Archive for the ‘Architecture’ Category

Predictions came true – tablet era ahead of us

Thursday, January 6th, 2011

As I predicted earlier, the wave of tablets came from this year’s CES. There’s so many of them, both good and bad, that we surely can talk about a revolution in browsing. Some of them run flash, some don’t, some do it in a limited way. But the touch input will be the new browsing in the starting decade. And we should think about that while designing.

That might mean a small revolution in web design, towards a mixture of print and web styles, that are easier to grasp on tablets. Maybe “swipe to change page” mechanisms, more jQuery and Javascript, video and sound. And bigger, clear controls. We’ll see where it goes next, but since most of the internet is about consuming content, we might see a big transformation of the way in which the content is delivered. Exciting times!

The 960 grid system

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

960gridsystem

So you’re designing a website and thinking : are there any universal proportions for columns, element placement and such things? Why do some websites look so good, while others don’t even though there’s nothing visibly wrong with them? Well the devil is in the details as usual, but lucky for us we have the internets and we can use the knowledge other people learned the hard way. The 960 grid system is one of those things. It’s a set of templates for both coders and designers (pretty much a template for any major software). It was initially designed as the my-own-design-aid kit like most of us do, but it has spread and that is because of two things:
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Iphone music app development

Sunday, February 7th, 2010

keyboard
We’re starting to work on a little project for the iphone – a simple 5 octave keyboard with combining two synth patches playing at once + an optional drum pattern underneath. You can see the first version of the GUI here.

Bing/Google maps API free idea giveaway ;)

Tuesday, December 15th, 2009

silver

So here’s the deal. I’m not really a microsoft person, but I checked out their “isometric view” of the maps (here’s New York) and I instantly thought of one thing – Sim City! First of all the idea itself is pretty awesome to show it this way, the perspective makes the cities more memorable as a landscape, rather than just a top-view photo.  But what can be done with it ?

Well for once – using the API which I think would be given out anyway – a new type of social sim-city style game could be created.  Let’s for one moment think that we can “destroy it all” and put nice, green grass everywhere. Then we’ll have a few types of buildings, some roads, other elements, and combine it to create a district of our own, based on the natural landscape of our city, with it’s rivers, islands, whatever. Other people can of course join the fun and start building a district of their own in the same city. Maybe even a better city-planner could be found that way (choosing the best guy for the job while working on a semi-real thing would probably make more sense than choosing him based on just promises). Possibilities are endless.

And yes – of course google is doing something similar as well – letting people build their own buildings and all. So a bunch of free API’s from both of the big fish could actually give someone with the guts to do such project, plenty of choices.

Amazing underground/subway architecture

Saturday, December 5th, 2009

subway

Amazing subway photography. Too bad most of the subways are so dull and boring, but as we can see here it doesn’t have to be this way. More photos after the break, and on this Link (more…)