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Archive for the ‘design’ Category

E8, Edwin Abbott, Garrett Lisi, Maui, Theoretical Physics, Unified Field Theory

26 Mar

So I was going to post this to Facebook directly – and found that it was too long – and then I remembered – wait – I have half a dozen blogs – surely one of them could serve as the platfrom for a post – so Webservations it is >>>

 

When I was much (much) younger and actually understood the Maths I was studying, I read a wonderful little book called Flatland by Edwin Abbott. At one level it was a commentary on social hierarchy and at another an examination of the resistance of humans to recognizing – much less understanding – the concept of multiple dimensions. The book was written in 1884 BTW.

 

Just been watching a wonderful Ted Talk on ‘E8′ (or as it is affectionately known – Garrett Lisi’s Theory of Everything ) two years after it was recorded.

 

In the past 125 years, we seem to have developed a little – and now routinely talk of (that is different to understand) multi-dimensional space. In Garrett’s case (he is focussed on a theoretical model with 8 dimensions, dubbed E8 – that he ‘hopes’ IS the unified field theory we have been searching for around a century now (maybe longer) – I use hope loosley – he seems to be working with something more than hope :)

 

At the end of the talk, Garrett was asked to explain E8 a little further by the host and when he did, I couldn’t help but think of Edwin’s book as he talked of how different aspects of the 8 dimensions spin in and out of focus as the model spins around.

 

OK – this is hard to explain – happy to report that I am truly excited to be listening to Garrett talk first hand – very soon. YOWZA. More on that later.

 

(BTW fellow followers – Garrett is a Maui Resident – we truly have an eclectic, stunning, and extraordinary collection of residents on this island of ours.)

 

 

Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs for Design

11 Jun

Maslow is not a name that pops into my every day conversation. But he did yesterday – and when I saw this today – I though HELL – why not – a message from someone to post !!!

I still think his hierarchy of needs maintains its relevancy – what 60 or 70 years later !!

This is Maslow’s original …

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Meanwhile- I really love this one that Smashing Magazine has developed :

Passed on – with thanks to : Smashing Magazine : Maslow’s hierarchy of needs for design

 

Are photographers different to the rest of us ?

17 Apr

Ever since I was sent this NYT article: For Photographers, the Image of a Shrinking Path – NYTimes.com, I had been mulling this in my mind. Before that even. I picked up on one set of words … which I replay here to save you clicking through.

“There are very few professional photographers who, right now, are not hurting, said Holly Stuart Hughes, editor of the magazine Photo District News.

That has left professional photographers with a bit of an identity crisis. Nine years ago, when Livia Corona was fresh out of art school, she got assignments from magazines like Travel and Leisure and Time. Then, she said, three forces coincided.

They were the advertising downturn, the popularity and accessibility of digital photography, and changes in the stock-photo market.

Full disclosure - I am not – nor would I ever pretend to be a photographer, fine-artist, musician, write, sculptor or any other kind of creative professional ….. I am however someone who admires the work of a number of photographers, fine-artists, musicians, writers, sculptors and other kinds of creative professionals – and I currently happen to be working in a space that provides an aspect of business savvy to those photographers, fine-artists, musicians, writers, sculptors and other kinds of creative professionals.


So what is it about this article that made me tick ?

Well, two things;

1) It is like all the other articles that face off on the topic of the challenges of a photographer. It highlights the problem – provides not even an offer of a solution – and leaves everyone with a ‘woe is me’ attitude …. “Well – it isn’t so bad that I am having a hard time – so is every one else.

2) The world doesn’t owe ANYONE a living – so what are we going to do about it ?

No one can dispute that a photographers life is difficult these days. But sorry – everyone’s life is – EVERY industry and profession is having the rug pulled out from under its feet. It is a problem. But not insurmountable.

If you read other parts of the NYT and similar organs, there is much written about the importance of creativity and innovation and thought and leadership as the key to extricating ourselves from this particular swamp.

Last time I looked – photographers are part of that creative energy and drive that can lead us into the brave new world. Where is the leadership?

Before I move on to how that leadership might kick in how about a few more forces that collided with the three already picked out earlier.

  • A massive downturn in the US economy AND
  • A massive downturn in the Western economies AND
  • A massive downturn in the global economy AND
  • Levels of unemployment across the US not seen for 30 years or more AND
  • Low barrier of entry to be a photographer AND
  • Convergence of stills and video AND multimedia AND
  • Lack of understanding in the buying public as to what it takes to ‘create’ AND
  • No value associated with what a pro (in any field) does AND
  • No accreditation – if I can’t afford to use an architect to build my house – I don’t ask my sister’s friend who has done some doodles of a remodel on their place to design mine – why doesn’t that apply to photographers AND
  • so on AND so on AND so on AND so on

    A quick diversion into Music

    Cast your mind back 10 years ago – and the MP3 download revolution that was going to destroy the music industry. How life was going to never be the same. How this was it – the end of the Music Industry. Site after site went up allowing people to download and swap MP3s if not for free – then at a very marginal cost. The courts were used to push massive fines onto 12 year olds to pay up thousands of dollars in fines – what a WASTE. We knew it was wrong – we did it. You know what – they were right. The Music Industry is in its death throws. Thank God.

    BUT – Music is alive and well. Very well – thankyou very much. The creative energies are bursting out all over – and for us – the consumer – there is now so much choice it is hard to keep up – its like being back in the 60s again, with every day a new band or singer popping up – delivering their sounds … it is awesome !

    The old style music industry is of course not doing too well out of all of this – Musicians are going direct to their fan base, the distribution engines that used to be essential are being bypassed, there is no need to have ‘the Suits’ involved – that ‘MiddleMan’ is dead. (Of course there are plenty of other MiddleMen springing up – would you recognize a Social Media Optimization expert if they walked into the room ? (Clue – they are about 12 years old).

    The point is that the people that made the money out of music – Universal, Capitol, EMI, Sony …. yes – they are having a hard time. EMI in the UK is the latest disaster. And with Tower, Virgin, Sam’s Records – name your record store of choice all (pretty much) gone. I mean – where do you go to buy a CD today. A what ?

    But the musician is doing ok. I think. True. it is different. New knowledge is needed, but you no longer need to sell millions of records to make a buck. Will there ever be a band as big as The Beatles again ? I say not. Been there – done that. But don’t forget that for every ‘Beatles’ – there were tens of thousands of bands that never made it.


    I maintain there is an analogy at work here. Musicians give their work away for free to make it up in another bucket – eg Radiohead. Or perform for free – in the hope of selling their recordings (think buskers) (Two extreme examples). David Byrne of Talking Heads wrote a piece in Wired two and a half years ago called Survival Strategies for Emerging Artists — and Megastars take a read – two and a half years ago – this was before the recession – and still the Music Industry was in shock – but there was a way through.

    So – what could photographers do ? Who is going to write the equivalent article for the photographic industry ? Is there a single person of that stature, with that knowledge that could do it and would want to do it ?

    I have some ideas, even made a start. But I am not that person. Who the hell am I anyway and what do I know ? Actually – little. I am not an expert. I flit between industries and connect dots. I see something in Industry A – and wonder – would that work in Industry B?

    That is why I am passionate about this. The Photographer is not the only career hit by this problem – but is one of the few that can do something about it. I think. Easy for me to say – so shall we set about proving it ?
    Passed on – with thanks to : Rachel Lacour for the original piece.

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    A Parable of Open v Closed and Expert v Crowd Sourcing

    11 Apr

    An interesting take on the battle of open / closed …. apple / google …. apple / adobe – etc – without too much getting on the band wagon – but rather coming at the open v closed issue from a design perspective.

    Not sure I totally agree with him but I sure don’t reject it either, and haven’t got an argument against – so what – conflicted ? Yes – because I love Apple and I love Open Source. And that right there is a seeming conflict.

    I took the piece as a kind of metaphor / allegory / parable – I just can’t bring the right word to mind for the battle all creative professionals (and in this category I include the ‘poets of the internet’ [that would be the coders] are currently facing. As ‘the price’ gets close to zero – how do you make money? And if ‘we’ all want to pay nothing to others – but we want them to pay us for our art, photographs, design etc – how does that reconcile?

    It is another tension that we have in the market place.

  • I can’t afford Apple – I will get a LInux box with OpenSource Software
  • I can’t afford a Wedding Photographer – I will have all my guests take pictures – I will even ask a few of them to focus on parts of the Wedding that I want to make sure are captured
  • I can’t afford a Commercial Shooter for the Annual Report, I will use images from a micro stock source
  • I can’t afford x, I will do y ……… simply fill in the spaces – there are many examples.The point is that both sides of these equations are working – to a greater or lesser degree – what is emerging is not the funds needed to do something – but the TALENT – as Vincent Laforet wrote in a post on Vimeo a few months ago …

    Tools are making $$$ less relevant and talent MORE relevant – the way it SHOULD BE!

    Anyway – take a read – enjoy – agree or not – it isn’t the end of the world either way :)

    Extract From David Malouf’s piece:

    Because open systems people lack patience and strategic thinking. Yup! I said it. There ya go! With very few exceptions (ok, Mozilla you’re off the hook), OSS systems have failed to deliver mainstream, compelling, engaging, successful products.

    As I listened to Apple talk about what they did to make their implementation of Multi-tasking work, it just started to really crystalize for me one salient point about Apple.

    It is not about the right feature, but the right feature done right at the right time.

    This means being thorough. It means understanding the ins and outs of your system. It means being patient until both design and engineering get it right, and not just get it done.

    This level of intentionality is something that open systems can’t deploy well if at all. If everyone is free, then no one waits. No one considers. No one designs.

    And to save you the click through – ‘he’ (the writer of this oiece) is but one voice, name David Malouf and according to his web site:

    David Malouf is currently a Professor of Interaction Design in the Industrial Design Department of the Savannah College of Art & Design (SCAD).
    Before taking this position, David was a Sr. Interaction Design for Motorola Enterprise Mobility where he designed software, webware, and hardware interactions and interfaces. Motorola was the last in a 15 year journey of practicing interaction design, information architecture, UI design, project management and other roles and positions working almost exclusively with thin client technologies.

    Read the full article here : Why people who favor open systems are at a disadvantage?

    Passed on – with thanks to Daniel S

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    The Internet of Things is Here

    17 Mar

    This makes for a really interesting read. I love it when the internet web thingy and the real world (as we at least perceive it to be) come together. Hopefully meeting part of the network next week. When I found out what he was doing – and where he wanted to go – I couldn’t resist. The stuff is not the same as described here. But its stuff (good stuff – sorry – can’t be more precise) – and there’s money to be made.

    fridge_150.jpg


    It’s the same story as BandN v Amazon – compete on your terms – not theirs!


    Connect the dots. Make the jumps. Find the Blue Ocean. It’s just a small leap of thinking that can create a giant leap of change.

    consumer_electronics_20.jpg

    The Internet of Things – McKinsey Quarterly

    … the predictable pathways of information are changing: the physical world itself is becoming a type of information system. In what’s called the Internet of Things, sensors and actuators embedded in physical objects’ from roadways to pacemakers’ are linked through wired and wireless networks, often using the same Internet Protocol (IP) that connects the Internet. These networks churn out huge volumes of data that flow to computers for analysis. When objects can both sense the environment and communicate, they become tools for understanding complexity and responding to it swiftly. What’s revolutionary in all this is that these physical information systems are now beginning to be deployed, and some of them even work largely without human intervention.


    Passed on – with thanks to : McKinsey Quarterly

     

    The Brand Gap

    15 Feb

    One of my colleagues lent me ‘The Brand Gap’ a couple of weeks ago, A very good – highly recommended read – thankyou David. I had a prod around the ‘interweb thingy’ – and discovered this slideshare presentation – that will provide you the full 411 as a background. But PLEASE – this is not instead of reading the book !!!

     

    30 Creative and Unique Wine Label Designs

    26 Jul

    Amazing Wine Labels that stop you in your tracks are not that common – these do … such as this boarding pass Shiraz …

    boarding-bass-shiraz_1.jpg


    Passed on – with thanks to : The Cool List

     

    Creativity Through Collaboration

    24 Jul

    I am not usually one to promote someone’s PR – however the thought of the promotion of Creativity Through Collaboration stopped me for a couple of minutes to even read the piece.


    Aedas Architects

    At Aedas, designers and architects work in an almost continuous stream of communication, snapping images of designs, models, and construction sites with the camera on iPhone and then sending those photos—along with emails, text messages, and documents—around the office. It’s a highly collaborative process, enabled by iPhone.

     

    Most Interesting Libraries of the World

    01 Jun

    …. I have no idea whether their books are any good – but the structures are pretty damned amazing !!!


    Most Interesting Libraries of the World

     

    Periodic Table of Beer Styles

    11 Mar

    Through the power of Twitter, this link appeared in my morning’s catch up.

    I clicked on it – and at once was excited – yet disappointed.

    Excited because it really demonstrated an interesting approach to beer categorisation.


    Disappointed, because you couldn’t really read it.

    So I took an extra five minutes to find these two links for your delectation.

    The first comes from Mantis Design and is a colour rendition that you can order. In their words ..

    “This is a fantastic poster by Andrei Chapoval. He is an amazing wealth of information regarding beer, and this poster proves it. Although it has a smaller fan base, it is a consistent seller to people who love beer. We are hoping to reprint a better version of it soon, if we can convince our publisher to keep the design around.”

    This was back in 2006 – recent postings suggest that it is no longer available :(

    So – on to the second link. It is a biggie – so give it time to download.

    It is ‘quite simply’, another periodic table – that you can enlarge and actually read. It is only Black and White – but for beer fans everywhere – really really interesting.

    Alas – I don’t know enough about beer to understand if it really is accurate :(

    Still – it is a labour of love – much in the way that Pete Frame captured the rock bands of the 60s and 70s with his own graphic design.

    Take a look here … for the black and white, highly readable, periodic table of beer styles.