April 2011 19 posts

Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday

01

02

03

04

Steven Reker’s People Get Ready

05

The Silver Computer Screen

06

Guessing at Numbers for The Daily

07

08

The Village Voice: Comics Issue

09

10

11

12

13

What If Movie Theaters Worked Like NetflixCommented Out

14

Mark Styling’s Aviation Illustrations

15

The Illustrious Omnibus of Superpowers

16

17

Back of a Web Page

18

Blackwood

19

Will Wright on the Gambrian Explosion

20

21

The 50 Things Every Graphic Design Student Should Know

22

Condé Nast Slows Rollout Pace of Its iPad Magazines

23

24

25

26

Canal St. Cross-Section

27

Paper TossHypercities

28

Abandoned Yugoslavian LandmarksMy Column on Columns

29

An Address Book for Twitter

30

Fri 29 Apr
2011

An Address Book for Twitter

10:38 AM
Remarks (7)

Yesterday I tweeted that “Twitter needs an address book. Finding users is harder than it should be.” It was a sort of a throwaway tweet, one that I didn’t expect to think about a second time after it was out there, but I was surprised to find that it was re-tweeted at least a few dozen times throughout the day.

We could actually all spend an afternoon making a list of the many things that Twitter needs, but if the service added every single one of them, the end result would be its ruination, I’m sure. Still it really does feel to me that a more robust address book is a serious omission, and now I realize I’m not alone in thinking that. People really want some kind of address book on Twitter.

Some people took my tweet to mean that I wanted some central way of browsing for people that I don’t already follow, but in actuality what I mean is that I want to be able to sort through my current contacts with greater flexibility than is currently possible. Twitter’s current method sorts people I follow in reverse chronological order based on the date that I started following them. That’s moderately useful, but it would be even more useful to me if I could sort that list alphabetically. Or, even better, if this hypothetical address book could translate Twitter handles into real names too, which I’m often (though not always) more apt to remember than the obscure monikers that people often have to adopt when they join the service. I’d also like to see only the people I’ve corresponded with — via both mentions and direct messages — and sort those names by frequency and recency of correspondence, as well as alphabetically. And if these same added capabilities could be applied to the list of people who follow me, as well, that would be great.

That᾿s all I want, really. Otherwise Twitter is just perfect.

Thu 28 Apr
2011

Abandoned Yugoslavian Landmarks

Photographs of twenty-five immense, futuristic, and unintentionally dystopian structures commissioned by former Yugoslavian president Josip Broz Tito in the 1960s and 70s to commemorate the sites of significant battles during the Second World War. They were designed by various sculptors and architects in a architectural visual language intended to evoke the strength of the Socialist Republic, but were essentially abandoned after its dissolution in the 1990s.

Yugoslavian Landmarks

Yugoslavian Landmarks

You can see all twenty-five photos here.

My Column on Columns

12:45 PM
Remarks (20)

For as long as I can remember, designers working in digital media have wanted the ability to lay out text in columns — first on the Web, now within multitouch apps. I’ve flirted with it myself, back when when it was relatively difficult to pull off, but in recent years CSS3 has made it possible, if not probable, that columnar layouts can be delivered to wide swaths of Web users. On multitouch devices, iOS developers routinely columnize text using Core Text and other methods, and their successes with these techniques have led columnized text to be common on that platform, creating perhaps the most ‘print-like’ digital layouts we’ve seen yet.

It wouldn’t be unreasonable to suggest that, along with other recent improvements in digital typography, columnized text augurs the future of digital layout design. That is, some might argue that screen-based content will over time look more and more like magazine-style pages, where text is flowed from one parallel column to another, rather than the more common Web convention in which a block of text exists in a single column, reading top to bottom within a screen that scrolls.

I take a different position, though. I think that the desire to approach screen-based layout with columnized text is misguided. Multiple columns are an effective layout technique in print because they improve legibility for long blocks of text. But for digital media, it’s my feeling that they make it harder to read text.

Wed 27 Apr
2011

Paper Toss

10:25 AM
Remarks (37)

I consider myself lucky that I have some modest respect from among my peers in the design industry, and I also consider myself fortunate that many of these designers like to keep me abreast of their recent works and new projects. As a result, I get a fair amount of posters, pamphlets, books, magazines and assorted other promotional stuff, usually mailed to me but occasionally pressed upon me in person, too.

Many of these items are very creative and quite stunning, and I’m often impressed by the time, labor and expense that goes into them. But I also find them somewhat bewildering and, if I’m honest, burdensome.

Hypercities

This project from UCLA lets you overlay historical maps of any one of about twenty cities onto contemporary satellite photos of that same city, all in a Google Maps-based interface. It makes for a fascinating comparative exercise, and doubles as a good reminder that as authoritative as information graphics might seem to be — many of these maps were canonical in their day — they can still be quite subjective and even misleading, especially with the benefit of historical hindsight.

Hyprcities

You can play with Hypercities over here.

Tue 26 Apr
2011

Canal St. Cross-Section

Sculptor Alan Wolfson created this “core sample of a city street. As though you took a street, dug it up, and lifted it straight off the earth.” Roughly a two foot cube, this model reproduces in beautiful miniaturized detail everything from the air conditioning unit installed above the entrance to a pizza parlor to the interior of the pizza parlor itself to the subway station directly beneath it.

Canal St. Cross-Section

This sculpture will be on display in June in New York at the Museum of Arts and Design’s exhibition “Otherworldly: Optical Delusions and Small Realities” but you can see close-ups at the sculptor’s Web site.

Fri 22 Apr
2011

Condé Nast Slows Rollout Pace of Its iPad Magazines

Ad Age reports that after disappointing sales of the titles it launched soon after last year’s debut of the iPad, Condé Nast is slowing down and reassessing their app strategy on a publication by publication basis. Some choice quotes include this one from an unidentified publisher:

“They’re not all doing all that well, so why rush to get them all on there?”

President Bob Sauerberg said:

“There hasn’t been any fundamental shift in our plans, commitment or enthusiasm regarding apps… From the onset, our strategy has remained fluid and responsive to the marketplace. Given our industry lead, with digital editions from eight of our titles on the iPad and more on the way in addition to a good deal of learning under our belt, we are increasing our focus on distribution and sales efforts that will encourage scale.”

First, that’s corporate spin for “Our products were not very good and no one wanted them.” Second, an increased focus on distribution and sales is fine, but what the company really needs to double-down on is its user experience strategy — which was terrible. That’s the real root of why these apps are not “doing all that well.” Working even harder to distribute and sell bad products is a waste of energy.

Read the full article here.

Thu 21 Apr
2011

The 50 Things Every Graphic Design Student Should Know

British designer Jamie Wieck from the studio Airside compiled this list of useful wisdom for design students about to enter the workforce. Most of them are fairly straightforward if not obvious, but there are some useful nuggets in there (e.g., “Don’t get drunk at professional events.” If only someone had mentioned that…), and I enjoyed reading through them.

50 Things Every Graphic Design Student Should Know

The whole list is also very digestible thanks to its uniquely 21st Century formatting: each tip is no longer than 140 characters. Whether it’s a good thing or a bad thing that advice intended to inform a decades-long career has to be boiled down to tweet length, I’ll leave that to readers to judge. You can zip through all fifty here.

As a related aside: I wrote a post late last year called “Students Don’t Do as I Have Done.” It covers some similar ground, and some folks have told me they found it helpful. You might want to check it out here.

Tue 19 Apr
2011

Will Wright on the Gambrian Explosion

The vaunted creator of Sim City and Spore predicts that video games are poised to break into new levels of diversity and ubiquity, and will become regarded as meaningful works of art in and of themselves — he calls it a “Gambrian explosion,” a play on the Cambrian explosion. Venture Beat published notes on the talk here.

Mon 18 Apr
2011

Blackwood

Spotted on Behance: a stunning hybrid of woodtype fonts and fat magazine fonts from Barcelona type designer Octavio Pardo.

Blackwood

View the project page, including several more specimens over at Behance. Be sure to check out the screen grab of one of the letters in vector form. Pretty impressive.

Sun 17 Apr
2011

Back of a Web Page

This is a small, simple and limited idea, but it’s executed so cleverly that I can’t help but be impressed: hypothetical illustrations of what the back of some iconic Web sites might look like if they did indeed have a back. The first one, an illustration of reverse side of Google is fine, but they get much more clever very quickly. For instance, here’s the back of YouTube:

Back of a Web Page

See all of them — there aren’t many, but they’re all good — over here.

Fri 15 Apr
2011

The Illustrious Omnibus of Superpowers

It’s really difficult to resist linking to the many gimmicky infographics that have become popular on the Internet over the past couple of years, especially as the form seems to be getting ever more popular, and especially as the work produced within this meme gets better and better at tapping into our most defenseless childlike whims.

A case in point is this “taxonomic tree of over 100 wondrous powers and abilities, with over 200 superheroes and supervillains as examples thereof.” It applies a deadpan seriousness to an inherently silly topic — a comprehensive catalog of the various super-powers that comic book characters have adopted over the years — making it irresistible to those of us who enjoy nurturing our pre-adolescent whims using the language of, well, of modern capitalism, really.

The Illustrious Omnibus of Superpowers

You can view the poster at full size and even buy yourself a copy over at Pop Chart Lab. Upon closer inspection, you may agree with me that it’s nicely designed and wittily executed and a very enjoyable bit of ephemera that will be easily forgotten before the weekend is out.

Thu 14 Apr
2011

Mark Styling’s Aviation Illustrations

Perfect for the kid in me: beautiful paintings of (mostly) military aircraft from all eras. They look like they’re rendered with graphics software, but they nevertheless retain real warmth, almost as if they were hand-painted.

Mark Styling Aircraft Illustrations

Browse the extensive galleries here.

Wed 13 Apr
2011

What If Movie Theaters Worked Like Netflix

An idea to help increase theater attendance: customers pay a subscription fee for movie passes at theaters of their own choosing, creating a relationship between the moviegoer and the theater. I’m not sure anyone will ever do this, but it’s intriguing, and as a fan of the in-theater movie experience, I hope something like this can reverse the downward trend in attendance.

Commented Out

3:05 PM
Remarks (33)

Last week I had to shut down the comment thread for a post I wrote about The Daily when it turned into an unexpectedly snarky exchange on the merits of various approaches to iPad publishing. To look at the twenty comments that were published before I shut it off you’d think the discourse wasn’t that bad, but I had to filter out several fairly nasty and thoroughly unconstructive comments that some less diplomatic readers tried to post.

I don’t mind debate and disagreement and even outright refutation of my opinions, but I really do mean it when I implore commenters to “Please be nice.” In fact, that’s the only instruction I offer in my comments form, simply because I feel like it’s short and simple enough to set the right tone for 99% percent of the people who comment here. When commenters don’t adhere to that, the fun of running a site with open comments is drained away for me.

Luckily, this hasn’t happened very often. In fact I can’t remember the last time it did, and I doubt I’ve had to take this measure more than two or three times in the decade or so I’ve been running this blog. So I’m very grateful to the vast majority of the readership here who have had the decency to be nice in the comments.

Fri 08 Apr
2011

The Village Voice: Comics Issue

New York’s legendary Village Voice has their comics issue out this week. I used to read The Voice every week but this is the first time I’ve picked it up in years, I think. Sad. Anyway, the cover for this issue was illustrated by Ward Sutton and it’s terrific: a mash-up of several different comics artists’ styles and comics characters. See how many you can pick out.

The Village Voice

You can read stories from the issue here, or see the art slightly bigger here.

Wed 06 Apr
2011

Guessing at Numbers for The Daily

Though News Corp does not release subscription numbers for its iPad newspaper The Daily, the folks at The Nieman Journalism Lab, with help from PostRank, have come up with a clever proxy metric that might suggest the publication’s overall trends. By studying the number of Twitter posts that originate from the app (The Daily includes a tweet function on every article), they show that, at the very least, outbound social media activity has declined significantly, suggesting that app usage is down precipitously. There are all kinds of caveats to this method, to be sure, but it yields some interesting data, to say the least. Read the full report here.

On a side note: I’ve been mentally drafting a post about my thoughts on The Daily ever since it debuted, but I can’t seem to get around to hammering it out in full, so I may as well offer a sketch of my thoughts here, otherwise they may never see the light of day.

It’s true that The Daily qualifies as a form of experimentation, yes, but it doesn’t strike me as a very imaginative or a particularly adventurous form of experimentation. In fact, it’s about as uninspired an experiment as a publisher could undertake. To me, The Daily is a near perfect realization of exactly the idea that occurs to print editors every single time they get their hands on digital media for the first time, regardless of what the underlying technology might be: “Let’s make it just like what we know so well in print.” As a result I found it sadly lifeless and lacking in urgency. What a waste of US$30 million.

Tue 05 Apr
2011

The Silver Computer Screen

10:36 PM
Remarks (9)

If you can’t tell already I’m a fan of the movies, pretty much all kinds of movies. From art house fare to popcorn flicks, I’m pretty confident I can find something interesting in just about every film I watch, and so I try to watch as much as I can of as many different genres as I can. This requires a well-practiced suspension of disbelief, of course, which is not hard to muster if you are passionate about films in general.

But one thing that almost always breaks me out of any movie’s spell is the on-screen appearance of any kind of computing technology — specifically the appearance of interfaces for computing technology. The reason is obvious: they’re almost always completely phony, designed not so much to reflect what the movie’s characters are supposed to be doing with a computer as to reflect what the movie’s producers want us to understand about what the character is doing with a computer.

Mon 04 Apr
2011

Steven Reker’s People Get Ready

Last Thursday night I went to this dance and music performance by Steven Reker and People Get Ready at the arts space The Kitchen here in New York. I’ve been to several modern dance performances before but this one caught me by surprise: Reker is not just a dancer but a musician as well, and this performance was an unlikely but riveting hybrid of indie rock and modern dance — the musicians danced and the dancers played music. More than that, the pieces they performed (there were about a dozen of them, organized like two sides of a mixtape) established a clean and vibrant linkage between the act of dancing and the act of making music. It wasn’t just music and dance together, it was music and dance as one act. I haven’t seen anything quite like it before and I thought it was great. You can listen to some of People Get Ready’s music here, and read The New York Times review here.