
First of all I must apologize for not updating this blog in a while. There's been three reasons mainly. My wife and I, this year, have been very busy. We've sold our flat, our first rung on the property ladder in favour of buying our first house. It's a lovely Victorian terrace which is about 100 years old. It's lovely owning a period property in such a historic town but over the 100 years or so that this house has been standing it's accrued it's own set of problems. So, my first reason for not updating the blog in a while is that I've been busy nursing our geriatric house.
My second reason for not updating the blog in a while is that my wife and I weren't husband and wife until November 17th 2007 so the past year has been busy preparing and organising everything for that day. Photos will be coming soon but there's just so many to get through that it's taking us ages to find the time to go through them in the first place to decide which ones to use and which to leave on the DVDs but we're getting there. For that very reason the wedding blog that I set up has suffered as well as I never knew just how much stuff there was to organise. Now, however, I'm a fully fledged wedding planner though Nu (my wife) and her mum did most of the work! When the photos are online I'll update this post with the location of the photos.
The last reason is more of a consequence of the last two but is worth noting. Because of the house move and wedding I decided not to accept anymore work as I was already up to my eyes in Skill Swap Shop work from the wedding. Now, however, it's a new year and with the house move and wedding behind me I'm ready and raring to go with new work. So, my last reason for not updating the blog is that I've not been doing any work. For more information about me and my work and what I can do for you, please have a look through Clear January and get in touch with me with your requirements so we can talk them through.
Posted by Mark at 10:23 AM | Permalink | 0 comments | links to this post
Clear January have just finished work on a project with a very short deadline. In just over a week I designed and built the HinidiClasses.co.uk website for the Hindu Cultural Society (Slough).
The Hindu Cultural Society (Slough) wanted a website to promote their work in teaching Hindi in the area as well as other centres up and down the country they are affiliated with through the Hindi Samiti. The secondary aim of the site was to be scalable in the future to allow it be potentially become a website that would cover the needs of all the Hindi teaching centres all over the country.
The process worked really smoothly with the client creating all all the content in advance, Clear Jauary creating wireframes/scamps from that content and then I moved into Photoshop so get my thoughts from my head and onto a blank starting document. From there I moved into Dreamweaver to cut the design up using standards compliant, valid XHTML and CSS . Just like a project should go.
Visit HinidiClasses.co.uk.
Labels: classes, code, design, family, hindi, portfolio, teach, website
Posted by Mark at 2:35 PM | Permalink | 0 comments | links to this post
Although I dislike the logo, they keep banging on about it not necessarily being a logo, but more of a brand. A brand is always more than the sum of what you can see in the logo and as Sir Sebastian Coe says it's trying to engage with the youth of the country and London. In that respect I think that it's trying too hard in that it's very obvious looking at it that those shapes and colours are in fashion with the youth of the moment. In five years time those people attracted to that style will no doubt be the same people repulsed by it's then uncool colour palette and silly sharp edges.
Who's to say that they know this will happen and as either a get out clause or an acceptance of the fact, they have said openly that the logo will evolve almost saying we're trying to get today's youth on side so that they can evangelise the youth to come that being involved in the this project is a good thing. So in that respect it's a very clever idea/brand to have developed.
Remember as well that the people in charge of this project, the client, are people that would have wanted a say in what the logo looked like and what it stood for and we all know that the client isn't always right. The project took a year. That wouldn't have all been development and thought process time, that would have been meetings, meetings, meetings, everyone having their say and in the end the concept that Wolf Olins may have come up with could well be now so diluted that it's ended up being as obvious as it is now.
The problem is that they've not explained why and where they've come from to get to the design they've put together so people are taking and making their own opinions of it with regards to the immediate youth/cultural climate. Instead the spokespeople have merely tried to defend the logo showing that they don't know what's going on with it either. There should almost have been a separate microsite devoted to the logo and the brand so that they could convey the message of what it's all about through interaction, video, interviews, funky design and a good user experience. With that people wouldn't have to make their own minds up, they could simply be told what to think. That would have solved this whole issue and if there's one thing the government like to do it's tell us what to think, but that's another story (blog entry).
A quick jolly over to Wolf Olins' website shows they don't want to tell people what it's about/don't know what it's about/or are just damn creative if you don't understand it then you don't deserve to look at it anyway.
So, what do I make of it? I don't like it visually but if I'm right about it then I like the concept/brand. I just think it could have been executed better as a project. I just feel a little sorry for the guys at Wolf Olins if they don't appreciate paradies because they're going to be coming thick and fast.
Labels: brand, debate, design, logo, olympics
Posted by Mark at 12:39 PM | Permalink | 0 comments | links to this post
Today sees Clear January back online after a couple of days of up and down hosting problems as I've moved it over to a better supported server a little closer to home as well. It's now in the capable hands of Alchemy Systems and is being managed by my good friend Chris of Cold In England.
Cheers guys!
Posted by Mark at 9:24 AM | Permalink | 0 comments | links to this post
What Apple acheived with the iPod's UI was brilliant; a UI that had never been seen before. The iPod didn't do anything it didn't need to and it did it with just 4 physical controls. These controls were multi-purpose and intuative. Lists were managed via the scroll wheel, selection by the central click button, getting back to the menu through the menu button and going backwards a step through the back button. Simple, elegant, thoughtful design giving the feeling that the software was designed before the UI of the physical device - the best way. The iPhone takes these same principles along with Apple's wonderful OS design skills and the result is one of almost perfect flow.
The idea is the same as the guys over at 37Signals preach (and I'm a massive fan of as well) - the idea that less is more and instead of thinking about what more you can add to an interface, you should be thinking what more can I take out. Where this line blurs is with the iPhone. You could argue that the iPhone doesn't need to play MP3s, take pictures or browse the net but as with most things the youth of the world are showing us the way the world should (and is) going. The 13-18 bracket is an Internet generation that requires more than just a mobile phone with silly ringtones, they want video, social networking, texting, music and a good camera!
So people are more and more wanting all their media in one place. Gone are the days of people having numerous remote controls for their electrical products, they want one remote that does everything. The idea with media is the same. In a world where time is ever more money consumers are demanding things faster and all in one place and with pretty much everyone accessing the Internet everyday now taking the capabilities of your PC/MAC away with you when you leave your desk is becoming a massive requirement.
So where does this leave the state of the UI of the iPhone? The flow between the different tasks a user can perform on the device is as flow should be smooth and seemless. How does it acheive this? Navigation? Animation? Easy access to key areas? Well, all of those things really; the navigation altough traditional in appearance means that all mobile phone users will understand how to use it straight away and new users (of which you're not going to get many buying this product) will be able to pick it up with a couple of minutes playing time.
Apple have designed the interface to give a feeling that you're not performing different tasks - you're just communicating. This is the key to the flow. When you pick up the iPhone you're presented with the usual navigation options SMS, Calendar, photos etc with the device types at the bottom of the huge screen. From there you can launch off to take a picture, play a song, check your calendar or call a friend and when you're done, the only physical button, the "home" button brings you back to the root navigational page.
I can't say it's genius because it's like all great design, it's just common sense. I say common sense because it's designed like something should be; simple and elegant. If I was to sum up the Apple brand I'd use the same two words but that's a whole new post that I'll save for next time.
Labels: apple, application, design, iphone, mobile, user interfaces
Posted by Mark at 9:00 AM | Permalink | 0 comments | links to this post