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Every day design fans submit incredible industry stories to our sister-site, Webdesigner News. Our colleagues sift through it, selecting the very best stories from the design, UX, tech, and development worlds and posting them live on the site.

The best way to keep up with the most important stories for web professionals is to subscribe to Webdesigner News or check out the site regularly. However, in case you missed a day this week, here’s a handy compilation of the top curated stories from the last seven days. Enjoy!

How to Treat Clients Who Treat You Poorly

PC Users Are Furious About The New Windows 11 Design

20 Best New Fonts, June 2021

22 Free Web Design Tools from Spring 2021

10 Best Google Fonts for Headings 2021 Collection

Why Python is Not The Programming Language of the Future

The 6 Levels of UX Maturity

Top 20 JavaScript Tips and Tricks to Increase Your Speed and Efficiency

Drawing Graphics With The CSS Paint API

Creating Rhythm With Typography

Soft UI: Making Sense of the Latest Design Trend

Optical Size, The Hidden Superpower of Variable Fonts

WebP Images: A Primer

Perfect Tooltips With CSS Clipping and Masking

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The post Popular Design News of the Week: June 21 2021 – June 27, 2021 first appeared on Webdesigner Depot.


Source de l’article sur Webdesignerdepot

SAP SE (NYSE : SAP) annonce aujourd’hui que Bboxx, fournisseur d’énergie propre et de services publics de nouvelle génération, a choisi l’offre de cloud Grow by SAP pour développer son activité et atteindre son objectif ambitieux de résoudre la problématique de la précarité énergétique.

Avec 770 millions de personnes vivant actuellement sans accès à l’énergie, Bboxx a été fondée en 2010 pour mettre fin à la pauvreté énergétique. Bboxx fabrique, distribue et finance des systèmes solaires décentralisés dans les pays en développement. Grâce à la fourniture d’une énergie abordable, fiable et propre, l’entreprise a un impact positif sur la vie de plus de 2 millions de personnes avec ses produits et services. Bboxx fournit ses produits et services à des clients mal desservis dans les zones rurales grâce à sa technologie innovante, Bboxx Pulse®, qui est sa propre plateforme de gestion à la pointe de la technologie. Bboxx Pulse® permet la croissance des futures entreprises mondiales de services publics et leur permet de gérer l’échelle, lorsque les clients, les employés et les produits sont dispersés dans des endroits éloignés.

Bboxx était donc à la recherche d’une plateforme basée sur le cloud computing, capable de fournir des logiciels évolutifs de pointe et d’intégrer les meilleures pratiques pour l’aider à étendre sa présence sur de nouveaux marchés. Bboxx a choisi SAP Business ByDesign – Supply chain and Finance avec Grow By SAP, un programme exclusif pour les entreprises en hypercroissance. La phase 1 du projet a été lancée en Asie en mai 2021. Ce n’est qu’un début, la phase 2 doit être lancée au Royaume-Uni, en France et au Rwanda en septembre 2021, et la phase 3 en RDC, au Kenya, au Togo et au Nigeria en décembre 2021. Au cours de la phase 3, SAP Business ByDesign sera intégré à Bboxx Pulse®. La mise en œuvre de SAP Business ByDesign est prise en charge par Orchard House Solutions, partenaire SAP de la transformation des activités et de Grow.

En utilisant les solutions ERP, finance et supply chain de SAP, Bboxx gagnera en efficacité grâce à l’automatisation généralisée des processus et à l’utilisation des meilleures pratiques intégrées à SAP. Le fait de disposer d’une seule interface cloud pour la finance et la chaîne d’approvisionnement aidera Bboxx à mettre en place un processus cohérent à l’échelle mondiale tout en répondant aux besoins locaux en matière de reporting.

Anthony Osijo, directeur financier du groupe Bboxx, a déclaré : « Bboxx est actuellement présent dans 10 pays, et nous avons l’ambition d’atteindre 23 pays d’ici cinq ans. Nous avons un impact positif direct sur 1,8 million de vies grâce à la fourniture d’une énergie propre, fiable et abordable. Nous voulons accélérer l’accès à l’énergie dans les pays en développement et continuer à transformer des vies et à révéler des potentiels grâce à l’accès à l’énergie. Face à l’ampleur de ces objectifs, il est essentiel d’avoir un partenaire mondial stratégique comme SAP, suffisamment souple et innovant pour vouloir nous accompagner dans cette démarche. »

Romain Gauthier, Vice-président régional – Nouveaux clients EMEA Nord chez SAP, a déclaré : « SAP était le partenaire idéal pour épauler la mission audacieuse de Bboxx, qui consiste à mettre fin à la précarité énergétique dans le monde, en lui fournissant une infrastructure de cloud unique, hautement flexible et évolutive. Le programme Grow by SAP a été spécialement conçu pour soutenir les entreprises à croissance rapide et les start-ups. Il permettra à Bboxx de bénéficier d’une supply chain, de finances, de comptabilité et d’un service client avancés sur trois grands continents, tout en veillant à ce qu’elle conserve sa base tarifaire compétitive. Lorsqu’il s’agit d’aider les entreprises à étendre leur empreinte et à se développer sur de nouveaux marchés, SAP est un véritable partenaire stratégique. »

À propos de SAP

La stratégie de SAP vise à aider chaque organisation à fonctionner en “entreprise intelligente”. En tant que leader du marché des logiciels d’application d’entreprise, nous aidons les entreprises de toutes tailles et de tous secteurs à opérer au mieux : 77 % des transactions commerciales mondiales entrent en contact avec un système SAP®. Nos technologies de Machine Learning, d’Internet des objets (IoT) et d’analytique avancées aident nos clients à transformer leurs activités en “entreprises intelligentes”. SAP permet aux personnes et aux organisations d’avoir une vision approfondie de leur business et favorise la collaboration afin qu’elles puissent garder une longueur d’avance sur leurs concurrents. Nous simplifions la technologie afin que les entreprises puissent utiliser nos logiciels comme elles le souhaitent – sans interruption. Notre suite d’applications et de services de bout en bout permet aux clients privés et publics de 25 secteurs d’activité dans le monde de fonctionner de manière rentable, de s’adapter en permanence et de faire la différence. Avec son réseau mondial de clients, partenaires, employés et leaders d’opinion, SAP aide le monde à mieux fonctionner et à améliorer la vie de chacun.

Pour plus d’informations, visitez le site www.sap.com .

Contacts presse SAP
Daniel Margato, Directeur Communication : 06 64 25 38 08 – daniel.margato@sap.com
Mateo Moreau : 06.31.80.86.93 – presse-sap@publicisconsultants.com
SAP News Center. Suivez SAP sur Twitter : @SAPNews.

 

 

The post Bboxx déploie SAP pour accélérer l’accès aux énergies propres dans le monde appeared first on SAP France News.

Source de l’article sur sap.com

Chaque année, Glassdoor, une plateforme de recherche d’emploi et d’évaluation des employés, récompense les employeurs et les leaders marquants du monde entier avec les Employees’ Choice Awards. SAP, éditeur mondial de logiciels d’origine européenne, est fier que son CEO, Christian Klein, ait remporté un prix Glassdoor Employees’ Choice Award, qui récompense les meilleurs CEOs de 2021.

En se basant entièrement sur les commentaires anonymes des employés au cours de l’année écoulée, Christian Klein a été reconnu comme un CEO de référence en Allemagne et en France. En France, Christian Klein se hisse à la première position du classement avec un taux d’approbation de 99%.

« Nos collaborateurs sont au cœur de notre succès et ils font de SAP la grande entreprise qu’elle est », a déclaré M. Klein. « De toutes les choses qui me motivent à donner le meilleur de moi-même chaque jour, ce sont sans aucun doute les personnes avec lesquelles j’ai le privilège de travailler dans le monde entier. Je suis reconnaissant de pouvoir travailler avec des personnes aussi exceptionnelles, qui m’inspirent continuellement par leur dévouement, leur ingéniosité et leur passion. »

Glassdoor, le leader mondial des avis sur les emplois et les entreprises, offre aux employés la possibilité de donner leur sentiment sur l’environnement, la culture et les dirigeants de leur entreprise. Sur les quelque 1,5 million d’employeurs évalués sur Glassdoor, le taux d’approbation moyen des CEO est de 73 %.

Pour en savoir plus sur les prix de la diversité et de l’intégration, les prix du meilleur lieu de travail, les certifications des premiers talents et les autres récompenses qui font de SAP une entreprise où il fait bon travailler, consultez la section Employer Awards sur sap.com.

À propos de SAP

La stratégie de SAP vise à aider chaque organisation à fonctionner en “entreprise intelligente”. En tant que leader du marché des logiciels d’application d’entreprise, nous aidons les entreprises de toutes tailles et de tous secteurs à opérer au mieux : 77 % des transactions commerciales mondiales entrent en contact avec un système SAP®. Nos technologies de Machine Learning, d’Internet des objets (IoT) et d’analytique avancées aident nos clients à transformer leurs activités en “entreprises intelligentes”. SAP permet aux personnes et aux organisations d’avoir une vision approfondie de leur business et favorise la collaboration afin qu’elles puissent garder une longueur d’avance sur leurs concurrents. Nous simplifions la technologie afin que les entreprises puissent utiliser nos logiciels comme elles le souhaitent – sans interruption. Notre suite d’applications et de services de bout en bout permet aux clients privés et publics de 25 secteurs d’activité dans le monde de fonctionner de manière rentable, de s’adapter en permanence et de faire la différence. Avec son réseau mondial de clients, partenaires, employés et leaders d’opinion, SAP aide le monde à mieux fonctionner et à améliorer la vie de chacun.

Pour plus d’informations, visitez le site www.sap.com .

Contacts presse SAP
Daniel Margato, Directeur Communication : 06 64 25 38 08 – daniel.margato@sap.com
Mateo Moreau : 06.31.80.86.93 – presse-sap@publicisconsultants.com
SAP News Center. Suivez SAP sur Twitter : @SAPNews.

The post Glassdoor désigne Christian Klein comme Top CEO 2021 appeared first on SAP France News.

Source de l’article sur sap.com

Every day design fans submit incredible industry stories to our sister-site, Webdesigner News. Our colleagues sift through it, selecting the very best stories from the design, UX, tech, and development worlds and posting them live on the site.

The best way to keep up with the most important stories for web professionals is to subscribe to Webdesigner News or check out the site regularly. However, in case you missed a day this week, here’s a handy compilation of the top curated stories from the last seven days. Enjoy!

22 Exciting New Tools for Designers, June 2021

7.css

Does the Hamburger Menu Make Mincemeat of UX Design?

Top 15 Tools and Resources for Designers and Agencies

Loaf Animation SVG Library

WordPress 5.8 Introduces Support for WebP Images

Star Trek + Design

11 Landing Page Design Tips You Should Follow Today

Isometrica 3D Constructor

HTML Semantic Tags Cheat Sheet

What is a Design System?

Source

The post Popular Design News of the Week: June 14 2021 – June 20, 2021 first appeared on Webdesigner Depot.


Source de l’article sur Webdesignerdepot

It’s fair to say that AMP (Accelerated Mobile Pages) is a controversial topic among web developers.

AMP is a Google-guided technology that strips down web pages to a limited sub-set of tags to serve pages faster. It was developed as a web-based rival to native news apps from vendors like Apple.

The controversy first arose when it was clear how much influence Google had over the conventions, essentially creating a tiered Web overseen by a single entity. The clamor didn’t calm when it became clear that Google prioritized AMP pages for mobile search results. Developers were left in a difficult position: stand by best practices supporting a platform-agnostic Web, or do what’s right for their clients by building the most competitive mobile site possible.

But that was 2015, six years is a lifetime for a web technology, and things are about to change.

Hidden among the announcements about the much-delayed Core Web Vitals update — it’s finally rolling out, a year after originally planned, but don’t expect to see much impact until the end of August — is the news that Google mobile search will no longer prioritize AMP pages.

Beginning immediately (from the 17th June onwards) and completing sometime before the end of August, AMP will cease to be a factor in mobile site ranking. The AMP badge on mobile search results will disappear, and AMP is not required to have your site included on Google’s news app.

This significant move is due to the fact that the Core Web Vitals update from Google will expect the same speed and usability as AMP from non-AMP pages. Google still expects the same optimized user experience; it simply isn’t offering a cheat sheet on how to achieve it.

You can continue to use AMP, but there’s no automatic benefit to doing so, and the housekeeping involved in maintaining multiple front-ends means it’s far simpler to optimize your base site. Without a solid purpose, AMP ceases to fill a need. And just like that, one of the most controversial technologies of recent years slips away.

Featured image via Unsplash.

Source

The post Poll: Is AMP Dead, and Do We Care? first appeared on Webdesigner Depot.


Source de l’article sur Webdesignerdepot

Every digital aspect comes with a security risk if not handled properly. With billions of people using online and digital technologies worldwide, there are ample opportunities for hackers to break the security wall and create unrest all around. Cybersecurity news has become too frequent these days. We see bitcoin mining, credit card credential stealing, injecting malicious code into the systems, stealing confidential data, etc. In today’s digital world, it is not just about having speed, reaching your customers quickly, easy setup, mind-blowing features, etc., but rather, it is about how safe or secure your systems, data, or features are.

What is Cybersecurity?

The approach and practice of securing electronic data, networks, computer systems, and any form of digital infrastructure from malicious attacks is known as Cybersecurity. Banks, educational institutions, tech companies, government agencies, publishing media houses, hospitals, and every sector invest in cybersecurity infrastructure to protect their customer data, secrets, and business intelligence from attackers.

Source de l’article sur DZONE

Every day design fans submit incredible industry stories to our sister-site, Webdesigner News. Our colleagues sift through it, selecting the very best stories from the design, UX, tech, and development worlds and posting them live on the site.

The best way to keep up with the most important stories for web professionals is to subscribe to Webdesigner News or check out the site regularly. However, in case you missed a day this week, here’s a handy compilation of the top curated stories from the last seven days. Enjoy!

Patttterns

What I Learned by Relearning HTML

All You Need is 5 Fonts

What Is Glassmorphism? (With Examples)

Half the Internet Went Down Today — Here’s What Happened

3 Essential Design Trends, June 2021

50 Free Cursive Handwritten Fonts to Spice Up Your Design

The 4 Biggest UI Trends Shaping Apple’s Future

Google Changes Core Web Vitals Metrics

Storytelling In Design – Top Trends For 2021

Source

The post Popular Design News of the Week: June 7 2021 – June 13, 2021 first appeared on Webdesigner Depot.


Source de l’article sur Webdesignerdepot

Configuring your wireless network is one of the essential tasks to upkeep the security of your corporate wireless network.

At least among IT professionals, it is not a big secret how important it is for the Wi-Fi networks to be safe for any business. You can do a quick search on Google or skim through the social media or news feed to read about it. You will indeed read some interesting content about how vulnerable wireless networks are to attacks and data stealing.

Source de l’article sur DZONE

Does it ever cross your mind that praise can be negative? I guess not. After all, it looks harmless and seems to be quite effective. Conventional wisdom says that if you praise people, they are motivated to do better.
People who have been praised throughout their life by their well-meaning parents, friends, and teachers for their talent and smartness or those who have experienced extreme focus on talent and smartness throughout their childhood learn to value only intelligence. No wonder when these people enter the workforce, they continue to seek approval and demand praise every step of the way.
Every opportunity is a measure of their intelligence — do I look smart, how will I be judged, what if others find my ideas dumb. With a single-minded focus on validating themselves, all their actions are rooted in establishing their worth. Every mistake hurts their reputation and every failure is a reflection of their competence. They care less about learning and more about proving themselves. Their sense of morality sometimes takes a hit as they resort to brutal behaviors — demeaning others by yelling, insulting, controlling, or taking undue credit — all in an attempt to boost their self-esteem.
Carol Dweck, professor of Psychology at Stanford University summarised this unfortunate reality from Morgan McCall’s book High Flyers:

People often like the things that work against their growth. . . . People like to use their strengths . . . to achieve quick, dramatic results, even if . . . they aren’t developing the new skills they will need later on. People like to believe they are as good as everyone says . . . and not take their weaknesses as seriously as they might. People don’t like to hear bad news or get criticism. . . . There is tremendous risk . . . in leaving what one does well to attempt to master something new.

What Do Organizations Do with Such People?

They feed and promote this mindset. They praise people for their brilliant ideas conveying the message “we value talent and smartness.” They shower people with rewards and bonuses for their achievements communicating to everyone else around “all we care about is success.”
What happens when these people take on a leadership role? Their mindset of valuing brilliance above everything else amplifies leading to disastrous results. History is full of leadership fiascos with great promises that turned out to be the biggest disasters. This article from Malcolm Gladwell in The New Yorker is as valid now as it was 18 years ago. Describing the talent mindset at Enron and the consultants at McKinsey who wandered the hallways at the company’s headquarters, he points out “They were there looking for people who had the talent to think outside the box. It never occurred to them that, if everyone had to think outside the box, maybe it was the box that needed fixing.”
He also talks about the impact of an environment that values innate talent and what happens when times get tough and that self-image is threatened “They have difficulty with the consequences. They will not take the remedial course. They will not stand up to investors and the public and admit that they were wrong. They’d sooner lie.”
Really, is praising people for their intelligence and achievements the only way to develop people who will be the leaders of tomorrow? Is there a better way out?
What if we praised people for their hard work, for their ability to persist despite failures and setbacks, for taking initiatives to build new skills, for standing up to their mistakes, for believing in their growth, and implementing the right strategies to overcome their shortcomings. What does this kind of praise tell them?
It tells them the value of effort in building abilities. It teaches them the importance of implementing the right strategies to solve problems. It encourages them to seek help to make progress on their task. It creates a passion for learning that’s not driven by the need to look smart, but with a desire to cultivate skills, to stretch themselves to grow.
When these people take on leadership positions, this mindset guides them to put the well-being of the company and its people before their own needs, to place value on teamwork over individual accomplishment, and to foster growth and development of their people.

As growth-minded leaders, they start with a belief in human potential and development — both their own and other people’s. Instead of using the company as a vehicle for their greatness, they use it as an engine of growth — for themselves, the employees, and the company as a whole.
– Carol Dweck

Unlike leaders who pull their companies down with their focus on brilliance, these leaders lead their companies into greatness and gratitude filled in their own hearts and those of the people around them.
Choose your praise carefully as you will see the tremendous benefits in praising for growth over brilliance.

When Leaders Focus on Brilliance

They live in a world of personal greatness and entitlement, vie for labels, and will do anything to boost their image. Instead of building a long-lasting company, they spend time and money on enhancing their image.
With the constant need for validation, they use people in the company to feed their egos and showcase their superiority. Everything is about pleasing the boss. They surround themselves with people who boost their self-esteem. Agreement earns them admiration and disagreement is an attack on their intelligence. Instead of hearing people out, they punish dissent and shut people down.
They pounce at the less talented for their lack of intelligence and find those who are more talented than they are as threatening. They mistreat employees, yell, insult, control and abuse them into their way of doing things. They feel better about themselves by making other people feel worse. Employees worry about being judged all the time. When people are ridiculed for mistakes, they soon learn to keep their heads down, stop putting their critical thinking skills to use, and give in to groupthink.
Their belief in their superiority blinds them to see reality. They turn a blind eye to complaints, ignore warning signs, and fire people who tell them what they don’t want to hear. Their decision-making criteria are based on what would make them look good as opposed to what’s good for the company long term.

What happens when a leader refuses to confront the brutal facts? “The minute a leader allows himself to become the primary reality people worry about, rather than reality being the primary reality, you have a recipe for mediocrity, or worse. This is one of the key reasons why less charismatic leaders often produce better long-term results than their more charismatic counterparts.
– Jim Collins

Since success and failure are a part of their identity — success means they are smart and failure means they are not — they find excuses and blame others for failures instead of taking personal responsibility. Instead of investing in the future growth of their company, they play safe with fear of failure, become less responsive to challenges from competition, go with what’s tried and tested, and refuse to take risks. Why take up the challenge that can hurt their reputation? On the other extreme, they may not shy away from crossing ethical boundaries to beat the competition at all costs. Success is what they are after and it doesn’t matter how they get it.
With more focus on talent and less on potential, they do not invest in mentoring and coaching employees. Instead of putting practices in place to develop employees and help them collaborate together, they make them compete against each other.
Carol Dweck sums up their brilliant mindset “My genius not only defines and validates me. It defines and validates the company. It is what creates value. My genius is profit. Wow!”

When Leaders Focus on Growth

They operate with a learning mode. They don’t claim to be genius but promise to invest in development, their own development, and the development of their people. The drive and enthusiasm to grow their companies make them adopt long-term strategies over short-term tactics. They aren’t in the game to boost their ego or establish their self-esteem. It’s the pure joy of shaping the future of their company that excites and motivates them. More than prestige, they are in it for the challenge.
They understand that the path to success goes through failure. Why lose the opportunity that can drive their future growth? So instead of hiding behind their failures, they face them head-on. Failures don’t define their competence, they are glaring moments of self-reflection. They are opportunities to build skills, explore possibilities, experiment, and invest in the promise of a better future.
They lead with vulnerability. They accept mistakes to shift the focus in the organization from hiding mistakes to finding solutions. When they don’t know something, instead of pretending to hide their ignorance, they say “I don’t know”. These three powerful words show humility and self-confidence. To make decisions, they invite others to share their opinion which promotes the culture of constructive criticism. Since they do not connect their identity to their opinion, more value is placed on seeking the right answers which require open disagreements and championing flexibility of opinion over their sense of righteousness.
Difficult situations make them uncomfortable, no doubt. Instead of letting their discomfort get in the way of meaningful conversations, they embrace it. They choose to look past their discomfort in the value that these discussions provide — saving a lot of time that can be wasted due to stress and anxiety that comes from misalignment of expectations and lack of clarity of purpose.
They are tough but compassionate. They do not shy away from giving critical feedback while also challenging the people in their organization to step outside their comfort zone. They empower people to make decisions with the right channels of feedback to assist in better decision-making in the organization.
Leaders with the growth mindset operate with what Lou Gerstner, who turned IBM’s fortunes around by saving it from near bankruptcy said “Hierarchy means very little to me. Let’s put together in meetings the people who can help solve a problem, regardless of position.” Not blinded by reality, they focus on finding solutions that will push their company forward. This requires keeping an open eye to change in market trends, identifying and investing in future growth areas, and taking calculated risks.
With a focus on potential and growth, they invest in identifying and building future skills of the organization — skills that will be useful during difficult circumstances giving them an advantage over the competition. They foster productivity through coaching and mentoring, place value on teamwork by encouraging collaboration and defining shared measures of success.
Warren Bennis, a scholar, author, and widely regarded as a pioneer of the contemporary field of Leadership studies, writes in Organizing Genius:

Leaders are people who believe so passionately that they can seduce other people into sharing their dream.

His most admirable view on leadership says:

Good leaders make people feel that they’re at the very heart of things, not at the periphery. Everyone feels that he or she makes a difference to the success of the organisation. When that happens people feel centred and that gives their work meaning.

What kind of leaders think like this — those focused on brilliance or the ones driven by growth?
Previously published here.

Source de l’article sur DZONE