could easily make this app using not-so-un-apple language, and have it read 'forecasts' from a server, and change the language accordingly at a later date.
Project Soli is developing a new interaction sensor using radar technology. The sensor can track sub-millimeter motions at high speed and accuracy. It fits onto a chip, can be produced at scale and built into small devices and everyday objects.
great read chris. currently we're undergoing looking at being ADA compliant. the contrast check has me shitting in my shorts. our brand color palette is hard enough to work with (cuz it's shit but i did the best i could based on outside firm redesigning a shit logo for us). it's gonna be a nightmare.
it's like some globalist liberal echo chamber of hillaryisms all wrapped into an ipad-like interface that was clearly influenced by obama. down with antifa!
^ how many times have we tried to start this conversation over the years?
one thing that is really annoying...we all remember 10+ years ago when everybody was talking about open source and trying to create things that were shareable. being open. having open ideas and discussions...etc.
there were probably too many free things in those earlier yers - we all loved it. and young people, they LOVED the internet for the same reason. but, what are they doing today? i'm not going to mention names...
they are thought leaders. they validate your ideas. they are secretive. they don't have to spend their own money to build a product. product designers! the entitlement that has sprung from this once amazing resource is astronomical. the number of things that eventually turn to shit over "business" strategy is practically endless.
how many of those people donate their time? work on open source? take the time to teach others - even random people over the net?
^^^ anyways, above i was just being silly. but i think slater is right...we're all kind of bored with these things now. maybe this is part of the problem, too.
Michael Leggett is even more annoyed with Gmail than you are.
“It’s like Lucky Charms got spewed all over the screen,” he says to me, as he scrolls through his inbox. It’s true. Folders, contacts, Google apps like Docs and Drive–and at least half a dozen notifications–all clutter Gmail at any given moment. And of course, there’s that massive Gmail logo that sits in the upper left-hand corner of the screen. Just in case you forgot that you just typed “gmail.com” into your browser bar three seconds ago. “Go look at any desktop app and tell me how many have a huge fucking logo in the top left,” rants Leggett. “C’mon. It’s pure ego, pure bullshit. Drop the logo. Give me a break.”
Rather than sit there and stew, Leggett decided to do something about it: He created a free Chrome extension called Simplify, where all the extraneous folders and functions overloading Gmail seem to melt away, leaving you with a calm screen and nothing but your messages. It’s understatedly beautiful, and every button just seems like it’s in the right place. In fact, it feels a little too good for some random free Chrome extension made by some random developer. Let’s just say that Leggett was highly qualified for the job.
Comments
mobile, tablet, desktop, webdesign, app UI patterns and icons galore!
authentic weather
or something.
but yeha, fuck sake, apple!
the converted, by idion
http://www.theguardian.com/world/interactive/2013/nov/01/snowden-nsa-files-surveillance-revelations-decoded
on the webhttp://osvaldas.info/image-lightbox-responsive-touch-friendly
and desktop browsers, of course.
wait a minute, wtf!
also, scroll forward a bit to see the 3d transform effect for the old-school CRT monitor terminal window
Project Soli is developing a new interaction sensor using radar technology. The sensor can track sub-millimeter motions at high speed and accuracy. It fits onto a chip, can be produced at scale and built into small devices and everyday objects.
cross-posted in 'project soli - radar interaction sensing!'
https://medium.com/refactoring-ui/redesigning-laravel-io-c47ac495dff0
it's like some globalist liberal echo chamber of hillaryisms all wrapped into an ipad-like interface that was clearly influenced by obama. down with antifa!
one thing that is really annoying...we all remember 10+ years ago when everybody was talking about open source and trying to create things that were shareable. being open. having open ideas and discussions...etc.
there were probably too many free things in those earlier yers - we all loved it. and young people, they LOVED the internet for the same reason. but, what are they doing today? i'm not going to mention names...
they are thought leaders. they validate your ideas. they are secretive. they don't have to spend their own money to build a product. product designers! the entitlement that has sprung from this once amazing resource is astronomical. the number of things that eventually turn to shit over "business" strategy is practically endless.
how many of those people donate their time? work on open source? take the time to teach others - even random people over the net?
^^^ anyways, above i was just being silly. but i think slater is right...we're all kind of bored with these things now. maybe this is part of the problem, too.
A game for designery designers.
it's slick. it does exist already...perhaps not as slick though...
https://www.slant.co/topics/526/~best-window-manager-for-mac
Senators just unveiled a bill to stop deceptive design and dark patterns
https://www.fastcompany.com/90332113/senators-just-unveiled-a-bill-to-stop-deceptive-design-and-dark-patternsthey are on to you, chris!
The former lead designer of Gmail just fixed Gmail on his own
Michael Leggett is even more annoyed with Gmail than you are.
“It’s like Lucky Charms got spewed all over the screen,” he says to me, as he scrolls through his inbox. It’s true. Folders, contacts, Google apps like Docs and Drive–and at least half a dozen notifications–all clutter Gmail at any given moment. And of course, there’s that massive Gmail logo that sits in the upper left-hand corner of the screen. Just in case you forgot that you just typed “gmail.com” into your browser bar three seconds ago. “Go look at any desktop app and tell me how many have a huge fucking logo in the top left,” rants Leggett. “C’mon. It’s pure ego, pure bullshit. Drop the logo. Give me a break.”
Rather than sit there and stew, Leggett decided to do something about it: He created a free Chrome extension called Simplify, where all the extraneous folders and functions overloading Gmail seem to melt away, leaving you with a calm screen and nothing but your messages. It’s understatedly beautiful, and every button just seems like it’s in the right place. In fact, it feels a little too good for some random free Chrome extension made by some random developer. Let’s just say that Leggett was highly qualified for the job.
steve schoger | Refactoring UI | CSS Day 2019
via @scally
Cool