Collax

Paula Hunter joins Collax to Lead U.S. Marketing

Collax, Inc., a leading European vendor of affordable, turn-key, Linux-based server solutions for small and medium businesses, today announced that Paula Hunter, formerly of the Open Source Development Lab (OSDL), has joined the management team as vice president of U.S. marketing.

Go Collax, Go Collax…


Update: 6/2/2006 10:24 PM CST

So, when I initially posted this about Collax I bit my tongue. What I wanted to say was: C’mooon! This marketing is never going to work. At least, not for Small and Medium sized businesses (SMBs). Sure for enterprise, but no SMB wants to buy technology; especially technology that involves Linux. The less SMBs hear about the components the happier they are. They simply don’t care what solves their problems. Do you know what your Tivo is running? Of course not! Why do you care? Well, it is Linux, but who cares. We just want solutions. Maybe this sells in the EU. Alas, who am I to question someone like Paula Hunter? Perhaps they haven’t changed their messaging since she joined. I don’t know, but I am sure that saying “Don’t think about Linux” is the equivalent of saying: “Don’t think about pink elephants.”

F-Shaped Pattern For Reading Web Content

Jakob Nielsen’s Alertbox

232 users looked at thousands of Web pages. We found that users’ main reading behavior was fairly consistent across many different sites and tasks. This dominant reading pattern looks somewhat like an F and has the following three components:

  • Users first read in a horizontal movement, usually across the upper part of the content area. This initial element forms the F’s top bar.
  • Next, users move down the page a bit and then read across in a second horizontal movement that typically covers a shorter area than the previous movement. This additional element forms the F’s lower bar.
  • Finally, users scan the content’s left side in a vertical movement. Sometimes this is a fairly slow and systematic scan that appears as a solid stripe on an eyetracking heatmap. Other times users move faster, creating a spottier heatmap. This last element forms the F’s stem.

It’s funny, in the last couple weeks I have been thinking about how I’ve been programmed to scan the top, down the left, and then across to the right. Specifically, I’ve recently become cognizant of the fact that I completely skip the section just below the top most section, usually this means I completely miss the second paragraph. Some one should put this to practice by providing complete nonsense in the second paragraph. I suppose, this is the second paragraph. I’ll bet I can provide: Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit. Nullam in neque vel nisi pharetra sodales. Donec dignissim gravida tellus. Etiam at nunc, and no one would notice.

Posted in Journal. Tags: , . Comments Off »

CSS Cornucopia

There are a ton of great CSS and design resources available on the Internet these days. Here are a list of some resources that have piqued my interest in the past couple months (in an arbitrary order):

If you’re throwing together a website there are lots of great open source designs in the above list that you can grab and cobble together with some of the fancier design patterns. A crappy designer, like myself, can very quickly throw together a very presentable site with just a couple of the above resources. I know, I’ve left off some obvious resources, but like I said these are ones I’ve noticed in the last couple months. Moreover, you’ll find a much more complete list in the above listed “very very big…

Posted in Journal. Tags: , , , . Comments Off »

PalmOS is Dead, Long Live PalmOS

New Treo Smartphone returns to Palm OS roots

Four months after releasing its first Treo Smartphone with a Windows operating system, Palm is returning to its roots today by announcing the Treo 700p, its next-generation high-speed data Smartphone running on the original Palm platform.

Posted in Journal. Tags: . Comments Off »

Enterprise Support Program for 150+ Open Source Products

Integrated mar.com

OpenLogic announces launch of open source enterprise support program.

We will provide enterprises with commercial-grade support across 150-plus open source products and OpenLogic will cover tier one and two support and we will leverage the experts in the OpenLogic Expert Community for tier three and four support.

Posted in Technology. Tags: . Comments Off »