Tag Archives: interactive

Surviving Your First Mobile Design Project

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Filed under Design Process, Mobile, Projects, Review

A few months ago I was approached by the Boston based social network Going.com, asking if I might be interested in helping to design and develop their first mobile application. Going.com is focused on letting users find interesting places and events, and connect with other users based on who is going where, and when. Since their core mechanic involves pushing users away from their computers, branching into the mobile world was their logical next step.

Let me start out by disclaiming that I had never designed anything for mobile. Ever. The closest that I had come to mobile was doing web interface design for the mobile start up Zingku a few years ago, back in the SMS days… before any graphical user interface was realistic for mobile devices.

So I had to sell myself to this potential client as honestly as possible. I know user experience design, I know graphical user interface design, and of course, I have used a mobile device plenty. Maybe it was my charm, more likely it was my ‘lower-than-normal-I’m-learning-this-as-we-go’ price quote, but they decided to let me take a crack at it.

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Critically Exploring Digital and Physical Reality

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Filed under Design Analysis, Projects

My essay on Perception and Digital art was recently displayed at the Aronson Gallery at Parsons School of Design. While the essay mostly explored criteria for the critical evaluation of artwork within rapidly evolving mediums, it led me to a project idea.

Aronson Gallery

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Perception and Digital Art

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Filed under Design Analysis

Art and technology have always influenced each other as artists respond to the evolving tools that are available to them. The only thing that has changed since the dawn of the information age is the rate at which technology is advancing. The side effect of this is that we start to see projects that have arguably been constructed purely because the possibility of their creation exists. As we transitioned into the digital era, the philosopher Marshall McLuhan famously said “the medium is the message,” which feels like a limiting assertion when more and more of today’s art is driven or inspired by the digital technology that defines it’s medium, rather than an idea outside of its own medium. As technology progresses exponentially, allowing ‘the medium to be the message’ is akin to allowing a representational painting to entirely describe ones understanding of the physical world around them. While a representational painting can provide an abstracted visual interpretation of the physical world, artists of the Neo-Concrete, Op-Art, and Space and Light Art movements (among others) have shown us that art is capable of providing more possibilities. Art is capable of providing us with insight into our actual perception of the world around us, rather than just an abstracted representation of it.

Digital Art seems to be at greater risk of becoming a pure demonstration of it’s own medium, as tools and processes become available faster than messages beyond ‘look at these new possibilities’ can be conceived by those with the means to execute them.

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The New Hope Exhibit - Geneva

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Filed under Projects

Saturday was the opening of The New Hope exhibit in Geneva, Switzerland, which I had the honor of doing a piece for with Hyperakt Design Group. After gaining international attention for an Obama poster designed by Deroy Peraza at Hyperakt, the studio was asked to do a full series inspired by Obama’s message of hope, to be exhibited at the Flux Laboratory in Geneva. I contributed a Flash-based interactive piece called Kids Vote 2008 which explores kids’ perspectives on the election through an interactive cloud of comments on the two presidential candidates. While the piece is currently being projected at the Flux Laboratory, it can also be experience online at:

http://www.kidsvote2008.us/

I was responsible for the interaction design and front end development of this piece, and with a two week deadline, was left with little time for sleep over the past two weeks. However, with the site live now, and on display in Geneva, all the hard work feels pretty good.

While it is a little too early to hear any direct feedback from the show in Geneva, Kids Vote 2008 has already started to get some attention around the web, with a “Fresh Picks” feature on the website Moluv, a mention on the Communication Arts website, and a blurb on E-Creative.net.

Check out the project, and let me know what you think.

UPDATE
Kids Vote 2008 was featured (briefly) on Swiss television last week

Also, Hyperakt has put up a flickr set of photos from the show in Geneva. Seems like people at the show responded well.