About the Podcast
These are all the episodes related to Travel and local
in the Responsive Web Design Podcast.
(If you’d like, you can peruse the entire podcast archive.)
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The IESO works within Ontario’s electrical sector. Nicole Hynum and Darrell Corriveau tell us about their mobile-first, content-centric process.
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Fans of modular web design will love hearing Andy Lechlak and Greg Jenkins describe an approach that enables librarians at the Toledo Public Library to build new pages from components.
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Visitors to the website for Habita, a Turkish coworking space, may arrive on any device. Daniel Swakman and Levent Ocal explain how their collaborative process made it happen.
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Prepare be amazed and delighted by this beautiful, functional website aimed at spurring economic development in Ohio. Cindy DeVelvis and Emily Gray explain how they developed Ohio Certified Sites.
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Even though the Cincinnati Art Museum might later want to introduce apps for in-gallery use, the first order of business was a responsive website. Nicole Kroger and Jeff Webster tell us why.
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Yet another travel brand tells us that responsive design is the right way to go. Frank de Boer and Jan Willem Kluivers describe how they sped up development and improved customer satisfaction at KLM.
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Jeremy Taylor and Joyce Leung tell us that by creating a prototype and focusing on performance, they were able to redesign Realtor.com to work better for customers and their team.
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Mobile users and desktop users do not need different information—even on a transit site. Maureen Sheehan and Paul Bellows show how they meet the needs of all their users at BC Transit.
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Who visits the Royal Albert Hall on their phone? Louise Halliday and Jake Grimley report that designing mobile-first means a website that works better for everyone.
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Responsive and adaptive solutions can work together. Tom Stovicek from OpenTable explains why they went responsive but also maintain an m-dot site for some device-specific scenarios.
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Airbnb has robust native apps and a majority of web traffic from desktop—and they still went responsive. Dave Augustine tells us a front end framework made it easy for them.
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In part two of our conversation with Expedia, Travis Fleck and Tyler Fleck go into the details of what they learned rolling out and testing a responsive framework across the enterprise.
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Travel users are mobile, right? Expedia has experimented with native apps and separate mobile websites. Scott Kelton Jones and Jason Chandler explain why responsive design performs better.
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To reduce management costs and maintain a more consistent presence across platforms, Tina Alexander rolled out a responsive web redesign for Celebrity Cruises that works together with their app strategy to take advantage of a 3× increase in traffic from mobile devices.
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Virgin America recently launched an elegant, streamlined new website. Their CIO Dean Cookson and agency partner Joe Stewart from Work and Co. tell us that co-located teams with constant communication, a focus on prototyping, and obsession with user goals is what helped them pare down the experience.
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What if it wasn’t enough just to launch a responsive redesign? What if you wanted everyone on your digital team to learn and embrace a new iterative prototyping process? Livia Labate of Marriott did just that for a large, global website.