May 2007 60 posts

Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday

01

To Wrap It Up, I’ll Take ItHi, I’m a Marvel…and I’m a DCRod McFarland’s Wordpress ThemesA Rare Unassisted Triple Play

02

Human Computer Interaction in Science Fiction Movies

03

New Apple Patent ApplicationsSubmediaLuke Wroblewski: Beyond the BrowserWonkette: Time Magazine Cover as Designed by Kindergarteners

04

Tomorrow, Sat 5 May, Is Free Comic Book Day

05

06

07

DUX ’07: Conference on Designing for User ExperienceFutility Infielder: Rocket Slide

08

Pages Are the ProblemNYT: Wired But Not Web 2.0

09

NYT: Kool-Aid Dill PicklesNumber of Web Surfers Using Macs Doubles Over Past Eight MonthsW3C: Frequently Asked Questions about the Semantic Web

10

Wal-Mart Have Effectively Declared HD-DVD the Winner over Blu-ray

11

NY Post: Off-Leash Hours in New York City Parks Now Legal

12

“Exit Wounds,” by Rutu Modan

13

The Failures Behind SuccessSpeech ’n’ CheechColor Matching Your Photos to the Paintings of Old Masters

14

Mark Robinson’s Top 11 Commencement SpeechesAIGA New York Stuff I’m Involved WithNew Yorker: What Else Is New?Plaid-striped HTML Tables

15

Thinking and DrivingDesignByGrid.comBBC News: Jakob Nielsen Says Web 2.0 Neglects Good DesignNew York Design Week 200y: 19 May through 22 MayThe Nomad

16

National Geographic “Singles Map”Helvetica Hero ShotThe Greatest Long Tracking Shots in CinemaPrint Magazine: Rick Poynor on Design BlogsNYT: President Intervened in Dispute Over Eavesdropping

17

Denis Darzacq: La ChuteSteven Spielberg and Peter Jackson for “Tintin” Movie

18

Are Design Blogs Killing Design Writing?

19

20

NYT: Le Cinéma du Blockbuster

21

Drawing for Memoryd.Construct 2007: 07 Sep 2007, Brighton, UK

22

Alex Reisner on BaseballCelluloid Skyline: New York and the MoviesConan O’Brien Visits Intel

23

4th Annual Smithsonian Magazine Photo ContestAdrian Holovaty Leaves Washington PostNYT: Behind This Office Door, the Napping ChairNYT: As Comrades Search, Fatal Bomb Wreaks Havoc

24

Design Observer: Why a Book?Comparative Test of Public SymbolsL.A. Times: Not Everybody’s a Critic

25

The New Yorker: Feature Presentation

26

27

28

29

You Got to Move It, Move It… to BrooklynWiimbledon.netGet Fresh Tonight

30

Walt Mossberg Interviews Steve JobsMagnum Photos 6th AnniversaryNYT: Truth, Fiction and Lou Dobbs

31

Wed 30 May
2007

Walt Mossberg Interviews Steve Jobs

Stars

Stay tuned for Jobs⁏ crack at the very end. It’s cheeky.

Magnum Photos 6th Anniversary

Stars

 

NYT: Truth, Fiction and Lou Dobbs

Stars

David Leonhardt writes: “The problem with Mr. Dobbs is that he mixes opinion and untruths. He is the heir to the nativist tradition that has long used fiction and conspiracy theories as a weapon against the Irish, the Italians, the Chinese, the Jews and, now, the Mexicans.”

Tue 29 May
2007

You Got to Move It, Move It… to Brooklyn

7:12 PM
Remarks (27)

If you live in Manhattan and you work in media, new or old, then chances are decent that at some point you’ll move across the East River and take up a nicer, more spacious residence in Brooklyn. The environs are cleaner, the life less hectic, the population friendlier and the real estate generally more affordable. I’ve watched lots of my friends do that over the years. More power to them, I thought. But at the same time I quietly told myself that I liked it so much in Manhattan’s East Village that I’d never be one of those folks. Not me.

Except, sooner or later if you live in the East Village, chances are decent that you’ll get tired of the East Village, too. After eight-plus years, I’ve grown intensely weary of that neighborhood’s overripe scenester vibe, its unkempt landscape, and mostly its Friday and Saturday night massacres: crowded sidewalks full of drunken fraternity boys, desperate sorority girls and tragic hipsters, raucously enjoying their youth — as is their right, I admit — late into the night. Pesky kids!

Wiimbledon.net

Stars

“Wiimbledon is Brooklyn’s first — nay, the world’s first! — Wii tennis tournament.”

Get Fresh Tonight

2:57 PM

Folks, just a reminder: Fresh Dialogue 23 is tonight at the Haft Auditorium at F.I.T.. As I mentioned a few weeks ago, this year’s theme is “Designing Audiences,” which will examine how designers and design consumers are both getting all up in each other’s faces and what not.

We’re going to be showcasing some great talent that you’ll be hearing lots about in the coming years0 designer and illustrator Stefan Bucher, Eric Rodenback of Stamen Design and game designer Katie Salen. And, of course, the event will be moderated by the amazing Ze Frank who, if you haven’t seen him in person before, is worth the price of admission alone. There are a few seats left available (Haft Auditorium is relatively huge) so you can show up at the door tonight at 6:30p. Don’t miss it, just don’t!

Fri 25 May
2007

The New Yorker: Feature Presentation

Stars

James Surowiecki’s excellent, taut summary of “feature creep” in product development. Obvious to interaction designers, but invaluable when discussed in mainstream publications like this. “In part, feature creep is the product of the so-called internal-audience problem: the people who design and sell products are not the ones who buy and use them, and what engineers and marketers think is important is not necessarily what’s best for consumers.”

Thu 24 May
2007

Design Observer: Why a Book?

Stars

Michael Bierut on his first book, “Seventy-nine Short Essays on Design”: “I’ve found that writing is a way to slow things down again, to question my own premises, to force myself to pay attention to things I might otherwise file away after the quick glance.”

Comparative Test of Public Symbols

Stars

“This is an online survey to research the existing public symbols and pictogram standards.” See the results here.

L.A. Times: Not Everybody’s a Critic

Stars

Time Magazine film critic Richard Schickel argues in this editorial that “Criticism — and its humble cousin, reviewing — is not a democratic activity. It is, or should be, an elite enterprise, ideally undertaken by individuals who bring something to the party beyond their hasty, instinctive opinions of a book (or any other cultural object). It is work that requires disciplined taste, historical and theoretical knowledge and a fairly deep sense of the author’s (or filmmaker’s or painter’s) entire body of work, among other qualities.”

Wed 23 May
2007

4th Annual Smithsonian Magazine Photo Contest

Stars

 

Adrian Holovaty Leaves Washington Post

Stars

“I’ll be founding a Web startup, EveryBlock, that focuses on making local news and information useful.” Thanks David for the tip.

NYT: Behind This Office Door, the Napping Chair

Stars

Article from March about the benefits of and taboo on napping during the workday. I wish we had siestas in the States.

NYT: As Comrades Search, Fatal Bomb Wreaks Havoc

Stars

Damien Cave’s harrowing account of an Army unit’ fatal run-in with a road bomb in Mahmudiya, Iraq.

Tue 22 May
2007

Alex Reisner on Baseball

Stars

An information design lens on the sport.

Celluloid Skyline: New York and the Movies

Stars

Companion site to the book by James Sanders.

Conan O’Brien Visits Intel

Stars

 

Mon 21 May
2007

Drawing for Memory

11:44 PM
Remarks (32)

One of my most annoying shortcomings is that I have a terrible head for names. The moment someone is introduced to me, I’ll say something to the effect of “Very happy to meet you,” and then focus almost immediately on some detail of his or her physical appearance — a hairdo, or a singular quality of the face, or some interesting wardrobe minutiae. Almost always, this leads me to distraction, such that the person’s name never fully registers; in fact, it usually disappears from my memory immediately, like a swipe of rubbing alcohol evaporating tracelessly on the skin.

This is bad. It’s a horrible practice, especially for someone, like me, who works in a large company, where I’m meeting new co-workers all the time, as many as three or four a week. The problem is compounded by the fact that I might meet a colleague for the first time today and not see that person again for weeks or even months… Usually not until some inopportune moment, when it becomes achingly inconvenient to be so forgetful. Like waiting for an elevator together, or finding myself face-to-face with that person in a small meeting; times when not addressing a person by first name is conspicuous and awkward. As often as not, the victim of my interpersonal amnesia demonstrates that, unlike me, he or she has courtesy, grace and mental stamina enough to remember my name. Makes me feel like an ass.

d.Construct 2007: 07 Sep 2007, Brighton, UK

Stars

“d.Construct is an affordable, one-day conference aimed at those designing and building the latest generation of web-based applications.” A production of Clearleft, with some great speakers planned.

Sun 20 May
2007

NYT: Le Cinéma du Blockbuster

Stars

Luc Besson and the success of recent French cinema.

Fri 18 May
2007

Are Design Blogs Killing Design Writing?

2:24 PM
Remarks (10)

Though I posted it to this site’s Elsewhere section, I want to take a moment to point out Rick Poynor’s recent article for Print Magazine, “Easy Writer.” Since its publication, this piece has stirred up a little bit of controversy because it can be fairly easily read as an indictment of design blogs and their allegedly low standards for serious writing and criticism about the practice and art of design. Right or wrong, it’s an important essay that bears a closer look. At the same time, it’s worthwhile to take at least a passing glance at the response to Poynor’s article by D. Mark Kingsley at the design blog Speak Up, too.

Thu 17 May
2007

Denis Darzacq: La Chute

Stars

Slick photographs of street dancers caught in mid-air.

Steven Spielberg and Peter Jackson for “Tintin” Movie

Stars

“While the duo want their films to have the reality of live-action, they felt it would not ‘honor the distinctive look of the characters and world that Hergé created,’ which led to their decision to use digital 3D performance capture technology.”

Wed 16 May
2007

National Geographic “Singles Map”

Stars

Visual representation of parts of the country where there are more men or women.

Helvetica Hero Shot

10:15 PM
Remarks (15)

Generally I’m not too keen on showing off photographs of myself. But back in March, while we were both at South by Southwest, Naz Hamid took a picture of me that I really like. It combines a few of my favorite memes: super-heroes, Helvetica and, well, me. And it has just enough kitsch value to present some modest appeal to readers here, I think, so I’m posting it.

The Greatest Long Tracking Shots in Cinema

Stars

 

Print Magazine: Rick Poynor on Design Blogs

Stars

“The biggest single problem with blogs as a medium for writing is the very thing that bloggers tend to love them for: the lack of editors… In the meantime, for range of commentary, depth of research, and quality of thought, printed publications are still the best source.”

NYT: President Intervened in Dispute Over Eavesdropping

Stars

David Johnston’s gripping account of the dispute and palace intrigue between the White House and Justice Department over the National Security Agency’s domestic eavesdropping program.

Tue 15 May
2007

Thinking and Driving

10:12 PM
Remarks (9)

Living in New York, I can easily get by with rarely ever driving a car. Which, when I think about it, really accounts for the fact that I’m not dead.

That’s because I’m afflicted with a particular kind malady that a friend and colleague of mine calls “transportation narcolepsy.” That’s a condition in which, whenever I board a plane, train or automobile, I’ll fall asleep, almost instantly — or at least struggle to stay awake.

It’s the steady, vibrating motion of most mechanized transportation — the hum of a car on the road, the regular propulsion of a train on tracks, the muted rumbling of jet engines on a plane — that knocks me out. I’m surprisingly baby-like; rock me back and forth a little and I’ll pass right out. (It’s compounded by the fact that I rarely get enough sleep to begin with.)

This past weekend, though, I rented a car during my visit to California and discovered that having a G.P.S. unit on my dashboard is a surprisingly effective way to keep me awake. I also discovered a little something about what it takes to hold my attention.

DesignByGrid.com

Stars

 

BBC News: Jakob Nielsen Says Web 2.0 Neglects Good Design

Stars

 

New York Design Week 200y: 19 May through 22 May

Stars

More industrial than graphic design, but it should be fun nevertheless.

The Nomad

Stars

A modern yurt. Thanks to Alissa.

Mon 14 May
2007

Mark Robinson’s Top 11 Commencement Speeches

Stars

The fact that mine is number two has nothing to do with why it’s posted here. Really.

AIGA New York Stuff I’m Involved With

10:10 PM
Remarks (2)

AIGAWe hit a little bit of bad luck over at AIGA New York during the weekend, when tomorrow’s Small Talks speaker, the one and only Jason Fried came down sick and had to cancel. So for those of you who have tickets to this sold out event, please don’t show up tomorrow (an official email went out to all chapter members and ticket holders this afternoon) as Jason’s appearance has been postponed. We don’t yet have a make-up date, but we’re hoping to schedule it for sometime in the next few weeks — hopefully pretty soon, actually.

Meanwhile, here are some more AIGA New York goodies to tide you over.

New Yorker: What Else Is New?

Stars

Steven Shapin’s review of “The Shock of the Old: Technology and Global History Since 1990” by David Edgerton is also a fascinating essay on the difference between innovation and use in technology. Highly recommended.

Plaid-striped HTML Tables

Stars

 

Sun 13 May
2007

The Failures Behind Success

9:35 PM
Remarks (17)

Otis School of Art and DesignAs promised in my previous post, here is the text of the commencement address I delivered to the 2007 graduating class at my alma mater, Otis School of Art and Design.

It is, as I explained, intended to be an inspirational address rather than the sort of tactical overview I’ve been giving at my presentations thus far in my career. So at times it can be a tad maudlin, but at the very least it’s an honest communication of one of the more valuable lessons I’ve learned in my career: don’t be afraid of failure, because every success is just the result of a series of failures. You might want to have a box of tissues at the ready.

Speech ’n’ Cheech

9:18 PM
Remarks (2)

This weekend I flew to Southern California for a very quick Mother’s Day visit to my mom in the O.C.. While I was here, I took up a somewhat astonishing offer from my alma mater, Otis School of Art and Design in Los Angeles, to give the commencement address at this year’s graduation ceremony.

I was so flattered that I had been asked to do this at all that chances were good that I would have said yes in spite of what they told me next: that they would be giving an honorary Doctorate in Fine Arts to Cheech Marin at the same ceremony. Meaning I’d be sharing a stage with Cheech Marin. THE Cheech Marin. As soon as I heard this, my response was, “Done. I’ll be there.”

Color Matching Your Photos to the Paintings of Old Masters

Stars

Gimmicky but worth a look.

Sat 12 May
2007

“Exit Wounds,” by Rutu Modan

Stars

Debut graphic novel from the Israeli artist, who is currently blogging for TimesSelect.

Fri 11 May
2007

NY Post: Off-Leash Hours in New York City Parks Now Legal

Stars

‘Hooray!’ says Mister President. One missing detail: this policy is only in effect in “designated parks,” which unfortunately and inexplicably does not include East River Park, near my apartment. Boo.

Tue 08 May
2007

Pages Are the Problem

6:01 PM
Remarks (27)

The names we give things can be so important because they can cause so much havoc. The fact that we call the basic organizing unit of a Web site a “page,” as in “Web pages,” has made the lives of Web designers immeasurably more challenging, and it’s a disservice to those coming to the Web from the world of print, too.

I’m not going to propose an alternative to the term page here — I may as well tape a “kick me” sign on my back if I’m going to venture in that kind of folly. I just thought it would be useful for me to articulate the confusion that I’ve seen that’s arisen from this particular terminology.

NYT: Wired But Not Web 2.0

Stars

“Although most U.S. adults have a cell phone, a computer and Internet access, a study says only a small percentage are participating in Web 2.0 activities.”

Mon 07 May
2007

DUX ’07: Conference on Designing for User Experience

Stars

“A forum to present your case studies and sketches about your insights in designing user experiences, with a focus on the methodologies used and the effectiveness of final results.” Now accepting submissions.

Futility Infielder: Rocket Slide

Stars

As is his wont, Jay Jaffe does a great job summing up the news that Roger Clemens is returning to the Yankees: “Counting on him to dominate as he did even for stretches during this millennium is probably a pipe dream given the contrast to his cushy Houston environs.” I’m not particularly optimistic.

Thu 03 May
2007

New Apple Patent Applications

Stars

It’s always interesting to see how companies attempt to patent user interfaces.

Submedia

Stars

Gallery of flipbook-style subway tunnel advertising. Via Capn Design.

Luke Wroblewski: Beyond the Browser

Stars

Notes from a session at the MIX07 conference on Microsoft’s Reader technology, the most prominent example of which may be our own Times Reader.

Wonkette: Time Magazine Cover as Designed by Kindergarteners

Stars

I thought they redesigned this magazine to make it look better?

Wed 02 May
2007

Human Computer Interaction in Science Fiction Movies

Stars

“A survey of different kinds of interaction designs in movies during the past decades and relates the techniques of the films to existing technologies and prototypes.”

Tue 01 May
2007

To Wrap It Up, I’ll Take It

10:31 PM
Remarks (30)

Here’s one of my favorite design innovations ever: there is a subtle, dotted grid pattern printed on the backside of Hallmark gift wrap that serves as a guide as customers cut away the necessary amount to wrap presents. This allows you to shear away an amount of paper that’s much closer to what you actually need to wrap a gift, and to easily do so at more or less right (i.e., ninety degree) angles — in both cases, you save paper, which is good for you, the environment and Al Gore. Everyone wins.

Hi, I’m a Marvel…and I’m a DC

Stars

Parody of the Mac/PC ads.

Rod McFarland’s Wordpress Themes

Stars

Unusual, for sure.

A Rare Unassisted Triple Play

Stars

Colorado Rockies shortstop Troy Tulowitzki pulled off an extremely uncommon feat on Sunday: “In the top of the seventh inning of a tied game, with runners on first and second, nobody out, and the count full, [Atlanta Braves batter] Chipper Jones hit a line drive at Tulowitzki, who snared the ball in flight, stepped on second to double up Kelly Johnson, and tagged Edgar Renteria between first and second for an unassisted triple play.” Only the thirteenth of its kind in Major League history.