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Eidetic Opacity

Being The Singular Personal Blog and Virtual Soapbox of Alex Leonard

The Category known as Design

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Thanks to Jonas Nockert for sharing this one. The instant I saw it, the image struck a chord, both introspectively and as a commentary on broader society today.

Below I have reproduced the most recent cover of the New Yorker, posted by Design Milk, which says a lot about today’s society. Something of which I know I’m guilty -  my face constantly being lit up by a screen of some sort. It is also something which I’ve seen in action at the last stadium concert I attended – the view from the stand seats being one of a sea of camera phones held up to capture the moment, either calling friends during famous songs, or camera-phoning the event.

new-yorker-3

November Cover of New Yorker

This humorous new cover for the November 2, 2009 issue of The New Yorker says a lot more than it appears to at first glance. For a closer look in case it’s difficult to see, read more.

via Design Milk – The New Yorker Cover by Chris Ware.

This cover also made me think of one of the best articles I’ve read on TechCrunch in a long time – NSFW: Weezer, plane crashes and everything else that’s worrying about the real-time web – which I recommend reading, and captures a lot of my own thoughts and concerns about the all-encompassing, always-on, realistically unsocial (at least in the traditional sense) internet world into which we’re drifting.

Am I guilty of a lot of these things – hell yes. My world is now driven by internet-based communication and social networking tools, I’m as bad as anyone. Still, I want to keep it in check and make some changes that result in me having a bit more physical world interaction over the coming years. I think travelling to India and Cambodia will help with this. Maybe I’m wrong and it’s just a natural evolution, but I still think I need to keep it in mind.

Anyway, great cover – wanted to share it out there (I recognise the somewhat ironic nature of using the medium I am slightly knocking to deliver this message).

Visit the New Yorker

Date Added: November 1st, 2009 | Leave a comment!

A veritable mess of a photo

I was planning on putting up a photo I took of some lentils, but ended up getting carried away with photoshop and making it anything but a load of lentils.

Sprawled Mess

Sprawled Mess

Update: A few people were wondering what the original photo was, so to satisfy your curiosity I reproduce it below (I haven’t bothered to dress it up barring a quick auto-contrast in Picasa).

Deli window display

Date Added: March 29th, 2009 | Leave a comment!

Why oh why does Creative Suite not auto-save

I’m facing a crash in Illustrator at the moment. I’m going to leave it for a little while to see if it gets its head together, but it’s not looking promising.

I know, I should remember to save things on a regular basis, and I’m usually pretty good at it, but any application in which you spend long amounts of time doing detailed work, whether it be something like Cubase (music production), or OpenOffice (word processing, spreadsheets etc) offers the option to automatically save your work to a temporary file which, after a catasrophic crash, allows you to recover the most recently auto-saved version.

Adobe Creative Suite is the leading collection of creative design tools, including Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign, Flash, After Effects, Dreamweaver, and others.

As far as I’m aware, the only auto-save feature comes in either Dreamweaver or Contribute (not sure which), but none of the other applications offer it.

So please, Adobe, I’m sure I’m not the only one clamouring for this addition – bring auto-save to Creative Suite. Save us from tearing our hair out.

Date Added: January 31st, 2009 | Leave a comment!