The Floating Frog

Web design and news by The Floating Frog

Frog of the Antarctic
By frog on December 4th, 2008 at 21:43 UTC | 5 Comments »

See the dedication Frog has to his job and his clients after he abandoned his car 2 miles away from work and battled through 6 inches of snow in a gale for 30 minutes to get to work.

Hmm snow! Best defrost the car

Frog of the Antartic

A shot from the car

Frog of the Antartic

We abandoned the car and trekked along The Stray

Frog of the Antartic

Poor Zoe

Frog of the Antartic

Harrogate FC

Frog of the Antartic

Gridlock on Wetherby road

Frog of the Antartic

A car loses control and mounts a verge

Frog of the Antartic

Arrived, just one in I see

Frog of the Antartic

Work? Nah, snowman? Yes indeedy

Frog of the Antartic

The Antarctic trek to work, with soggy feet and a cold red nose I was glad to make it. Gradually half the team got in one by one, the other half quite sensibly stayed at home.

Other shots from friends from today

David Naylor

Patrick Altoft

An alternative to sIFR
By frog on December 1st, 2008 at 22:12 UTC | 2 Comments »

WTF man!

Rich typography on the web

sIFR (Scalable Inman Flash Replacement) is a mix of Javascript and Flash that enables a web designer to move away from the restrictions of on being able to use web-safe fonts and pick the one’s they really want to use. sIFR isn’t to everyone’s taste however, mainly down to the fact that it is heavy on server load, with the relevant Flash, Javascript and CSS files taking a meaty chunk out of the browsers performance. My current agency have taken the steps to ban sIFR from all future web builds, mainly due to these inefficiencies.

Those shoes are too big for you son!

This news broke my heart, the first signs of rich typography on the web and it’s taken away from me by technical issues. Whilst I argued day and night with the developers, asking them to look harder at a fix or an alternative my words seemed to be falling on deaf ears, so I, a mere designer whose job it is to merely ‘colour in’ and ’stay between the lines’ decided to play sherlock and find an alternative.

Search for the Holy Grail

WTF man!

Well I didn’t find the Holy Grail, but I did find
FLIR (pronounced FLEER, Facelift Image Replacement).

Facelift Image Replacement (or FLIR, pronounced fleer) is an image replacement script that dynamically generates image representations of text on your web page in fonts that otherwise might not be visible to your visitors. The generated image will be automatically inserted into your web page via Javascript and visible to all modern browsers. Any element with text can be replaced: from headers (<h1>, <h2>, etc.) to <span> ) to elements and everything in between!

It looks exactly what I’m after! It claims to automatically find what needs to be replaced and where (presumably through standard markup tags like a H2), with it’s nifty Javascript. I can’t see any flash at all in it’s downloads section so again I presume it isn’t required.

Facelift website screenshot

Explore FLIR for yourself >>>

Top 20 GEEK gifts for Christmas
By frog on November 28th, 2008 at 13:35 UTC | 12 Comments »

Here are 20 must own gifts and gadgets for all geeks to wish for this Christmas. I’ve got the Ariel Atom on my list as it’s friggin awesome, maybe asking for too much though!

8 year Daily Photo Project
By frog on November 26th, 2008 at 14:51 UTC | No Comments »

I had the idea of doing a photography project where I take a picture of my face everyday for a year, slap it into a video and animate how it changes across the length of the year. That was until I came across this video where this guy did the same thing, only across 8 years! 8 years! I mean seriously, WTF! Enjoy!

It’s snow joke!
By frog on November 23rd, 2008 at 23:27 UTC | 2 Comments »

WOW what a weekend! I traveled through to Scarborough to see my little girl as usual this weekend and was ecstatic to be greeted by 6 inches of snow to play in. Weirdly on the way I didn’t see a single flake until I hit Malton, about 15 miles outside of Scarborough. The fields slowly started to gradiate from green to white as I drove further and further into the wintery wonderland. I thought I’d share some snaps for those who weren’t lucky enough to see any snow.

Snowy photograph

Snowy photograph

Snowy photograph

Snowy photograph

Snowy photograph

What a lovely weekend, the snow is worth the wait, especially when it comes in such a quantity :)

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