Recent News

  1. A List Apart No. 266

    September 7, 2008

    CSS Sprites, the next generation. Cartography, the next metaphor for webmaking. Dave Shea and Aaron Rester aim high and score in Issue No. 266 of A List Apart, for people who make websites.

  2. So long, San Francisco. Hello, Chicago.

    August 25, 2008

    An Event Apart San Francisco 2008 was our best conference event ever. (Check the Flickr photo pool for evidence of good times had.) If you missed this show, join us for the final event of the year. An Event Apart Chicago features Andy Clarke (Transcending CSS), Curt Cloninger (Hot-Wiring Your Creative Process), Jason Fried (37signals), Robert Hoekman Jr. (Designing the Obvious), Cameron Moll (Mobile Web Design), Sarah Nelson (Adaptive Path), Bronwyn Jones (Apple.com), Jeff Veen (Art & Science of Web Design), Rob Weychert (Web Standards Creativity), Jason Santa Maria (Happy Cog), Eric Meyer (CSS: The Definitive Guide) and Jeffrey Zeldman (Happy Cog, Designing With Web Standards).

  3. A new chapter for Books-A-Million

    August 20, 2008

    The third-largest bookseller in the US came to us needing more than just an overhaul. Happy Cog created a rich, interactive, “single-page” experience that merged the solitary pleasures of reading and book-buying with the joys of community—all while never losing site of the user’s ability to find related products quickly and easily. Introducing the new Books-A-Million.

  4. ALA 265: listen!

    August 12, 2008

    In Issue No. 256 of A List Apart, for people who make websites: The web is a conversation, but not always a productive one. In “Putting Our Hot Heads Together,” Carolyn Wood shares ways to transform discussion forums and comment sections from shooting ranges into arenas of collaboration. Plus: Because of limited awareness around Deafness and accessibility in the web community, it seems plausible to many of us that good captioning will fix it all. It won’t. In “Deafness and the User Experience,” Lisa Herrod explains how to enhance the user experience for all deaf people.

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Happy Cog helped us bring Ma.gnolia to life with an elegant architecture and design that is as beautiful to look at as it is easy to work with and build upon.

Larry Halff, Founder, Ma.gnolia

Why Happy Cog?

It’s simple: designing with web standards means lower costs, reduced production time, and increased accessibility. We literally wrote the book on it.

Our uncompromising dedication to the human being using your site means your online presence works properly in support of your business goals online, first time, every time.

From site structure to front-end design, Happy Cog’s people are the authorities.