Missing the /s? Most people have a calculator in their pocket all the time now.
I remember having to split bar tabs by hand at the end of the night without a calculator. The waiter delivers a hand-written bill, and we'd calculate how much each person owed, splitting drinks individually and food equally, recalculating tax and tip to derive each person's total. We'd pool the cash in the middle of the table (with people taking their own change as they go where possible), then counting all the cash and making sure it still included sufficient tip. All after many pints. I do NOT miss those days.
We created this app as we often tether our mobile connection, but there is no easy way to measure the impact of your current session, It’s especially important when you’ve got limited data usage from your carrier.
Tether Strength is an app that pops up in your system's menu bar when you are tethering your smartphone to your Mac. This handy app will tell you the strength of your iPhone’s or iPad’s connection to the cellular network, how long you have been tethering and how much you have downloaded.
We had a good laugh when it went live like that, rest assured we've got some some updated screens that won't end up looking like extremely poorly drawn iPads.
I've been creating a couple of blogs over the last week using Jekyll, It's pretty easy and I was not aware there were so little. Might have to make some templates.
UX Designer here.
In my first 4 or so years of web designing I found I did this often. Low contrast elements is they easy/lazy way out, you can clearly give things more importance just by giving the element greater contrast, but it's not good design.
In my case it was learning this. Learning to feel comfortable with every single element I was putting on the page, learning how to balance correctly contrasted objects, giving elements the right sizing and ultimately having confidence as a designer.