to fix this, I located and modified the hosts file.  In most computers, this should be in %windowsdir%>system 32>drivers>etc>hosts.  Updated it in a notepad entry and added the local host IP back to this file to result in 127.0.0.1 as instructed by Microsoft’s Malware Protection Center’s article.

Testing… YAY!  My silverlight apps now run!

The spam bots found me!! Ugh!

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I’ve been on this non-design related project now for a week, perhaps a week and and a half now and I just have not had the time to check FacingBlend.com during this time.

Well I decided to poke around out of curiosity – see if anything has occured since I’ve been away.  Well sure – stuff had occured.  One of my posts had around 300 new comments on it.  Wow!

 

 

Ok, that wow was not a good one.  They were all annoying casino, poker, bingo, or other related posts.  Spam.  UGH!

This project isn’t over and likely has another week to go until I have the free time, but hopefully I’ll be able to get the Silverlight facingblend page at a point where I can upload it.

We shall see!