This animation by Keiichi Matsuda seems like a pretty reasonable vision of what the next iterations of augmented reality will bring. In his vision of the future, media saturates the physical world, and ads pervade everything.
via GOOD
This animation by Keiichi Matsuda seems like a pretty reasonable vision of what the next iterations of augmented reality will bring. In his vision of the future, media saturates the physical world, and ads pervade everything.
via GOOD
The shape of the flash drive is designed according to main functions of this device: collecting, accumulating and acquiring information. The curvature of the flash drive’s case also makes it easier to disconnect the flash drive from the computer’s USB port.
A little display located on the flash drive’s case shows the volume of data already stored on the drive. Depending on how the flash drive is programmed, this information may be shown as a percentage of total storage capacity, or in megabytes used; also, certain symbols or writings may be displayed there.
The way of presentation of the displayed information may be changed using the menu activated when the flash drive is turned on.
via FlyLyf
Inside the Intel booth at the 2010 Consumer Electronics Show, the Internet was displayed in double HD. Running on an Intel Core i7 processor, the touchscreen measures 9×9 feet and vividly displayed in 1920 x 1920 resolution, dynamically pulling in 500 nuggets of information, photos, tweets and blog posts from the Internet.
Web Designers in Cape Town have a BIG PROBLEM. In fact, I’m sure the same situation occurs the world over. With the current state of tertiary education in South Africa web design courses have been added as an after thought at the end of graphic design courses. Many greatly skilled graphic designers find their way to interviews for digital design positions thinking that great design skills and the three month section of their studies that covered web design will stand them in good stead for the position.
Upon seeing what actually goes into good interactive design, they end up shocked. To my knowledge, no courses currently running in Cape Town cover usability studies, best design practices, or even the latest advances in technologies like jQuery and Flash. The bulk of what I’m seeing taught is useless HTML design with no purpose. I refer to one large tertiary education institution in the heart of Cape Town whose final web brief was a four page design for a company selling cup cakes. In the real world of web design we face challenges of representing large bodies of data. Making it easy to use and an enjoyable experience for the user thereby incorporating technology that can add value and make the site smooth and functional.
These mislead designers might be shocked that actual industry professionals would tell them to close Photoshop and start with planning, sketching, wire-framing, usability study research and after the design, some serious testing and adjustment where necessary. Then there are aspects of the job that aren’t so obvious; planning, time management, knowledge sharing and continuous self-learning and research.