Signal vs. Noise
8 June 2008
Haven't people figured out by now that any decrees made by 37signals only ever work for 37signals?
Cubescape Highlights
19 May 2008
My great uncle Jeremiah once told me these wise words: "If you give a man a painting, he will ... continued
Popular Entries
Articles Elsewhere
Go Forth and API
An article written for Vitamin promoting the use of Web APIs with JavaScript/AJAX, including some server-side proxying techniques and code snippets.
AJAX: Usable Interactivity with Remote Scripting
A tutorial on how to use the technology behind AJAX, and a discussion of how AJAX interactions affect the usability of web sites.
You want to be a dinosaur?
An article promoting Web Standards to the primarily Flash-oriented audience of the Favourite Website Awards.
The Web Standards Awards
Monthly postings on the cream of Web Standards design on the Internet.
Press
35 Designers x 5 Qs
Smashing Magazine asked the same 5 questions to 35 designers. I was one of them.
By the Book
John Lampard interviewed me about The JavaScript Anthology for OnVoiceOver – a series on Australian creatives.
mcville: Cameron Adams Interview
A light-hearted interview with Marko Mihelcic, organiser of mcville.
Ten questions for Cameron Adams
Ten questions about Web Standards, design, and the Internet from the Web Standards Group.
Links
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Beautiful libraries
These photos of beautiful libraries make me yearn to be an academic; buried amongst musty tomes of hidden knowledge.
17 June 2008, 00:57
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Mark Coleran interfaces
How cool: Mark has a job as an interface designer for the computer interfaces you see in movies.
22 May 2008, 15:14
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Hotel Puerta America Madrid
This is, quite frankly, the most incredible hotel I've ever wanted to stay at.
04 April 2008, 12:38
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Fontstruct
Create your own font (and font files!) with one of the coolest online drawing apps I've seen.
02 April 2008, 16:13
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Color label wheel
An interesting interactive visualisation of the names that people give to colours.
20 March 2008, 14:46
My Book: The JavaScript Anthology
The JavaScript Anthology contains over 100 solutions to common Web development challenges such as drag-and-drop interfaces, client-server communication with AJAX/remote scripting, DHTML animation, and many more.
All code used in the book is unobtrusive and accessible, and a key focus is placed upon creating modern, cross-browser scripts.

