Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Response to poor design article from The New York Times

          It seems to me like an article like this is long overdue, poorly conceived and non-functioning change in design has been happening for way too long. People have an overwhelming need for change even if it isn't a good one. Some will say that the automated sink and soap activator in public bathrooms was a good way to kill cross contamination, as well as a great way to conserve water. However when the soap dispenser gives you little soap and the water sprays for 3 seconds, exactly how convenient or sanitary was that?
         For centuries things have been getting invented, changed, modified, re-invented and eventually butchered. Much like the rise and fall of Myspace, to Facebook, to Instagram even social media gets created, changed, screwed up, and eventually forgotten. Everyone wants the convenience of having what they want as easy as possible, while expelling as little effort as possible. The need to fix what isn't broken will always be there.
        One point raised in the article was a complaint about poor signing for various road obstacles. The "detour" signs are in theory there to help, but if the magical trail of unwanted warning signs actually led you to the destination they would be awesome and functional. Unfortunately, this is seldom the case. Another issue that is happening just outside of the campus, the dreaded traffic circles of death and confusion. Yield, drive, yield, think about which exits yours, miss it, drive, yield, this was a great idea. Look another circle, onto the next yield, drive, exit, circle, yield, drive. Someone could have certainly stepped in and figured out a more streamline way to get people to where they were going without making them hit laps around suburbia in search of their destination.
        To bring this all to a close, great ideas like public hand sanitizer kiosks and puppy poop stations are great things we desperately need. However when you invent the EZ pass and then have sections of highway that give little to no warning a toll is coming and then have three quarters of the road EZ pass and the rest cash only, your not helping. For those who still aren't in 2013 and hooked up to big brother, getting that twenty five dollar fine for not seeing the tolls come in enough time sure shows who is being favored. Design flaw is something that as long as people desire and want, eventually everything will be dumbed down to "fast easy and sleek", as opposed to useable and functional.

Friday, September 6, 2013

Here's my photo, this artist goes by Mr. Dist doing some prepwork on a tablet, which later becomes this. which is awesome


Questions Answered...




What is your computer experience? 

I've been working with computers for almost my entire life, I am getting into tablet drawing on my iPad and am beginning to follow artists who do the same. 

What is your major class? 

Well I am trying to major is Computer Graphics, so, this one?

What do you hope to get out of this class? 

A better understanding of computer image rendering and hopefully a stronger use on composition. 

Who is your favorite Artist? 

Jeez.. where to begin. Jeff Gogue would be a top pick, along with some of my favorites Gunnar Gaylord, Nikko Hurtado, Annie Frenzel, Emily Rose Murray. Mostly tattoo artists who also concentrate on other mediums. 

Write a five line story? 

A rose grows from the ground and is very young starting as a bud. 
Once it's sick of being a bud, it becomes a small flower. Flowers get full and rich in color, reaching desired potential. As it's potent, its time is also got an expiration. Beauty never stays, and death never fails.