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January 25th, 2012

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January 5th, 2012
The team talk to Jose Diaz & Ryan Frazee of Incae, the best business school in Latin America, about their efforts to rebuild their web presence with the Groop. Watch as Jose and Aure take them through the Groop discovery and development process.
January 5th, 2012
Jose, Jacob, Aure, and Tony meet up to close out the 6 week sprint to redesign the ThisWeekIn website redesign. Tony leads the team to a retrospective on the final design, as well as guide us through a discussion of what worked, what didn’t, and how he would improve the process next time. If you enjoyed any of the previous episodes, this is the one to tune in for and add your comments and questions.
January 5th, 2012
After developer Jacob Pittassi discovered that there was an issue with the taxonomy of the web site architecture last week, the team switches from development of the individual show page to a parent “network’ page. Watch as host Jose Caballer demonstrates the strengths of developing a site in scrum with members of both the design and devlopment team in the room. Watch the ThisWeekIn Web Design team work through their third sprint of six as they attempt to build a MVP (minimum viable product) of the ThisWeekIn website redesign.
January 5th, 2012
Aure and Ryan take a look at viewer site HorsePowerCalculators.net and redesign the logo and homepage live on the air. Check out the before and after and let us know what you think!
January 5th, 2012
Seth Epstein demonstrates SocialStay’s mobile product and discusses the challenges of designing for mobile.
November 27th, 2011
CIO.com cites a Dynamic Markets survey of 800 IT managers, reporting that 62 percent of IT projects fail to meet their schedules. Other data:
- 49 percent suffered budget overruns
- 47 percent had higher-than-expected maintenance costs, and
- 41 percent failed to deliver the expected business value and ROI
This wouldn’t be so bad, CIO.com notes, if it weren’t for the fact that the numbers haven’t appreciably improved over the past decade. In some cases, they’ve gotten worse.
November 8th, 2011
Each quarter, GAUGE, the AIGA student group at Cal State LA, hosts a guest designer. This is our premier event each quarter, and the purpose is to inspire and educate our design students. The talks run for a length of 30-45 minutes with a question and answer period to follow.
For the Fall 2011 quarter, GAUGE is honored to present Jose Caballer.

7:00 PM – 8:30 PM / 10 NOV 2011
CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, LOS ANGELES – MUSIC HALL
5151 STATE UNIVERSITY DRIVE, LOS ANGELES, CA 90032
For more information click here
November 4th, 2011
Here is an excerpt from the article:
It says: Social, Mobile and Video are the big things.
By TANZINA VEGA and CLAIRE CAIN MILLER
Google might be late to the display advertising game, but it wants Madison Avenue to know that it will be ahead of the game in the future. At the Interactive Advertising Bureau’s Mixx conference in New York on Tuesday, Google made seven predictions for display advertising that the company thinks will happen by 2015.
1. Google announced two new kinds of video ads for YouTube and predicted that half of display ads would include cost-per-view videos that viewers choose to watch. On YouTube, people will be able to skip video ads they don’t like after five seconds (and the advertiser won’t pay for those views) or choose which of three ads to watch.
2. Half of the audience will be viewing ads in real-time, Google predicted. That means changing elements of ads on the fly based on things like location, the viewer’s interests and the weather. Google demonstrated technology from Teracent, an advertising company it acquired, that changes a car ad depending on whether the viewer is in a sunny or rainy place, is a woman or a man, and prefers shopping or sports. The technology would allow “millions of possible permutations,” Mr. Salzman said.
Click here for entire Article: