The Perfect Office #124

We’ve seen some great gadgets and equipment for designers. So many cool stuff, that we could actually assemble infinite perfect office spaces! Every week we’ll assemble a perfect office, and we’d like you to help us. What equipment would the perfect office have?

Not only gadgets and equipment, but also furniture, sound system, gaming stuff (for lunch time!). A designer is totally allowed to dream with the perfect office, and that’s what we’re gonna do here! Also, tell us your suggestions, or even better, you may tell us via twitter, using #abdz_ofc so we can check it. Alright? I hope you guys enjoy this brief selection. Cheers! 😉

P.S.: Office Interior Design Ideas – Help us build this new area! Do you have an awesome home office and would like to inspire other people around the world? Contact me via twitter.

Cork Planter Bookend Set


The Perfect Office #124

Bookends that double as a planter and a mini pin board. Makes a great addition to any office desk. (at Holy Cool)

Lamps by Giles Godwin-Brown


The Perfect Office #124
The Perfect Office #124
The Perfect Office #124

The Candor Lamp is wall-mounted and is constructed of cotton and timber. Wired with LED lighting as well, this lamp features a transparent strip that generates a “halo-like” glow on the wall it is mounted on. (at Design Milk)

Lexar 32 GB USB 3.0 flash drive


The Perfect Office #124

The Lexar Triton USB 3.0 flash drive leverages SuperSpeed USB 3.0 technology to provide blazing-fast file transfer, with up to 155MB/s read and 150MB/s write (more than 20x faster than standard drives). This gives you the power, for example, to quickly and easily transfer 100 songs in less than 20 seconds and a full-length HD movie in less than 40 seconds. (at 7 Gadgets)

Level 10 M Mouse


The Perfect Office #124

BMW’s cars are generally pretty elegant, so we’ll forgive you if you fail to see the car maker’s influence on the Level 10 M Mouse. The latest result of the collaboration between Thermaltake and BMW’s Designworks USA, the M Mouse is designed to go great with the Level 10 PC Case, and sports a highly breathable design, a wired connection to eliminate lag, side A, B and trigger buttons, and an overall look that should be far more attractive to hardcore gamers than owners of 5-series sedans. (at Uncrate)

CES: Samsung Series 9 monitor


The Perfect Office #124

Looking sleek and thin (and matching my favorite super thin Samsung TVs) ~ it’s actually pretty comprable to the Apple 27” Studio display (though definitely need to play with it in person in a few days!) Both tout resolution of 2560×1440, contrast ratio of 1000:1, and viewing angles of 178/178. The Samsung however has a 300cd/m^2 whereas the apple has 375, and the Samsung is priced at $1199 while the apple is $999… though the Samsung has 2x 7W speakers built in as well as this interesting feature: “By linking their Android MHL-compatible smartphone, users can enjoy content from their mobile devices directly on the much larger screen and with the benefit of rich, built-in stereo audio. Users can also keep an eye on their smartphone, seamlessly browse to it and even charge the device for added convenience.” (at NotCot)

Folding Chair

The Perfect Office #124

Enough said.

About the author

Hello, everyone! I’m Paulo Gabriel, designer from Porto Alegre, Brazil, born in 1984. I have worked as a webdesigner since 2006, but websites and blogs have been a hobby for me since 1999. Here in Abduzeedo, I try to bring only the hot stuff for you… and hope that all of you enjoy my posts! For more cool stuff, you may also follow me on Twitter.

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New developer tools in Firefox 10 and 11

Firefox 10, due out January 31st (the same day Firefox 11 becomes an official Beta release), finally rounds out the browser’s growing collection of developer tools with Page and Style Inspectors.

In some ways, these tools are similar to Firebug, but they’re also uniquely Mozilla-ey.

Rather than try to reproduce Firebug or the WebKit developer tools, Mozilla has included only the most essential features, focusing instead on making the experience elegant.

Does the new approach work, or will designers run screaming back to Firebug? Let’s take a look.

You can pull up the Page Inspector by right-clicking a web page and choosing “Inspect.” (Firebug recently changed its context menu item to read “Inspect in Firebug,” so it will coexist peacefully with the built-in dev tools.) At the bottom of the screen, a purple bar appears with a list of the selected element’s parents and children.

You can click parents or children to select them, and you can right-click an element to see its siblings. There are also buttons labeled “Inspect,” “HTML,” and “Style.” If Firebug’s sea of tabs and buttons drove you up the wall, this layout will be a godsend. If just you want to want to see the DOM, having to click “HTML” first may drive you up the wall.


Digging in

Clicking the HTML button bring up a panel that shows the hierarchy of HTML tags that make up your page. In this view, you can expand and collapse tags and edit their attributes. Clicking the “Inspect” button lets you hover over elements to inspect them, and as you do so, Firefox highlights the element you’re inspecting and darkens the rest of the page.

Clicking the “Style” button brings up the Style Inspector, showing the CSS rules that apply to the selected element. In the Style Inspector, you can switch from “Rules” to a “Properties” section that gives you the computed CSS properties for the selected element, along with links to Mozilla’s documentation for each property.

The Style Inspector sits to the right of the page, while the Page inspector and HTML pane sit at the bottom of the screen. You can choose to display both panes, just one of them, or neither.

The Firefox HTML inspector, expanded.

That basically covers the entirety of what the Page and Style Inspectors do. The web console and JavaScript scratchpad, introduced in earlier versions of Firefox, are separate tools. There is no network activity monitor. There’s no user agent switcher, no “edit as HTML feature,” no performance-testing tools, no way to inject new tags into a page, no way to activate an element’s hover state. There’s not even a “layout” panel for viewing the dimensions, padding, and margins of your element.

Despite all those limitations, I keep coming back to the Page and Style Inspectors. I come back for the uncluttered interface, the thoughtfully placed panes, and that funky purple chrome. I come back because they’re a pleasure to use, and because they meet my needs most of the time.

The inspectors’ simple UI also means that they’re useful even when I’ve made the window small to test responsive designs. When they don’t meet my needs, I just open Firebug or the Web Developer Toolbar. (I’d do this a lot less if the built-in dev tools had equivalents to Firebug’s Layout and Net panels.)

The Firefox HTML inspector used to analyze a responsive design

Mozilla’s development tools don’t have to match the feature set of their competitors’ tools, because the specialized features of those tools already exist as Firefox extensions. That’s what makes the Firefox dev tools unique.


These browsers go up to 11

In addition to the HTML and Style Inspector, some innovative features are slated for later releases of Firefox. Firefox 11’s developer tools let you view your web page as three-dimensional stacks of tags. Each time you nest a tag, that stack of tags gets taller. This feature is actually surprisingly helpful—you can see at a glance whether an element is inside the wrong parent, and seeing those tags pile up will cure new developers of div-itis right quick.

The Firefox 3D inspector analylzing Web Designer Depot

Also due out in Firefox 11 is a style editor. This is tool lets you create new stylesheets, much like any good text editor would. The main difference is that your changes are applied to live web pages as soon as you finish typing.

Previously, this sort of live CSS editing has been the domain of development environments like Espresso, so it’s awesome to see this feature built right into the browser. More features, including “tooling to assist with application performance issues,” are planned for later this year.

Firefox 11's CSS editor

Even in Firefox 11, though, comparing the built-in dev tools with Firebug (or with the WebKit dev tools) is a little like comparing iOS with Android. The former has a clean, intuitive UI and some innovative ideas, but it’s short on power user features.

The latter has every feature that you can think of, and you can configure the blazes out if it, but it’s not quite as elegant as Cupertino’s wunderkind. Unlike iOS and Android, it’s easy to use both tools at the same time if you want. Mozilla continues to contribute to Firebug and has made it clear that Firebug is here for the long haul.

Firefox's HTML inspector and Firebug, existing together in harmony.

Which tool is right for you? That depends on what features you need, what features you can live without, and how you feel about hunting down extensions to fill in the gaps in your tool of choice. Whatever you think about the new developer tools, this is one area where you can’t accuse Firefox of aping WebKit.


Ryan DeBeasi is a front-end developer at the web design company 352 Media Group. He loves concise language, elegant design, strong coffee, and jazz. He spends far too much time on Twitter.

Are you excited about the new dev tools in Firefox 10? What are your go-to dev tools? Let us know in the comments!

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