- Most Recent | Since 2004
- List View
- Archive
- June 22, 2006
US Pipe Interactive Calculators
June 22, 2006Read moreI recently did two interactive calculators for US Pipe & Foundry, a company that makes pipes and pipe fittings for the water works industry.
The two pieces I worked on are the MJ FIELD LOK® Time-Savings Calculator and the HDD with TR FLEX® Pipe Calculator; you can find them in US Pipe’s suite of online tools.
This is the kind of project I really enjoy, combining elements of information design in the context of an industry that I know nothing about. I love learning about infrastructure and process in all forms, particularly ones that are not readily discernable unless you’re paying attention. There is an entire waterworks system that is one of the everyday miracles of modern society, and we take it for granted.
If that isn’t interesting enough, US Pipe also does their marketing differently than what one might expect with respect to their industry. For example, US Pipe has a separate website for their MJ FIELD LOK® GASKETS, which are used to connect and restrain water pipes without the fuss of pouring concrete. Instead of drab tables and ugly photos (par for the course with most industrial B2B), there’s a slick Flash-based presentation stuffed with professionally art-directed photo assets, coordinated by a real creative agency. Who knew the pipe industry had a sense of humor? I find the combination of creative presentation and tangible benefit just awesome. YEAH!
So anyway, you can check out the MJ FIELD LOK® Time-Savings Calculator and the HDD with TR FLEX® Pipe Calculator in US Pipe’s suite of online tools. Pretty straightfoward stuff from a technical Flash perspective, but a lot of fun to make. I implemented this using the hybrid-movieclip approach, which is quite fast and flexible; wrapping some AS2 stuff on top made it a bit more convenient from the scripting side of things.
- June 21, 2006
Outstanding Web Cartoonists Choice Awards Nominees
June 21, 2006Read moreCool, a list of the nominees for the Web Cartoonists Choice Awards. A lot of titles I haven’t looked at…this would be an excellent way to lose a weekend :-)
- June 18, 2006
Sporadic Updates
June 18, 2006Read moreI’m starting a rather rushed project this week, and as such will not be posting very regularly at all. There are a few things on my mind, though…discuss amongst yourselves! :-)
- Values — On this recent post, a neat comment by Lauren Muney about living one’s life in “alignment with values” really struck a chord. “My Values” are something I hadn’t been thinking of…I’ve been on autopilot. Thanks Lauren! I’ve been thinking about what they are, and how I can live in alignment with them.
Principles — I have been rediscovering these after emailing a friend about a Libertarian candidate for Congress in Connecticutt. I read up on Libertarian views, and was reminded of some of my own deeply-held beliefs about what was important to me. I am thinking that principles and values are similar, but not quite the same.
Looking Forward — Reader Mark commented how he uses a carrot on a stick approach to get him to focus on getting things done. Reflecting on this, I realized that I don’t really have a whole lot that I look forward to, which took me completely by surprise. Perhaps this is why I’m so interested in motivation and finding a sense of purpose. I’m interested in lots of things, but they’ve all been missing something. Reader James commented that considering who one did tasks for is another way to look at it. Having people involved somewhere in the task mix seems to be the common motivator.
Secrets — Despite what I just wrote about looking forward to things, I had an insight recently: the world is a pretty neat place, and I’m ecstatic to be in it. The world and I have a secret deal with each other, that’s what it feels like.
Tasks — I went to sleep very late on Friday night and couldn’t sleep. As a result, my Saturday was pretty much blown, unable to focus and fuzzy headed. I also was feeling very unmotivated; my mind was saying “get up and work on something!” but my body was saying “sleeep”. An insight occured to me as I was crumpled on the couch: when faced with a task, my mental stance is either running-towards or running away. When I’m running away, I find something else to do in its place as an escape. When I can’t run away any more, I fall asleep. I am not sure what triggers this, but framing the behavior in this way gives me a new anti-procrastination visualization tool: face the task and run towards it. This works for me because I don’t like the idea of NOT facing something; I hadn’t realized I was doing this until today. If it’s a task that doesn’t have to be faced, then I shouldn’t bother doing it at all.
High School — My 20th year high school reunion is coming up, and I haven’t decided if I’ll go. It’ll be in San Francisco this October, since my high school is in Taiwan and the old campus technically doesn’t exist anymore. I enjoy watching movies and TV shows about High School, and seem to be on a High School comics reading kick, like the print Blue Monday (my sis, again, introduces me to this) and the Penny & Aggie (not quite as fun, but nicely drawn). I’m not sure WHY I find this stuff so fascinating. I suspect it’s partly because High School was different in Taiwan (being an international school in a non-English speaking city) than it was here in the US; when I moved back for college, I found that there were huge gaps in my cultural background that made it difficult for me to relate to people. I’m still filling them in. Today I had another thought: High School is one of those places where you don’t choose your community, and because of that the social environment shapes you. After High School, you’re pretty free to shape yourself by choosing a college and a major, then a job and a workplace. You have the ability to shape yourself by selecting your community, and there really are no restrictions on you, other than what you choose to put up with. You always have the choice. Right now, I’m living the choice to work independently, but I am starting to think I’ve gone too far in this direction. I need to reconnect with some kind of community and learn to navigate a new set of social conventions. Yup, it’s a weird thought.
<
p>Incidentally, some of you may have noticed the site went down on Friday. That’s because I forgot to renew my domain name registration. It’s funny how the domain name system takes a couple hours to take down the site, but 48 hours to come back up.
- June 17, 2006
Pixel Pushing Programs for My PC
June 17, 2006Read moreI wonder what pixel artists are using for image editors these days. Photoshop is a terrible pixel editor; it drives like a car with bad [tie-rod ends][tie] with water in the gas tank.
It looks like these are the contenders at the moment:
- Cosmigo ProMotion — modeled after the much-loved DeluxePaint package.
Ultimate Paint — another paint app, but says it uses the much-loved “brush paint” style of the old DeluxePaint package. Can you tell I love DeluxePaint?
ProPixel — another pixel app.
PxPaint — another DPaint clone, using .NET for Windows. Appears to be an open source project, but hasn’t been updated for a couple years.
<
p>Will check these out later.
- June 16, 2006
PixelHugger
June 16, 2006Read moreI followed a link to this one-button helicopter game via Penny Arcade, and then followed another link to Pixelhugger, the author. Delightful pixel graphics! Very clean. Very retro 8-bit. Makes me happy, because the PIXEL ARTS ARE STILL ALIVE.