| Sunday | Monday | Tuesday | Wednesday | Thursday | Friday | Saturday |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
01 |
02 |
03 |
||||
|
04 |
05 |
06 |
07 |
08 |
09 |
10 |
|
11 |
12 |
13 |
14 |
15 |
16 |
17 |
|
18 |
19 |
20 |
21 |
22 |
23 |
24 |
|
25 |
26 |
27 |
28 |
29 |
30 |
31 |
Thu 29 Dec
2005
A detailed critique of the general user experience of newspapers online. I won’t argue that online news design is perfect, but I don’t find myself agreeing with these particular critiques. Via Chris Johansen.
This is going to be a hard post to write, so I’m going to keep it as short as I can, but forgive me if I run long. After pouring so much of my blood, sweat and tears into Behavior, I’ve decided that the time has come for me to leave this terrific company that, with a little bit of cash and a lot of ambition, my partners and I co-founded in the dark days of late fall, 2001. My last day at Behavior will come just a little more than four years after we legally opened doors — as of 31 December I’ll no longer be a member of Behavior LLC.
This decision is no cause for alarm; my departure is on completely amicable terms, and my partners at the company have been kind and gracious enough to wish me luck in my future endeavors. By the same token, I wish them great continued success too, and I’m absolutely confident that there’s lots and lots of great design work still to come from Behavior. I guarantee it.
Uses Google Maps to plot a commuting route — the most practical combination of subway, bus and walking directions — from any two, user-selected, Metro-area destinations. Pretty brilliant.
Wed 28 Dec
2005
Slide show details the process of creating a replica of the Knight Industries Two Thousand from “Knight Rider.” From Louisell Enterprises, a custom body shop specializing in K.I.T.T. replicas.
I don’t know how that Bloc Party disc made it onto the list, but it’s still worth a read.
Tue 27 Dec
2005
Sat 24 Dec
2005
Fri 23 Dec
2005
I wish I had gotten my ass out of bed to get this great photo on the Brooklyn Bridge.
Thu 22 Dec
2005
With any luck, this post will remain relevant for just about three weeks, when, hopefully, it will be made obsolete by a concrete announcement at Macworld Expo of OmniWeb 6.0’s imminent release. As a loyal user of that Quixotic Web browser, I’ve been waiting seemingly forever for a long-promised upgrade that will move OmniWeb away from its clever but problematic customization of Apple’s WebCore foundation and over to the more stable, more easily built-upon WebKit framework available in Mac OS X. I’m crossing my fingers that this will put an end to the memory leaks, imperfect page renderings and random crashes from which OmniWeb suffers (though to be fair, the OmniGroup does an admirable and timely job of continually hunting down and sorting out bugs) — even for all of those problems, it’s still my favorite Web browser.
Upcoming game from Ambrosia Software looks like a high school kid’s notebook come to life. Genius.
This brilliant artist, famous for his ‘clear line’ style, has a gorgeous illustration in this week’s New Yorker for Yoko Ogawa’s fiction piece, “Preganancy Diary.”
Wed 21 Dec
2005
“AIGA has changed its official name from ‘American Institute of Graphic Arts’ to ‘AIGA, the professional association for design.’”
For a year-end round-up on the state of Web design that ran last week over at Publish.com, I provided, among other quotes, this little bit of crankyism: “There’s so little illustration, photography and adventurous typography going on [in Web design], that I genuinely worry that we’ll never match the heights of graphic design achieved in the last century.”
Now, I know that there are lots of terrific designers out there doing genuinely daring work today; I grant that freely. But it’s reasonable to say that the vast majority of that work can be tagged with the familiar descriptors ‘personal’ and ‘experimental.’ There’s absolutely nothing wrong with design created for those ends; I applaud and admire those who are making genuine efforts to push the medium forward with excursions into the non-commercial, because they’re doing important advance work upon which the rest of us will eventually feed.
However, with respect to what I was talking about — the commercial application of our craft — there remains, to my mind, a somewhat conspicuous gap in its practice: almost without exception, the Web is a medium in which all of us design and almost none of us art direct. I think of the former as a mode of work that’s closely wedded to execution, whether that means pushing pixels in Photoshop, bringing ideas to life in code or even ‘directing’ teams of designers in the development of a design solution.
Tue 20 Dec
2005
New utility from Thomas Knoll allows Photoshop users to recover an extra four to sixteen pixels usually obscured from the edge of a RAW image file.
Without getting into whether I side with New York City’s Metropolitan Transit Authority or Local 100 of the Transport Workers Union in the labor strike that has put a halt to most commuting in New York City this morning, and at the risk of sounding too easily dismissive of the genuine hardship that this situation has dropped in the laps of average New Yorkers as well as the striking workers (who are, after all, average New Yorkers themselves), let me say there is a silver lining in this cloud: Manhattan, today, is less like its usual convergence of angry rivers of traffic, and more like a peaceful countryside of gentle streams of cars. It’s nice. And, to top it off, there are cones lining the major avenues running north and south along the length of the island — believe it or not, these are bike lanes, intended to let human beings get to and from without the aid of automakers or oil companies. I’ve always wanted to see cars sharing the city’s major thoroughfares with bicycle traffic.
We’ll see if the introduction of graphical advertising to Google will start to devalue text ads.
Mon 19 Dec
2005
Lame write-up of a great men’s clothing store, linked to in lieu of the store having much of its own Web site.
Sat 17 Dec
2005
Online companion to an exhibition at the Library of Congress honoring the venerable Washington Post political cartoonist.
The actor, best known for his portrayal of Leo McGarry on “The West Wing” died on Friday in Los Angeles after suffering a heart attack. He’ll be missed.
Fri 16 Dec
2005
Thoughtful and surprisingly open-minded review of the new Pixar exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art.
Thu 15 Dec
2005
Wed 14 Dec
2005
“You can enter information in [a structured blog] form and it’ll get published on your blog like a normal entry, but it will also be published in a machine-readable format so that other services can read and understand it.” Horsefeathers.
Tue 13 Dec
2005
A hiring guide excerpted from the July 1943 issue of Transportation Magazine. Really amazing.
“A unified resource space for anyone interested in the visualization of complex networks.” In other words, a gallery of complex network diagrams, many of them gorgeous.
Mon 12 Dec
2005
There’s nothing revelatory in this post, and certainly nothing you won’t be seeing a lot more of at Nick Denton’s latest Web site, Consumerist, but sometimes one just has to vent: few things have consistently angered me more in life than the enterprise-level flavor of plausible deniability suffusing larger companies’ customer service operations.
I’m talking about the infuriating phenomenon of encountering a bewildering and apparently ridiculous oversight or mistake in a company’s services or offerings, and being told by a customer service representative that it’s a matter to be dealt with by another department entirely, that the person to whom you’re talking accepts no responsibility for the gap in spite of the fact that it’s all the same company, and that you need to go talk to that other department. Oftentimes, the representative won’t even do you the courtesy of transferring your call!
Sat 10 Dec
2005
Fri 09 Dec
2005
Adding a little bit of PHP programming in order to centralize various CSS attributes for easy editing.
Wed 07 Dec
2005
A great primer on using cast iron cookware. We’ve been using iron skillets at my house for the past three years and they’re awesome. I’m really not the kind of guy to get excited about cooking paraphernalia, either.
Just a word to say that I’m back from my trip to Viet Nam. Technically, I’ve been back since about 11:30p on Sunday evening, when my plane touched down at the end of 22-plus hours of transit. But I’ve been dealing with the inevitable jet lag, as well, which accounts for why I’m writing this post at 6:30a (and I’ve been awake for two hours already!); in case I hadn’t mentioned it before, Viet Nam is exactly twelve hours ahead of New York, so you can imagine my body clock is completely off. Somewhere between the haze of insomnia, walking catatonia and catching up with work, I also managed to corral all my trip photos together into a Flickr photoset, and this morning I went through them all and added titles and captions, so if you’ve browsed through them already, it might be worth another look for more back story. More posts as soon as I’m all caught up on sleep…
“…Daily blog designed to run the length of the Oscar season. The gesture is one of a bulletin board about Oscar coverage and will not be in the handicapping business…”
Mon 05 Dec
2005
Sat 03 Dec
2005
Two years ago, broadband internet came to Viet Nam in a big way thanks to the country’s Ministry of Post and Telematics, which brought ADSL to most urban areas throughout the country. Today you’ll find dozens of small, ramshackle shops marked with signs that say “ADSL,” “Game Online,” or simply “Internet.” It’s hard to miss them because they’re everywhere.
The proliferation of this industry is fueled mostly by Vietnamese kids nursing increasingly pronounced addictions to online gaming. The most popular MMORPGs, like “Swordsman,” are ported from other culturally complementary sources (read: Chinese game publishers) by local upstarts like VinaGame. At just about US$0.19 for an hour of playing time, the result is an apparently ferocious gaming market that wasn’t in evidence just four years ago.
You can use the machines for anything you like, of course, and so it’s not uncommon to spot disproportionately tall and/or well-dressed Westerners surfing next to thin, gangly Vietnamese kids; the former playing at business, the latter at swordplay. Such sights are as close to an advertisement for technologically-enabled cross-cultural bridges as you’ll see this side of an IBM commercial.