Month: December 2011

If anything, we all agree that Tandoori House's homestyle Indian food is second to nan.

Each Thursday the Radii team goes out for lunch, and anytime we’re in the mood for cozy Indian food, we head over to Tandoori House at Yonge and Sheppard. The warm aromas that fill the interior of the restaurant are always a nice reprieve from the outside chill, and the staff is consistently friendly, attentive, and accommodating. Of course, the main reason we continue to return to Tandoori House is for the food—the lunch buffet is reputed for high quality and plentiful traditional Indian fare.

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Our very own Alex Ng, a long-time web developer and general tech guru, recently completed a 116-story high walk around the CN Tower in downtown Toronto—and he wasn’t even fazed. The CN Tower’s EdgeWalk is in a class of its own, recently having been awarded a Guinness World Record for the highest external walk with no railing on a building in the world. Although he admits it was a fun experience, he adds with a chuckle that it wasn’t his idea either.

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...or how I learned to stop worrying and love Fireworks.

Photoshop has been my go-to tool for many years now. Like a trusty sidekick it was reliable and always helped me get the job done. It was the Robin to my Batman, the Hobbes to my Calvin. But there was always another other program lingering off in distance, a mysterious one I had minimal first-hand experience with; little did I know that it would soon forever change my workflow.

Don’t get me wrong, Photoshop is a great tool, but when it comes to building and managing web comps, Photoshop is just the wrong choice. It’s akin to using a spoon to cut a steak--it’s simply the wrong tool for the job, and although it may work eventually, the experience leaves much to be desired. Below are my top 10 reasons why I’ve decided to use Fireworks over Photoshop as my primary web comp tool.

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