Archives:
Language

Whether spoken, signed or written, language is a beautiful thing.

“Visual Language for Designers”

Visual complexity is a paradox. On the one hand, complexity is a compelling feature known to capture a viewer’s attention and stimulate interest… On the other hand, complexity only arouses curiosity up to a point. When a visual is extremely complex, viewers may tend to avoid it altogether.

There are a lot of reasons why I really like Connie Malamed’s 2009 book, “Visual Language for Designers: Principles for Creating Graphics that People Understand.” Here are three:

1. Balance | The book balances examples of great design, explanations of core visual principles and informative bits on cognitive research about how the brain processes graphics. Some pieces you might be familiar with: Nicholas Felton‘s Annual Reports, the HistoryShots series, and Nigel Holmes‘ and Alberto Cairo‘s work all appear here. But a great strength of the book is in the mix of graphics projects you’ve almost certainly not seen before.

2. Context | But it’s not just about infographics. It’s not just about charts. It’s not just about data visualization. It’s not just about posters or maps or illustrations. The book clearly places each of those outputs into context by using specific projects as examples of a key design principle rather than sorting them by deliverable, or style, or date, or provenance or designer. Seeing each piece according to its best qualities is almost better than having an overall project case study. It helps make successes clear and repeatable.
Read more »

Posted by Bill Keaggy on Tuesday, September 14th, 2010 at 5:17 pm
Also published in Books, Data visualization, Graphic design, Infodesign & graphics, Mapping, Product design, Visual thinking | comments (2)



Business clichés visual find-it poster

In case you missed it, last month we sent out our 2009/2010 holiday greeting. Actually, it was more “greeting” than “holiday” — and maybe more “beating” than “greeting!” Why? because we went ahead and poked some fun at a lot of those empty business clichés that get thrown around in meetings, emails and corporate conversations.

So go ahead and download it, hang it up by the water cooler, leave it on someone’s desk… ;-)

Later this month we’ll be sending out an interactive PDF with all of the clichés identified and defined. Sign up for our email newsletter if you’d like to get a copy.

Happy new year, everyone!

Posted by Bill Keaggy on Thursday, January 7th, 2010 at 3:20 pm
Also published in Communications, Infodesign & graphics, Visual thinking, XPLANE news | comments (0)



Fight the Bull – Why Business People Speak Like Idiots

“If you think you smell something at work, there’s probably good reason — Bull has become the official language of business. Every day, we get bombarded by an endless stream of filtered, jargon-filled corporate speak, all of which makes it harder to get heard, harder to be authentic, and definitely harder to have fun. But it doesn’t have to be that way. The team that brought you the Clio Award-winning Bullfighter software is back with an entertaining, bare-knuckled guide to talking straight. Grab your cape and sharpen your sword. It’s time to fight the bull!” (Thanks Magda!)

Posted by Bill Keaggy on Friday, July 25th, 2008 at 7:37 am
Also published in Business issues, Meetings & office culture | Comments Off



“Marks and Meaning” a new book by XPLANE founder Dave Gray

“Marks and meaning is a work in progress; an evolving exploration of visual language, visual thinking and visual work practices by the founder and Chairman of XPLANE, the visual thinking company. An unfinished work, it’s a hybrid: part sketchbook, part textbook, part workbook, and continuously updated by the author, based on feedback and conversations with readers. This is version zero: the first version available to the public.”

Posted by Bill Keaggy on Friday, July 25th, 2008 at 7:36 am
Also published in Books, Communications, Random, Visual thinking, XPLANE news | Comments Off



Gene Weingarten – Yanks Thump Sox

“If you are like I, you are pretty sick of reading articles about how the financially-troubled newspaper industry is making desperation budget cutting moves: Downsizing its products, laying off staff, buying prostitutes for advertisers, and so forth. But believe me, you’d be even sicker of it if you were INSIDE a typical American newsroom these days, where it’s sometimes hard to hear over the 200 decibel background drone of human whining.

One frequent newsroom complaint is that they are cutting back drastically in the use of copyeditors. It’s true, but I for one am not complaining. I say good riddance.”

Posted by Bill Keaggy on Friday, June 27th, 2008 at 9:16 am
Also published in Journalism | Comments Off



Goodbye, cruel Word: A personal history of electronic writing

“For the first time, I no longer have a copy of Microsoft Word installed on either of my computers. That’s some change. I wrote my first two books, and many hundreds of articles, in Word. But I’m writing my third book in an inexpensive yet wonderful piece of Mac-only software written by a single person instead of a “business unit” at Redmond. Scoured of Word, my computers feel clean, refreshed, relieved of a hideous and malign burden. How did it come to this?”

Posted by Bill Keaggy on Tuesday, March 11th, 2008 at 8:36 am
Also published in Software & technology | Comments Off



The Alphabetizer

The Alphabetizer puts just about any list in alphabetical order with options to strip HTML, ignore case, make all lowercase, capitalize first word, remove duplicates, reverse list, randomize and/or ignore indefinite airticles.

Posted by Bill Keaggy on Tuesday, December 18th, 2007 at 12:00 pm
Also published in Web design & dev | Comments Off



How to Say Nothing in 500 Words

“Paul McHenry Roberts (1917-1967) taught college English for over twenty years, first at San Jose State College and later at Cornell University. He wrote numerous books on linguistics, including Understanding Grammar (1954), Patterns of English (1956), and Understanding English (1958).”

Posted by Bill Keaggy on Thursday, December 6th, 2007 at 10:33 am
Comments Off



English Pronunciation!?!

“If you can pronounce correctly every word in this poem, you will be speaking English better than 90% of the native English speakers in the world. After trying the verses, a Frenchman said he’d prefer six months of hard labour to reading six lines aloud. Try them yourself.”

Posted by Bill Keaggy on Thursday, October 18th, 2007 at 9:02 am
Comments Off



Yahoo! Design Innovation Team: I. you. he. she.

“This application example uses live questions from Yahoo! Answers to generate an overall, up-to-the-minute impression of people’s raw feelings and thoughts on the network. Typically such language visualization applications screen out common words, such as our Answers Cloud. When we look at such pronoun words and see how often they are used on Yahoo! Answers, an overall pattern of common meaning and usage emerges.”

Posted by Bill Keaggy on Monday, September 10th, 2007 at 10:03 am
Also published in Data visualization, Internet | Comments Off



Kronos video

Sample visual
Check out this video we made for Kronos to help celebrate International Women's Day, 2011. Learn more in this xBlog post or jump over to YouTube and watch it there.

Azure poster

Sample visual
XPLANE | Dachis Group developed a A vibrant, engaging poster showing how Microsoft Azure enables developers to run applications and store data on Microsoft servers. The poster recently took top honors in the American Business Awards.

Tweets & Flickrs