Whenever someone shows me their iPhone I'm always curious about what's on their home screen and what it may say about them.
Here's what I have lately.
Wonder what it says about me...stays in touch, loves reading and baseball, curious, surfs, tracks, and saves?
Here's the thing. My apps have to audition for the home screen.
Tell me about yourself...uh huh. How many clicks do you get? Are you a rookie that needs a trial run? How much distraction will you be? Are you seasonal? Will you make my life better or easier? Will you entertain me when I'm bored? You know, if I don't use you much you're off to join the jumble of apps on deeper screens? I'll have to separate you two, Camera and Clock, if you keep fighting with each other.
Here's my second screen.
There's a lot of pushing and shoving here to earn a spot on the home screen.
That Good icon will never make the home screen. Too loud. Just screaming to be buried. (It's actually my app to access my work e-mail, making it a good candidate for relegation to the heap.)
There's not a lot of special interests going on here because my phone really is about communication and usefulness, including the church stuff.
And, no, I haven't upgraded to 4.1 OS.
My husband did though and it screwed up a lot things...his wifi settings, and his Mail access and a few other things.
And, yes, I know you can group your apps into folders with the new OS, but now his phone is just a nondescript jumble of icons that all look the same...black with tiny dots of color representing the contents.
Indistinguishable.
You have to read the tiny labels under each group to know what's in it. It's no longer visual and easy to find the app you want.
Icons are powerful little colored gems that save space and create an identity that's easy to recognize. They are there when I need them without extra fuss. And I don't need reading glasses to navigate!
What does your home screen say about you?
e
Friday, October 22, 2010
Sunday, October 17, 2010
What Your Desk Says About You
My coworker sent this video to me...with a -hint-hint- wink.
These are all inspirational, but none of these are my work desk.
This is my desk.
My desk has a pile of paper 15" high that symbolizes the amount of work the team has done this year in creating and editing specifications for the next generation of Vanguard.com.
Sort of like those goal "thermometers" you see for fund-raising efforts.
But my pile of paper is symbolic of the constant change to standards and the effort it has taken to stay on top of them, not of reaching a lofty goal.
Necessary work, but hardly rewarding.
Standards are never done, never completely right, and never fully embraced or appreciated.
So I take satisfaction in that pile of paper, applaud myself and teammates as it grows, and will relish sending it to the recycle bin when I rotate off the project at the end of the year.
e
Credit | credit | credit | credit | credit | credit
Desk - Music and Sound Design from Aaron Trinder Film:Motion:Music on Vimeo.
Is your desk a state of mind or an actual place?
These are all inspirational, but none of these are my work desk.
This is my desk.
My desk has a pile of paper 15" high that symbolizes the amount of work the team has done this year in creating and editing specifications for the next generation of Vanguard.com.
Sort of like those goal "thermometers" you see for fund-raising efforts.
But my pile of paper is symbolic of the constant change to standards and the effort it has taken to stay on top of them, not of reaching a lofty goal.
Necessary work, but hardly rewarding.
Standards are never done, never completely right, and never fully embraced or appreciated.
So I take satisfaction in that pile of paper, applaud myself and teammates as it grows, and will relish sending it to the recycle bin when I rotate off the project at the end of the year.
e
Credit | credit | credit | credit | credit | credit
Saturday, October 9, 2010
The Art of Folding Paper
Stumbled upon this documentary on Netflix, Between the Folds. It's fascinating. I highly recommend seeing it.
Filmmaker Vanessa Gould takes you on a provocative odyssey into the mesmerizing world of modern origami, where artists and scientists use the ancient art form to craft works of delicate beauty and to model cutting-edge mathematical theories. Pushing the envelope of origami to include caricatured portraits and elaborate abstract designs, these experts examine how paper folding can reveal the profound connection between art, science and philosophy.It sparked a long-forgotten memory, lost in the necessity of day-t0-day demands of current circumstances.
I love math.
Few people know that about me.
It started with pop-up books. I remember when I was three years old, or four, sitting on the floor in the children's book section of a large department store, looking at the magic of a pop-up book, and closing my eyes, imagining what the shapes would look like if I took them off the page and laid them flat, and wondering if I could put it all back together to work again.
I loved the fun of learning math. I've loved solving those little puzzles of number logic since I was in elementary school first learning the rules of the game. So black and white. Either your solution was wrong or it was right. But rewarding when it was right. A game.
I remember one Jr. High math teacher, who fancied herself an inventor, who could explain an algebra problem in several different ways until nearly all the students understood, one way or another. We caught her enthusiasm for algebra and learned that it could be practical and not just theoretical.
Later in high school I found such a sense of accomplishment at completing a complex proof of a theorem, proving a truth through a series of logical steps, or explaining a complex trigonometry shape with a formula of numbers and letters. But these were always private victories because what girl brags about that to their friends. Not cool. Such a geek.
Then came a fascination with Tessalations, then fractals, and on to scherenschnitte (paper-cutting) and then quiltmaking. The folding, bending, reflecting, matching, and snipping and cutting, and then the recombining, repeating, rotating, seeing it come together in new and intricate and interesting ways.
Art and math.
Wanting to continue on in the same vein I chose Graphic Design as a career...art, and possibly beauty, explained mathematically through the Golden mean and the Fibonacci series and more. To take line and shape and make something beautiful and meaningful and useful. Visual explanations that communicate on several levels. And then came web design where math and code is what underlies some beautiful digital work.
Now today, I'm inspired by this documentary on Origami, and paper folding. Math can be explained through art. Art can be explained by math. The color, the feel of the paper, the old-fashioned work of hands...making something dimensional from a flat 2-dimensional plane.
Hmm, maybe it's time for a new hobby.
e
Photo credit
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