David Kadavy

David Kadavy is author of Mind Management, Not Time Management, The Heart to Start & Design for Hackers.

Posts from the How To Category

Quicksilver for OSX Will Change the Way You Use Your Mac

November 09, 2004

I’m using an amazing new program called Quicksilver to use Mac OSX. Download it and use this tutorial to familiarize yourself with Quicksilver.

What’s so great about it? Imagine this:

Instead of using a mouse and opening your browser, then navigating through your bookmarks menu to access your weather bookmark, you could press the Quicksilver hotkey (by default, Control+Spacebar), then type the first few letters of the word “weather,” Quicksilver searches through all of your Safari bookmarks, finds your weather bookmark, and when it does, you press enter, thus launching Safari on the page indicated on your bookmark. More than anything, Quicksilver is great for launching applications.

The process saves time and repetitive stress, and can be used in this same manner for many of your tasks throughout the day.

Photoshop Brush Cursor Shortcuts

November 04, 2004

What’s the fastest and easiest way to manipulate the characteristics of your brush in Photoshop?

This will save you tons of time when using the brush tool.

Carpet Tile Sample Area Rug

October 19, 2004

I’ve found a great new use for the old carpet tile samples my Architecture firm gets. I taped together some matching samples to make a rug for my pad.

carpet tile sample rug

keep on reading »

Naming Blogs and Webpages, Not “What’s in a Name?”

September 02, 2004

A common trend in writing is to come up with “clever” names for articles. This annoying attempt to create reader curiousity is only appropriate for print design. The web is another story.

Not only is writing on the web for humans, but it is also for machines, or in many cases, humans using machines that help them find what they want. If a typical contemporary print magazine contained an article about naming articles, there is a good chance that it may be called “What’s in a Name?” While this is annoying to a reader who is trying to decipher what the article is about, this title will not be significantly detrimental to a reader’s ability to find it (though I have many times flipped through my magazines, trying to find that great article I read, only to find out after scanning over the right issue many times that it had been named irrelevantly). However, if that same article is put on the web, not only do you essentially exclude your useful article from search queries about “naming articles appropriately,” but you also run the risk of mucking up the search results for someone who is looking for the origin of the popular Shakespeare quote.

So, next time you write a blog, imagine, if you were someone searching for the information in that article, what words would be in your query. Then, try to include those words in the title of your blog. It’s true that the contents of the blog may be relevant to what someone is searching for, but that information only has a <p> tag around it. The title of a blog on my page has an <h3> tag on it, which holds much more weight as important information to a search engine than a <p> tag. Then, in the archive of my blog, each page <title> includes the title of the blog in it, which I have found to have more semantic weight than anything for determining search rankings.

Keep in mind that you should title your blog postings relevantly. Just because “brittney spears” is a popular search query, including it in the title of your blog post won’t help your search rankings any unless there is truly valuable information in your blog about brittney spears. Search engines such as Google will get you sorted out one way or another if your information isn’t truly pertinent to said search query. I know that seems to run contrary to my previous point about the Shakespeare quote, but nevermind that, just be a good web citizen and name your blogs appropriately.

Quick Photoshop Cursor Tip

June 27, 2004

Ever been confronted, in Photoshop, with this (totally useless) crop tool icon?

Or been using a large paintbrush, and seen this equally useless icon:

Even though your preferences clearly designate the “brush size” cursor should be used?

In either case, press CAPS LOCK. You will get the latter icon, which is the only good way to crop, if cropping, and you will toggle back to the “brush size” icon if you are using the brush tool (and your brush size is big enough).

It was quite awhile before I discovered this, and I always thought I had a buggy copy of Photoshop in the “brush size” situation. It seems everyone else I’ve encountered has thought the same, so I hope this helps you.

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