xBlog: The visual thinking weblog
31st August 2007

Idea Mapping Set

“This [Flickr] set contains Idea Maps collected by Jamie Nast, author of Idea Mapping.” (More on Idea Maps at Squidoo.)

posted in Visual thinking | Permalink | Comments Off

30th August 2007

Staying Motivated

“Whether your chosen medium is pictures or language, food or formulas, everyone has the capacity to be creative in their work. But we can often lose our motivation to create, making it difficult to stay focused and excited on a project. So how does one keep their creative well from drying up?”

posted in Creativity | Permalink | Comments Off

29th August 2007

XPLANE reprints Robert Horn’s classic book, “Visual Language”

This week, the newly formed XPLANE Press achieved its first milestone: The reprinting of Bob Horn’s classic book Visual Language. Horn’s book makes the case that visual language is truly an emerging international language, and – like all languages – it has an inherent order, syntax, and grammar that can be learned and applied. While the world of information design has come a long way in the 10 years since Visual Language was first published, the book’s core message remains relevant today.

Visual Language has been out of print for the last few years, but is now back on the market via the XPLANE store. We will soon be offering it on Amazon as well, where used copies have been selling for upwards of $100. Here’s more from XPLANE founder Dave Gray.

posted in Books, Language, Visual thinking, XPLANE | Permalink | Comments Off

28th August 2007

Pantone’s Missed Chance

Tim Bray: “Today I see, via John Gruber, that Pantone has been acquired by X-Rite. In 1995, I gave Pantone’s CEO some advice that might have made them a lot of money. He didn’t take it, but it’s an amusing story.”

posted in Color, Web graphics | Permalink | Comments Off

28th August 2007

BBC Guidelines for Personal Weblogs and Websites

“Blogging is a form of public conversation on the internet, in which BBC people may wish to take part.

When a blogger clearly identifies themselves as a BBC person and/or discusses their work, the BBC expects them to behave well when blogging, and in ways that are consistent with the BBC’s Editorial Values and policies.

Many bloggers, particularly in technical areas, use their personal blogs to discuss their BBC work in ways that benefit the BBC, and add to the “industry conversation”. These guidelines are not intended to restrict this, as long as confidential information is not revealed.”

posted in Weblogs | Permalink | Comments Off

28th August 2007

SWFAddress: Deep linking for Flash

“SWFAddress is a small script that sits on top of SWFObject and provides deep linking for Flash websites and applications. In other words it enables the Back, Forward and Reload buttons of the browser and creates unique URLs with page titles that can be sent over email or IM. SWFAddress uses the ExternalInterface functionality introduced in Flash Player 8 and comes with a technique that enables search engine indexing for deep Flash links.” (Thanks jonnymac!)

posted in Flash, Usability | Permalink | Comments Off

24th August 2007

HistoryShots

“We create informational graphics that tell stories about subjects, time periods and events. Our purpose is to inform and entertain you with intense content embedded in an elegant design.”

posted in History, Information graphics | Permalink | Comments Off

23rd August 2007

Content-Aware Image Sizing

“This video by Dr. Ariel Shamir shows off presentation on content-aware image sizing. It demonstrates a software application that resizes images in such a way that the content of the image is preserved intelligently.”

posted in Photography, Software/Hardware | Permalink | Comments Off

23rd August 2007

Transition from Visual Design to Interaction Design

“Over the past month at Planet Argon, I’ve been taking on more interaction design work. Mostly because there’s a gap to be filled with all the design work on our plate, but also because I said I was willing to take it on. Visual design to interaction design doesn’t seem like a huge transition on the surface (it’s all design right?), but it has really been a challenge.

Maybe I’m still hanging out in the web standards design blogosphere too much, but finding IxD & IA blogs to read have been few and far between. The ones I have found get updated once every 8 months or so. In an effort to spread the knowledge, here are some initial thoughts and experiences from an IxD n00b…” (Thanks Airbag!)

posted in Graphic design, Interaction design | Permalink | Comments Off

23rd August 2007

InfoVis Toolkit

“The InfoVis Toolkit is a Interactive Graphics Toolkit written in Java to ease the development of Information Visualization applications and components… The InfoVis Toolkit, as of version 0.9, implements nine (9) types of visualization: Scatter Plots, Time Series, Parallel Coordinates and Matrices for tables; Node-Link diagrams, Icicle trees and Treemaps for trees; Adjacency Matrices and Node-Link diagrams for graphs.”

posted in Data visualization, Software/Hardware | Permalink | Comments Off

23rd August 2007

Blueprint Grid CSS Generator

“This tool will help you generate more flexible versions of Blueprint’s grid.css and compressed.css and grid.png files. Whether you prefer 8, 10 or 16 columns in your design, this generator now enables you that flexibility with Blueprint.”

posted in CSS, Web design | Permalink | Comments Off

16th August 2007

Pixels Are The New Pies

“An interesting infographic trend: Square blocks of color are now being used to represent percentage-based statistics instead of the traditional pie chart.”

posted in Information graphics | Permalink | Comments Off

16th August 2007

The Road to Clarity

“‘So, what do you see?’ Martin Pietrucha I asked, turning around in the driver’s seat of his mint green Ford Taurus. It was a cold day in January, and we were parked in the middle of a mock highway set on the campus of Pennsylvania State University in State College. Pietrucha is a jovial, 51-year-old professor of highway engineering. His tone was buoyant as he nodded toward the edge of the oval stretch of road where two green-and-white signs leaned against a concrete barrier.

What I saw, Pietrucha knew, was what we all may see soon enough as we rush along America’s 46,871 miles of Interstate highways. What I saw was Clearview, the typeface that is poised to replace Highway Gothic, the standard that has been used on signs across the country for more than a half-century. Looking at a sign in Clearview after reading one in Highway Gothic is like putting on a new pair of reading glasses: there’s a sudden lightness, a noticeable crispness to the letters.”

posted in Travel, Typography | Permalink | Comments Off

13th August 2007

It will take more than a pair of creatives to get into this annual.

“Currently [Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary] does not recognize ‘concepting’ or ‘to concept’ as a proper mode of speech. Seeing as this is a process that we, as creatives, use on a daily basis, I aim to have Merriam-Webster acknowledge our creative methods and make an addition to their upcoming edition.”

posted in Language | Permalink | Comments Off

13th August 2007

Are Big Ad Agencies So Clueless That Corporations Should Avoid Them?

“I’ve been spending much time with ad agencies and focus groups lately and can only conclude that–with some exceptions–they are mostly clueless. Three years ago they had a traditional knowledge about consumers but didn’t know much about social networking and web 2.0 technology. Today, most of them don’t know about consumers and don’t know much about social networking and web 2.0 technology either. Mainstream ad agencies have one refrain–one message to their corporate clients–do social networking, do social networking, do social networking.”

posted in Advertising, Internet | Permalink | Comments Off