4/6/12

Design. Frist Round.

This is the first round of designs that have come out of this. There were ideas brought up in the last crit that this started to have the same air as Polititeens, which i don't want. It has the same conceptual path as polititeens and KCTV and other projects, but I still want this project to stand on its own. SO I'm moving away from this to make it its own.








Here is the first screen of a new direction that is pulling from an aesthetic of voting ballots and political elections. The aesthetic needs to be pushed a bit more, however. Right now it's mainly in the buttons that utilize the circles with a heavy stroke and a checkmark and an X inside of them.


Here is a link to a growing collection of visual inspiration to help me with this aesthetic direction.

3/9/12

Mid-semester Critique.

Mid Semester Presentation: Stance

Lots of work to do. New direction, better direction, more concise direction. Thanks for meeting with me Cady, you helped so damn much. I'm a bit behind right now, but I much more content with this direction.

3/2/12

Wireframes + Reliability Graphs.

Below is the small presentation given in class on friday, March 2nd. It goes over the latest infograph style and how it works. It then transitions into my three(ish) scenarios.
Degree Project. Wireframes + Reliability Graphs.


First, My Infographs
            So my search for the perfect infograph style continues as I work on my wireframes for my scenarios. The infographs have gone through many reimaginings since last friday, and have settled on a more direct approach visually.

This is the gradient I've been using for the infographs. Liberals are left-wing, conservatives are right-wing, so it makes sense to have the spectrum to go from liberal to conservative. The bars within this gradient are where the color is pulled for the infographs. There are 10 bars on each side, and one perfectly in the middle. This visualizes the article, journalist, or website's political stance.

I started out with the infographs on top, and it was then translated into the the one on bottom. The idea behind the one on the bottom is that the shape is trying to reach the outer perfect hexagon shape. Reaching that means you have 100% reliability. I enjoyed the curved infograph better, but I was having issues rendering it correctly, so I resorted to the angular one.

Above is a set of these infographs showing the range of possibilities within this system. The closer it got to the outer edge, the darker it got, the closer to the center, the lighter it got. There are a lot of factors shown within this infograph which makes it harder than a simple quick read. Plus, the angular shape wasn't that pleasing to the eye. So, I went back my initial infograph ideas to reevaluate what I had and to rethink the way this functioned.

So I went back to this idea that I ended with in the first round. They are visually reductive in comparison to the hexagon, but they hold just as much information within them as the hexagon infograph. Let's focus on the purple bar infograph. The idea is that the top bar is the visual mean of the set of bars below it. The faded bar in the middle is just the set of bars at the bottom overlaid onto each other. This style(the orange square functions this same way) is about size of the bar representing reliability. The thinness of the height if the bar, with its long, variegating width, makes it hard to place within any sort of context, which is why I made the square to try and fix this. I noticed the overlay on these two infographs which correlated a bit with the hexagon's idea of the darker/lighter color. They inspired this.

With this infograph style, the size and shape of the square will always stay the same, it's only the shade of the square that changes. The square on the right is the reliability rating of whatever it corresponds to. When you hover your mouse over the square, or tap your finger on it, the square on the left would appear in its place. The square on the left is what the one on the right is made of. The shade of the square on the right is the calculated mean of the bars on the left. This allows for a quick read of the shade of the square. The richer and fuller the color, the more reliable, therefor, the lighter and more washed out the color, the less reliable.

The top imade is a set of these overview infographs going from most reliable in the upper left-hand corner, to the least reliable in the lower right-hand corner. These squares correspond directly with the image below it and show what the overview squares are formed from. All of this allows for a quick initial read, and then a deeper dive into the content of the square.



The Scenarios
            I will leave the scenarios to exist in the presentation above. All of my scenarios run together to form one full use case, trying to cover the main parts of the website. It starts within the reliability website, here you get see activity happening within the website.The user clicks on "Graphs" and searches for immigration to find the most reliable article. It takes him to the article on the website. The user opens up the reliability plugin to rate and review the article. The user then opens up the article rating in the website to see a more in-depth look at the rating. They look at the sources, the website's rating, and then the reviews by the users. From here the user finds another user who posted a review that they like. The user goes to the other user's profile, looks over their profile and information, and ends up following them.

2/24/12

Finally, Visuals!

So, finally, this blog is has some visuals within it! (Yes, you're welcome Kidwell) This has been a long time coming, lots of research and thinking and understanding of this system. The three images below are my initial visualizations of all of the factors that go into giving an article, journalist, or website its rating. I like to think of these as visuals instead of infographs because they're very unclear and have ended up being used to show the factors that go into a rating, but not actually any content.
Articles, journalists, and websites are graded on the same criteria, the only thing that changes is what it is influenced by. With the article, it's rating is influenced by the journalist who wrote it and the website it was published on. The journalist has a stronger pull on the article's rating than the website becuase it is literally the journalist's written voice.
So it would make sense that the journalist's rate is affected by the articles they've written and the website(s) they write for. The article ratings has less of a pull on the journalist's than the website. The journalist may write hundreds of articles in a year, and as time progresses and they accumulate more articles, the better understanding of their writing reliability. As for the website, the journalist is a human embodiment of the website, so how the website is viewed is partially how the journalist is viewed.

As for the website, the content(articles) it is rated on is created by the journalist, so they both have direct influence over the rating of the website. Because the journalists are embodiments of the website, they really determine the overall rating of the website. It doesn't matter what the website set out to be/do, what matters is what it actually is doing.

How to Visualize this Clearly and Accurately
This was my first stab at showing this idea, a circular bar graph. All of the attributes that go into giving a piece its rating is on the same graph to help show they're interconnected. Sourrounding the main graph is the political stance of the piece, to better help show where it stands in relation to the reader.
With the first try, i realized that it didn't give an easy way to show a quick understanding of the rating the piece had. This was my next attempt to try and address this issue, something that has an easier first read that still allows for a deep dive into the content. The ideal shape in these graphs is either a perfect hexagon(left), or a perfect circle(right) The color is red because with this example the piece has a conservative slant to it. I liked this idea, but it was getting a bit confusing. This system is complex, and showing that complexity is key, but not confusingly. Confusing does not equal clear and accurate, if it's confusing, it could end up misrepresenting the content. 
Thsi graph above and the one below, are trying to help show reliability through color as well. The one above is just a jumble of color, but the one below is working on the idea of the less white, and the more color it has, the more reliable it is. That way, it's not jsut size, but also color to help get the initial idea across.
The graph above was just another style of the same circular grid. The two smaller blue ones were testing out what the shape would like without any defining factors, trying to find a shape that could easily convey "amount" of reliability.
Then I tried something different with this bar graph above. The bottom set of lines are all of the contributing factors to the rating of the piece. The middle shape is all of them overlaid to help find the mean of the ratings. The top bar is the mean of the bottom six bars combined. So with the individual ratings of 8, 12, 7, 2, 5,  and 9, the mean was found to be 7.2. This, if put with what the max size the bar could be, quickly shows its reliability. Possibly, when you hover over the bar, it could break apart to look like the middle bar to show where the mean was created from. The bottom set of bars would then allow for a deeper dive into the content. The two below this are just other shapes I considered, squares and circles. The bar graph works better in my mind because the height of the shape is always the same, it's only the width that changes. This allows for a quicker understanding. With the two below, comparing two squares with the same proportional sides, or circles that all look the same, rely on size only, and not shape.  This makes the initial reading slower, slower = not as good.
Colors of These Infographs?

Researching political colors, I found that historically, blue goes with conservative more than liberal. This stems back to the conservative party in the UK using blue. But the United States has very recently decided on red for conservative, blue for liberal. The Democrats recently revealed an all blue logo, and then the Republicans came out with an all red logo soon after.
            But does the red and blue have to be exactly red and blue? Can it be a blue/green and a red/orange? I don't know yet, I'm still playing around and doing research. But one thing I know is that people are not just blue or just red, they are very much purple. So one thing I want to have with this system is the ability to be somewhere in between red and blue, some form of purple.
            The color was chosen to help situate where the article/journalist/website is coming from, it gives a quicker understanding of the context this is in. For example, if there is a strong bias to the article and the shape has a red hue to it, it will be bias in favor of conservative.
Sooooo.... From Here?

Pick a direction for my infographs, both style, shape, and color. And start wireframing the app + plugin. This infograph system is at the very core of this idea, so this needs to be figured out ASAP.

2/17/12

How Does This System Work, You Ask?

The quick answer: A gradient. (of what? i'll get to that in a few words)
The real answer: I'm still working on it.

The Idea(s)
            From Polititeens, Taylor and I realized that nobody is straight blue or red, everyone is a shade of purple. With that project, we went with the straight red/blue, but with this, I want to be as accurate as possible. That's where the gradient comes into play, both conceptually and visually.
            The gradient, however, will be a multi-directional gradient affected by multiple factors. The ability to visualize where people stand in this platform is key to the success of the platform. Creating an icon/color/shape system to denote where people stand is the direction I'm heading in, but I'm still defining which factors are in the gradient. The main one that I know for sure will be in it is the liberal/conservative gradient, to give everyone a basis of where they are coming from. The other part of the gradient may have to do with the community involvement.
            To show what/who is reliable through the help of other people, you need to know who is reliable among the other people. Those who are seasoned veterans of the system(those using it correctly, constructively, and to it's fullest extent) will have a stronger pull within the community than someone who just started or someone who doesn't use it as constructively.
            But we can't forget that the most basic function of this community is to stay informed. That's why I want to create visualizations of everything within this community. Visualizations of people's stances, how the system works(why the users/articles/journalists/websites get the "rating" that it does), journalist + media outlet's stances, and anything else that needs clarification. I want to visualize this because this system is complex*. But these visualizations would be based and formed from written content/ratings/reviews that users can still access to help them dive deeper.




*visualization usually helps clarify information

2/10/12

This is What the Hell I'm Doing.

Degree Project Progress Presentation

Above is the progress presentation I gave on 2/6, amassing all of the work that I've done in relation to picking out my specific topic for my degree project. The path that I've chosen is down the idea of reliability in political news.
"With record amounts of content being pushed out, there needs to be a way to sort through all of the crap to find the gems. Because anyone can publish content, the general masses have no idea where or who the content is coming from, and this needs to change."
 With this project, and after giving this presentation, i realized that I'm walking a fine line about what I do and do not want to do. I'm not wanting to show that one article, journalist, or media outlet is King above all of the rest, or show which articles are 100% true. I'm wanting to help point out which sources are doing their research and talking about topics knowledgeably, and not just ranting about their opinions.

From here, I'm working on how this system would function and work for the next two weeks. Below is my timeline for this project.



BEGIN!

2/3/12

What the Hell Should This Project Actually Do?

"Trust Through Verification"


List of specifics that this app could do
(bold = most important ideas, italic = good ideas, regular = lesser, but still good ideas)

Show validity of information
Rate journalists, their writing, + their reliability/validity
Rate website's reliability/validity
Break the information bubble
Analyze data across websites
Show trends in information/topics (and address other info not being addressed)
Compare/Analyze websites together
Aggregate of a topic across multiple sources
Bring attention to other sides of the same topic
A tailorable experience

Suggest users articles and topics that they might be interested in
Make sense of the hundreds of news websites out there
Visualize information
Gain a well-rounded knowledge of topics

Make reading articles easier/better
Show related articles/supplemental information
Share thoughts on an article better
Add personal thoughts when sharing an article
See trends of what people are sharing
Bring more to the reading experience but not overwhelming
See what people are talking about on specific articles

Thoughts

In looking at everything that is out in the digital world, I realized, damn there's a lot of stuff that's already filling up the space. I did a lot of brainstorming (and a lot of running in circles) to figure out what specifically I wanted to do within the mass already out there. I met with good ol' Marty(in addition to you, Kidwell) to talk things through and get me back on track. I noticed while going through all of these ideas that validity and reliability came up multiple times and it made something Carolyn said when I had coffee with her pop into my mind.

She said that professional writers were frustrated with personal blog publishing platforms like Blogspot, Wordpress, Tumblr, etc, because it made writing harder for them. There are so many people out there publishing their thoughts and ideas and believe they're right, but there's a very big chance that they're not. Carolyn also mentioned that the day before Joe Paterno died, some random person at a news company tweeted that Paterno had died, when in fact he was still alive. The person who wrote the tweet wasn't anyone well-known in the journalist community, but because they tweeted the statement, Twitter exploded. But why? Why would Twitter explode over one comment one person makes who doesn't even necessarily look like they have the authority to make? Doesn't this example beg for a validity/reliability "meter", if you will? All of the people blogging about goings-on throughout the world can be just as unreliable, so shouldn't they have a validity/reliability "meter", too?

The digital world doesn't need yet another aggregator/RSS feed of news being published, or another damn sharing platform. More than ever, the internet needs help figuring out what specific content amid the hoards of other content is true and valid, and which journalists and media outlets are reliable and honest. So, I want to create an iPad app that helps users assess just that, the validity and reliability of journalists and media outlets. This would compare writers/media outlets/articles with one another and rate them on a list of qualifiers that help figure out their validity, with the added addition of users adding their own ratings and comments on them. All in search of the most reliable content in world overrun with uncited, unreliable, amateur journalists and media outlets.

shortlink: http://ianarthur.info/yd5x1f 

1/27/12

Almost Final Question + Initial Answers.

How can graphic design change how news is accessed and shared through the use of new and proposed technologies in today's world of strong interconnectivity?

Everything written online today is somehow connected to the rest of the internet. Either through links to sources, referencing other websites, related articles, or sharing tools. All news and articles online today automatically has a layer of social applied to it. But how can that social layer be rethought to be more encompassing and informative? It should definitely be easy, but not frictionless. Facebook's new frictionless sharing is also known as over-sharing. But I've already talked about that before. There are many different possibilities that this rethinking could go in. Let's try and cover as many as possible.
      First off, let's cover some of the ideas that I think should be in all of the possible directions. They should all be multi-platform. Just creating something for the computer, or just for the iPhone/Android, or just for the iPad/tablet is pretty stupid. More and more of us are owning multiple devices that can all access the internet and be used for social purposes. Embrace them all and get as much coverage out there as possible to make the app as useful as possible. Nowadays when I look for a program to use on my iPhone or Mac, I try and find something that is cross-platform to make it as integrated and useful in my life as possible. Even though the nature of the iPhone is a limited, controlled experience compared to the computer, I continually seek the ability to have as rich of an experience on my iPhone as I do on my computer(and sometimes, the other way around, ie TweetBot).
      Like the platform coverage, I also want the content within the app to be as all-encompassing as possible, too. There should be the possibility for the user to include whatever content they want in it. The users shouldn't be confined to only what the app can provide them, or restricted to only the websites that have RSS feeds. That's possibly where some proposed technologies will come into play to help achieve this idea of completely open information.
      Cool, okay, awesome, rad, sweet, that pretty much covers the overarching ideas I want in all of these directions. Now the concepts.
  1. Plugin
  2. RSS/News Reader App
  3. Frame
1. Plugin
One idea is a browser plugin for the computer, and then an app that functions pretty much the same on the iPhone/iPad. It's not necessarily a group-oriented idea, but it would be something that adds a new social layer to the user's regular web-browsing experience. It would allow the user to easily share stories and articles they liked. They could even put in a little snippet of why they liked the article so people know the user's opinion of things and why they chose to share it. This plugin would work with every single website out there because it's a part of the browser itself, and not apart of the website itself. That way, websites don't have to sign up, or add anything new to their setup, it's already there. It would encourage sharing with the other social groups already in existence and not ask anyone to sign up for a new social network. Making sharing as easy as possible, without ever getting close to frictionless sharing.

2. RSS/News Reader App
This would be a network of its own that users would have to join to be able to be a part of. Users could hook up any website they wanted to the website/app and not only be able to read the articles through the website, but also see a new layer of information that the website you're pulling from didn't necessarily tell you. It would could construct lists of the most viewed articles, the most shared, the most commented, etc. It would help give the users more of an idea of what's going on with the websites that they visit on a regular basis. It would help give them a more robust experience with more information, but not harder to take it. It may add a new layer of information, but this would all be in search of helping the users understand the content better, and understand the conversations going on. These statistics would also be created across all of the websites you have added to the app. It would put together all of the stats it created for each individual site and compare them together and find trends within them all, and point out the biggest news, most talked about. The larger the number of websites talking about a topic, the bigger and more relevant it is going to be.

3. Frame
This is essentially a mixture of the first two ideas. It would be much less tied to the actual websites, but still have the new, added layer of information about whats going on in the site. It was add a new meta layer of what people are talking about in relation to the articles and websites, where they're sharing them to and with, and what they're saying. There wouldn't necessarily have to be a new community set up with this. But plug in with Facebook or Twitter or something of the like. The meta feeds would help break the information bubble in all of these scenarios.


Some reflective thoughts about these three idea brainstorms:

All of these would be tailorable for the user, and also help them find content they are interested in, while also exposing them to new and different information that may or may not relate to anything they like. But it would be there to help them learn about what other people are talking about and going through. The more well-rounded a person is on the subject matters of the day, the better. (or at least in my mind it is)
            And really, all three of these initial ideas would have everything applied to them, except maybe the idea of the community. Not all ideas have the community, but everything talked about in the three ideas would pertain to all three ideas. The biggest difference is what form this will take, and how all-encompassing it's design and structure is. It goes from the least intrusive simple plugin, to the boldest RSS reader-type idea, where everything is in the app created, and the content is reformatted out of it's original form and into what the app(and user) decides it to look like.
            And all three of these should help make the information digestable. Not simpler or dumbed down, but create a new and easier way for people to take in the content. This should be about helping the users understand the content better.

shortlink: http://ianarthur.info/zURpgx 

I will most likely come back and alter/add/delete content to this post before the end of class at 10.40.

1/22/12

My Thoughts + Writings. Part 4. Trends.

There are so many other trends than the ones talked about in the blog post. These are just the ones that I picked out of my research and meetings with people. I will come back and edit and add to these trends when I come up with another one that is appropriate and relevant to this project.


**If anyone reads this has any other trends or concepts that I should look into, please let me know! I am always looking for input from other people, don't hesitate to leave me a comment with something you think I should look into, or even something that you think I'm completely wrong about. Feedback is always welcome from anyone and everyone.


News Microcycles
This is something new to my vocabulary. It talks about the cycle of how news changes. In a time when we only had newspapers, the cycle was much longer and slower because the stories could only update themselves as the new paper was published either later that same day or the next morning. Once radio, and then television, came into the picture, the news cycle drastically shrank with the immediacy of those two mediums. Breaking news was able to be pushed to the masses much faster when something big happened. Instead of having to wait until the end of the day or the next morning to hear how things had progressed in a story, they only had to wait a few hours. So by the end of the day, the masses' knowledge of goings-on was much more robust and the story completely altered from what it was that morning. Now that the internet is here and almost in every single corner of our worlds, that news cycle has shrunk even farther. Anyone can publish information on news and topics they find intriguing, and they do. Topics and events are reported on so much more in so many different ways that stories and trends get worn out quicker than ever. These cycles have turned into microcycles, and therefore are changing every few days rather than every few weeks.
            This microcycle idea applies to everything online, not just news. I just recently started seeing the "Shit ____ people say" meme and yesterday read an article saying it's already dead and people need to move on. It may have been going on for a while, but it just got big in the public's eye and everyone joined in. Because so many more people joined in, it was seen more often than ever before, which made it overexposed and will inevitably kill it off if it hasn't already.
            This is something that needs to be accounted for, the quickly changing topics, themes, and stories. It's already covered by "trending topics" and other such lists on websites like twitter and news sites. Buzzfeed.com is all about the current trends in social media. It talks about what's being talked about, and only that. If a topic dies in social media, it dies on their website. Up until very recently, the website, for the most part, was more like an aggregator of news and topics. But, they acquired Ben Smith, from Politico, to start writing their own articles on politics. Buzz Feed saw that their model of talking about the current trends was an ideal model to use for politics, especially when everything is exploding about the coming elections. This ever-changing landscape is the base for news sites today. How can that be addressed while keeping everything together and in sync.

Social
Of course social is a huge trend in everything now-a-days and it ain't goin' anywhere. Connecting and sharing with others is what the internet is turning into. People engaging with their family, friends, and followers. But even though this is one of the biggest trends today, it's getting a massive overhaul in the eyes of the masses.
            Sharing is good, but not over sharing. Almost every article on any website now comes with social sharing tools. This is very handy to have to help share news and articles with others, but user have to be careful. Facebook has quickly turned into the over-sharing capital of the internet. Facebook is turning sharing into something so seamless that people don't have to think about it, and it does it automatically. That seamless, automatic sharing turns sharing into white noise that everyone then starts to gloss over. No one actually cares to know every single article their friends on Facebook are reading over on The Times' website. Over-sharing isn't pretty ya'll, those Facebook pictures of you at age 18 holding a half-empty vodka bottle doesn't look too stellar. So, in that same respect, do you really want everyone to know every single article you read?
            It's sometimes smart to keep parts of your life unconnected from the rest. I just read an article over on GOOD about the porn industry. It was a really tasteful and well-written article about the goings-on in the straight porn world. But, except for telling everyone this just now, do I necessarily want that in my Facebook stream, the same one that my possible employers and teachers can see? Yes, it depends on the person, but probably not. Even something as simple as just reading an article about the porn industry can have negative consequences. In a poll about new years resolutions, 18% said that they want to share less via social media. Facebook completely goes against this want, and catapults them in the opposite direction without them even knowing. It's so seamless that many users never realize what's going on until a while later. Not. Good. Ya'll.

Tailorable
Tailorable is where it's at. Let the users choose what content they receive, how things are organized, etc. The more control over the experience they have, the more they will enjoy it, the more they will come back and eventually turn it into a routine/habit.
            Let them customize, but keep the brand shining through. It's good to let people customize their experience, and in some cases completely remove any signs of what it once was, i.e. wordpress, but that's not usually the case. Let the users have control over their experience until a certain point. You still want the brand that you've worked hard on to create to show through. Keep the customizability of the actual design of the program/app/website minimal or restrict it in a way that keeps it inside the design standards you've created.

What is Reliable?
In a world where everyone has the ability to write news and content, the true and reliable news needs to stand out. This can be done in a myriad of ways. Sources, links to well-established companies/organizations, research, etc. Any way to show the user that the content that is there is reliable and true is great. Just make sure it's there.
            Simply having a "nicely designed" website isn't good enough to make it credible.  I could spend the next year creating a bangin' website with an amazing design like no one has ever seen before, but then fill it with a load of bull shit. Good design doesn't mean jack if there are no sources or links to any proof. Showing sources and credibility means absolutely everything in today's world where everyone has turned into a writer and commentator of every little aspect of life.

shortlink: http://ianarthur.info/xGSwNE

My Thoughts + Writings. Part 3. iDevices vs Computers.

There are fundamental differences between the iPhone/iPad(iDevices) and the computer beyond the touchscreen/mouse difference. Yes, that makes designing for the three different platforms radically different. But, there are still other contributing factors that affect both the design as well as the overall experience of the different platforms.
  The first major difference is the open/closed filing system. My computer has a open filing system in that I have access to all of my files on this computer from the Finder. I can go to a file in the Finder and open it up in whatever program I want that can read it. I can also open up a program that I know can read that file, and load it from inside of the program. I can also see every script, image, and document that goes into running that same program in the Finder. Some Apple programs like iPhoto try to hide my photo files from me by putting them inside of the iPhoto app in my Applications folder. But I can right click the iPhoto app file and choose "Show Package Contents" and it will give me direct access to the files. All of this direct access lets me create the experience that I want pretty easily. And for a computer, that's what I want, something that I have strong control over and use how I choose. I interact with it for longer periods of time and more intensely and I expect it to be able to handle whatever I throw at it. The iDevices have a closed system that doesn't allow me direct access to my files. For example, I have to use the Photos app to access my photo files, and I have no easy way to get direct access to them. It's what makes the iDevices so simple and clutter free, but also much more limiting. This decision pretty much forces me, the user, to experience everything the way the designers intended. That's not to say it's wrong for them to do this, every aspect of the iPhone was created to be easy and fast to use. This is what makes interacting with iDevices so nice. With something that is so much smaller than a computer and intended for on-the-go use, simple makes sense, and it's what I want.
  This control over the experience on the iDevices continues into the actual design of everything, as well. Any computer, mac or otherwise, all has a design aesthetic to it. It always has, and always will. But that aesthetic doesn't ever really influence how a website is designed*. A website is completely separate from the computer, design and otherwise. There is somewhat of a visual language across websites in general, how things are layer out and identified. But why does it have to be how people are doing it? Can't it be changed up for the better? Rethought completely? iDevices are the complete opposite of the computer. Apps are programs running on the iDevice itself, and it's treated as such visually. Because the app takes over the entire screen, and that's the only thing the iDevice is running, it's become standard practice to design the app in the style of the iDevice. iDevices have a very specific visual language to them unlike any other OS, and apps tend to take this visual language and tweak it to fit their wants and needs. But this is something that I want to question and possibly change up.

*However, technically, a website doesn't fully correlate to an app on an iDevice, a program running on the computer would (ie, an app from the Mac App Store). But let's stick with website equaling an app, because that's pretty much the standard right now. However, Apple does seem to be attempting to turn the mac computer into the same closed system design of the iDevices.


shortlink: http://ianarthur.info/xlV3Vl 

1/21/12

My Thoughts + Writings. Part 2. What I Want to Accomplish.

As I've been typing all of this up, I'm constantly thinking about what already exists and how it can be built upon and made better. This seems to be what I am constantly defaulting to, simply by starting with whats already there. But that's not what I want to do, I want to rethink what all of this should look and act like. The iPad just came out at the beginning of 2010 and it's only the beginning of 2012, there is still so much ground to be covered with this new platform. And the same goes with the iPhone, it's been around since the summer of 2007, but that doesn't mean it still can't be improved upon. Why does a website have to look and act a certain way? I feel like my project in IA about redesigning USA Today's website was starting to question that. Something I will also touch upon in a later blog post is thinking about new technologies, ones that either replace or supplement the current technologies out in the world.
            There are many websites and apps that are already changing the interactive design field, but how can they influence something completely new? Flud has a unique form to its content and a fresh concept behind all of it, but I want to push it even more. Flipboard is a very unique app in that it questions how the user should interact with the app, and how the app should respond. But, it feels regressive in that it's informed by how we interact with newspapers or books (this isn't either). I want to learn from what they've done, and learn from their ideas and reasonings and create something new.
            I want to figure out a way that I can be actively progressive in my concept and design through being influenced by whats out there already. I want to push my ability to think ahead and create something speculative. In a world that is changing as fast as it is, the designer's ability to think progressively will be one of the best and handiest tools in their filing cabinets. That can only be done by researching and studying what has come before and figure out patterns within everything. I don't want to build upon with this project, I want to redefine. Yes, that's a huge statement, but if I put it out there, it gives me something to strive for. I need to be careful to not put those steps too high, I don't want face plant and make myself feel like I let me down. I know my strengths and weaknesses, and by keeping those in mind (and on paper) that should help me from face planting. At least I hope so.

shortlink: http://ianarthur.info/x1kece 

My Thoughts + Writings. Part 1. An Overview.

I've been doing a lot of writing about news and interactive design this past week. Today is Saturday, January 21st, and school scarily starts on Monday, January 23rd. So not much time left to prepare for classes, but the one class I will be (somewhat) prepared for is, hopefully, this class.
            Anything I do is plagued with OCD, and writing isn't an exception to those rules. In writing all of this down to bring my thoughts together, my brain constantly switched from topic to topic and made it hard to get everything down. I had a lot of ideas that all wanted to come out at once, I blame that on my stuttering. So I have a lot of ideas written down, some are much more flushed out than others, but that's fine in my mind. This is all here for me to get my ideas out of my head and parse them down into what I'm really wanting to do. And this is also for anyone who is interested to see where I started this entire project.
            Looking back through everything that I wrote about and still want to write about, I came up with a list of overarching topics that the majority of my writings/thoughts fell into. Those topics are as follows:
  1. What I Want to Accomplish
  2. iDevices vs Computers
  3. Inspiration (coming later in the process)
  4. Trends
  5. Reader or writer?
  6. Platform: iPad.
            I want to have covered as many ideas and parts to this project as possible before monday to make sure I have a nice, thorough understanding of everything. That way, any discussions that I have about this with any of my teachers will go well, and I will get the most out of them. Plus, I'm taking another 18 hour semester again, so the more work I get done before classes start, the better off I will be once everything really picks up.
            Instead of making this one huge-ass blog post, this will be split up into eight separate posts. This one, the six mentioned in the list above, and then an ever-growing list of links to articles that I have found (and will continue to find) to help inform all of this.

shortlink: http://ianarthur.info/yvi50c

1/13/12

Senior Presentation + Degree Project Question.

Senior Review + Degree Project Question

This was the presentation I gave to the faculty and students in the Graphic Design department of the Kansas City Art Institute on December 5, 2011. The main part of the presentation was a recap of my time in the graphic department. The last part was introducing the topic of my senior degree project. I proposed the following question:

How can graphic design change how news is reported and accessed through the use of new and proposed technologies and platforms in today’s world of strong interconnectivity?
 This question has been mulling about in my mind since then and I've been reading my fair share of articles and studying websites and apps. Everything from the physical newspaper to the newest social news apps have been going through my brain to figure out where the consumption of news/information is moving. I can't ignore past and current incarnations of news and information outlets, they will most definitely inform the future incarnations.

more blog posts to follow about initial ideas and thoughts before this semester starts up on january 23.