Tue 15 Jul
2008
There’s plenty to like about the iPhone 2.0 Software Update, not the least of which is the fact that it now officially supports a brand new world of third-party applications. However, I’m only being a little facetious when I say that for me Apple really dropped the ball with its Contacts module.
Thu 03 Jul
2008
Apple’s new MobileMe service is due out before too long, and I’m pretty excited about it. In particular, I’m looking forward to what I hope will be a wholesale remedying of the many irritating shortcomings of its predecessor, the useful but error-prone .Mac service.
I know that I’ve said it before, but I’m really inclined to repeat it until a solution for its many problems is actually in place (and not just marketed) — .Mac is a very poor service. In my estimation, it falls far short of the high bar for excellence that Apple has consistently set for itself and met over the past decade.
Tue 01 Jul
2008
Whether or not Christopher Nolan’s “The Dark Knight” turns out to be any good when it’s released later this month, I want to just enjoy for a little while longer the situation that we’re in right now. That is, we live in a world in which the most recent Batman movie, Nolan’s three-year old “Batman Begins,” was actually a very good film. For my money, it’s about as rich a super-hero movie as any Hollywood has produced, but I’ll even settle for just a pretty good movie based on what came before it.
Mon 30 Jun
2008
In some respects, I think Muxtape, the popular site for creating so-called “MP3 mixtapes” is a triumph. Ostensibly a tool for creating personal playlists from nominally legal music tracks, it is in actuality very much a piece of social software. Except that the traditional trappings of social software — buddy lists, presence management, intra-membership messaging, etc. — are almost entirely missing. In a sense, it’s a kind of anti-Facebook, and in that functional asceticism, it’s really kind of a marvel.
On the other hand, minimalism has its drawbacks as well as its advantages. To be sure there’s real beauty to Muxtape’s enormous and simple music playback interface — its single-tasking posture may yet turn out to be as iconic as the original Google home page — but it’s also frustrating.
Tue 24 Jun
2008
Some NYTimes.com-related business today…
First, there’s a pretty plum job opening with T Style Magazine, the Sunday insert that has become a closely watched showcase for luxury design. The magazine launched an online version last year that, I think all of us involved would agree, is an imperfect first step in marrying the singular immersive qualities of the print edition with an authentically digital experience.
That’s why this position could be so influential. As Janet Froelich, the magazine’s creative director, describes it, “The focus of this position is to oversee the translation of the design approach of the print publication to the Web.” It’s a pretty unique job that requires publication design skills, a refined typographic sense and a good eye for photography — and a sophisticated understanding of the nuances of the Web. We’re essentially looking for someone to really help shape how a luxury magazine expresses itself online. By my guess, there are less than a dozen people in the world qualified for this job; if you’re one of them, send your résumé and cover letter to A. J. Rourk.
Mon 23 Jun
2008
To my surprise, Rumplo is an entertaining good time. Read this post…
Wed 18 Jun
2008
Presenting design ideas is fraught with distractions. Read this post…
Tue 17 Jun
2008
A little spacing could do Gmail a lot of good. Read this post…
Mon 16 Jun
2008
A beautiful — and I mean gorgeous — book about galleries in Tokyo. Read this post…
Mon 09 Jun
2008
Spending US$599 on an iPhone a year ago turns out to be not a great way to invest my money. Read this post…
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Dating back to December 1999.
“ No cameras or lights were used. Instead two technologies were used to capture 3D images: Geometric Informatics and Velodyne LIDAR.” Beautiful if gimmicky, like the best music videos. By the way, I wasn’t much of a Radiohead fan before “In Rainbows” came out, but I’m still listening to this album several days a week.
A new project from independent designer David Airey profiling famous logo designers.
BBC.co.uk applies some of the thinking I’ve done around grids to its new, wider page template.
Felix details the work he did for us designing a bucketload of icons for our iPhone application.
A brief remembrance of the recently deceased New York editor.
Coming with the 11 Jul release of iPhone 2.0 software, the App Store and iTunes 7.7: “Use the new Remote application for iPhone or iPod touch to control iTunes playback from anywhere in your home — a free download from the App Store”
“Fox News featured photos of Jacques Steinberg and Steven Reddicliffe that appeared to have been digitally altered — the journalists’ teeth had been yellowed, their facial features exaggerated, and portions of Reddicliffe’s hair moved further back on his head.” Amazing.
“The Carsonified team have set ourselves a challenge this week: to build a Web app in four days (32 hours) and we’re launching tomorrow at 5:30 PM GMT.”
Saul Hansell’s sobering update on the music subscription service: “All this seems the best that is possible for Rhapsody: A lot of time spent negotiating with labels to create products that are still expensive and don’t have the features that can get people excited.”
Nominations for best and worst designs on the Web, with contributions from yours truly.
Best theme I’ve come across yet for reskinning Firefox 3, the interface for which I file under, “nice effort, bad result.”
Nice write-up by John Kricfalusi about this old school comics artist.
“It’s a typically brilliant and engaging piece of design, but it sure ain’t modest.” Via Lined and Unlined. Also see my February write-up of “The Sagmeister Phenomenon.”
“The upshot is, that for a lot of client sites, Expression Engine is wonderful (if you can put up with the admin side) — especially sites that need members, forums and all that jazz. The thing is, if a site doesn’t need those things, it’s less pain and more pleasure to use TextPattern.“
A visual resource for all things related to the Pontiac’s immortal sportscar.
A MovieTickets.com poll shows that anticipation for this sequel to “Batman Begins” is running very high. I can’t wait.
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