Entries from May, 2009.

Google Wave will move our industry

Are you a designer? A web or tech geek? You have no excuse to avoid watching the introduction of Google Wave. To quote my good friend Matt Lohkamp, “just watch the first 15 minutes, then see if you can stop.”

At least two of my presentations (and a fair amount of my college lectures) have included the assertion that the web is still in an early, pupa-like stage. Email is a classic example of this: an impressively prevalent new media standard based almost entirely on the constraints of dead wood pulp traversing the globe on planes, trains and automobiles.

Wave excites me because it sheds those pre-conceived notions of written communication in order to take advantage of the web’s unique strengths. It is truly an infinite canvas project at heart, free from the bindings of “messages” and “inboxes.” In the spirit of Google’s flagship search product, Wave gets out of the way. It allows us to simply talk to each other.

ptaAs amazing, fluid and instantaneous as the default interface appears to be, the commitment to introduce Wave as an open standard is a far greater and more important statement. Google’s first level of ubiquity came with their efficient, fast and relevant search. They pushed it further with the introduction of extensible services which continue to organize our information in increasingly intuitive and exciting ways. I am truly impressed at the level of objectivity and foresight required to acknowledge the only barrier between them and world domination: themselves.

I’ve often heard that the increasing prevalance of Facebook and MySpace messaging may reveal email’s successor, but we may have failed to see the forest through the trees. The future is a standard of communication that exists in and apart from all our communication services, that accomodates our Grandma’s desire to share photos with the same appropriateness as our IT manager’s requirement of easily-managed, secure and efficient collaboration tools.

I normally reserve judgment of a product until I’ve used it myself, and I realize this entry must have an air of naiveté, but I can’t help it! For all my hyperbole, I confess to being an email codger who relies on a combination of Mozilla Thunderbird and Gmail born from a distrust of pure cloud communication. Fifteen minutes into this presentation, I was ready to abandon all of that.

The truth is, I want to be using Wave right now. Will you join me later this year?

(Apologies to Engadget for the movie reference.)

WebVisions Epilogue (Slides, comics and more!)

Thanks to everyone who attended the Graphic Storytelling in New Media session at this week’s WebVisions conference. I couldn’t have asked for a better audience, both in the presentation’s reception and the thought-provoking Q&A that followed.

Attendees requested that I post the session’s slides with links to the comics I talked about. You deserve no less!

The Presentation

My slides are very visual, with nary a bullet point in sight. I’ve been told the session was recorded and will be available as a podcast; until then, these might be confusing out of context. I’ll update this post with a link to the audio when it becomes available.

Linkage

Here are the best links I could find for the comics I mentioned, in order of appearance.

Warning: Many of these titles are not recommended for younger readers. Explore at your own risk!

Man, that’s a lot of comics! You can find my webcomics work in the extras section of this site.  Stan the Cat Goes Nuts!, Blip, Plod and Future Tale explore some of the infinite canvas techniques we discussed.

If you’re looking for comics in Portland, I would highly recommend the stores Floating World and Excalibur.

Other Stuff

I had a blast being interviewed on Strange Love Live. Cami, Kelly and Dr. Normal were all incredibly nice, and the tone was very relaxed and conversational. Allegedly, my interview exists somewhere in one of the two videos featured here, but my scrubbing did not reveal it. If you manage to unearth it, please post the timestamp in the comments!

Portwiture did not win the Mashup or Peoples’ Choice WebVisionary Awards. Luckily, we lost to a very capable adversary: the wonderful Twitter emotionscape-mapping Twendz. Congratulations to Waggener Edstrom for the double win!

img_0179The evening was not without it’s victories. Mallory and I had the chance to hang with Bram Pitoyo, Jason Grigsby, Amber Case and Matt Allen, which is always a good time. But perhaps most geektastic for me was finally getting to meet Dave Allen!

Dave’s an undeniably cool guy. He’s responsible for the excellent music and MP3 site Pampelmoose and the Director of Insights & Media at the always-impressive Nemo Design. But most importantly to me, Dave helped craft some of my favorite rock albums as the bass player for the seminal post-punk band Gang of Four. His thumping, primal sound is mimicked constantly by contemporary bands; it was thrilling to meet the man behind it, as evidenced by my goofy grin in the photo!

Your turn!

Did you attend the presentation? Jill Bruhn said it was her favorite part of WebVisions. Julie Cabinaw thought I was passionate, but wasn’t sure what to take from it. What’d you think? Better yet, what comics, film, music, art or web sites have moved you? Sound off in the comments!

Portwiture is up for a WebVisionary award

wva09I’m pleased to announce that my Twitter/Flickr visualization app Portwiture is a WebVisionary Awards finalist in the “Mashup” category!

I hope you’ll join me at the Baghdad Theater on Thursday, May 21st at 7:00pm for the free event. There’s even more to experience than Portwiture on the silver screen:

From virals and mashups to web apps and advertising, the Webvisionary Awards recognizes outstanding achievement in website design.

The event features videos and PowerPoint Karaoke, without long winded acceptance speeches. It’s an evening of fun with the big names in digital media, including host Ian Karmel (of The Groundlings improv group) and DJ Dave Allen (of Gang of Four). This is a free event that is open to the public (no minors).

The awards are judged each year by a cadre of visionary designers, technologists, strategists and other industry experts. Judges for 2009 include Lynne d Johnson, Jeffrey Veen, Molly Holzschlag, Brad Johnson, Indi Young, Roger Black and David Verba.

Visit Upcoming for more info and to RSVP for the event. If you’re also attending WebVisions, don’t forget to catch my presentation Graphic Storytelling in New Media at 2:45pm that same afternoon. I chatted with Stephanie Wagner about the presentation and Portwiture earlier this week on Blog Talk Radio.

Last year, my Flash physics game Ramps took home the WebVisionary Award for “Best Game.” Will my robot trophy learn to self-replicate this Thursday? Only one way to find out!

Who doesn’t like Sunday funnies?

Panel from ShamanIn addition to some minor tweaks to this site’s journal section, I’m happy to add five more webcomics to extras. They include:

  • Seashore Story, a mini-comic I drew and printed up and gave out at a Stumptown Comics show a couple of years ago. I tried to challenge myself to never repeat the same facial expression twice, which was a lot of fun. This is the first time it’s been reproduced online.
  • Shaman started as a storyboarding exercise, but I liked it enough to add color. One of my favorite comics, this was a blast to create.
  • Plod was a submission to both the Modern Tales and Serializer professional webcomics sites. While some interest was expressed, I still had a lot to learn. It was essentially a love letter to The Maxx and Krazy Kat.
  • George the Elf is my attempt at a Christmas story. I don’t know what it says about my brain that it came out so whacked.
  • I Am a Face goes way back. It was my first webcomic. I normally don’t like resurrecting work this old and this unpolished, but it’s the only comic I’ve had multiple people request to post anew. Take it as an artifact of a younger, simpler Tyler.
I hope you enjoy them!

Windows 7 Impressions (It’s a keeper!)

My Windows 7 desktopI’m an operating system geek. I find the challenge of designing environments that must facilitate all kinds of unpredictable, complex and varied interaction intensely intriguing. I test drive way too many Linux distributions to be healthy, and I happily alternate between Windows XP, Vista, Mac OS X and Ubuntu on an almost daily basis.

So it’s no surprise that when Microsoft announced their Windows 7 Release Candidate wouldn’t be crippled until March of next year, I was on it. And after a few days’ use, I’m happy to suggest a new slogan for Microsoft’s Redmond overlords:

Windows 7: Seriously, it doesn’t suck this time

And I mean it! Windows 7 is actually quite nice to use. To give it a good stress test, I installed it on my Lenovo X61 Tablet. If this operating system can handle the tablet features, fingerprint scanner, screen rotation and proprietary ThinkPad buttons, I figure it can handle just about everything.

I initially encountered some driver/software compatibility weirdness with a fresh installation, but upgrading from Vista did the trick and everything worked flawlessly thereafter. If you’re using a machine that requires a lot of system-specific drivers, I highly recommend upgrading over a clean install until vendors introduce explicit Windows 7 support.

The Good

Performance! Startup time is now reasonable, and my PC has around 250mb more RAM available at startup than in Vista. Everything is perceptibly snappier and more responsive.

The redesigned taskbar came together beautifully. It combines the simplicity and customization of the Mac OS X dock with the emphasis on window negotiation that was always Windows’ strong suit.

Window 7's taskbar, thumbail and "peek" featuresSpeaking of window negotiation, Microsoft really excelled in this area. You can still click icons in the taskbar (now simplified into large, dock-like icons), but the addition of quick, clickable thumbnails fanning out from the encompassing symbol has sweetened the deal. Furthermore, a feature called “Aero Peek” allows you to hover over any thumbnail to see that window full size. It may sound superfluous, but in execution it’s very natural, only taking effect if you linger a moment longer than usual. You can also close any window from this preview, allowing you to clean house swiftly and easily.

The windows themselves now support several gestures which eventually become second nature. Shaking a window will cause all other windows to minimize; shaking again will restore them. Drag any window to the left or right and it will “snap” to the edge and resize to 50% of your display, while dragging to the top will maximize. Keyboard junkies can take advantage of the same features by tapping Win+Right, Win+Left and Win+Up. Even cooler, all windows remember their previous size and position when you’re done snapping them. I found these shortcuts extremely useful for tasks that required a lot of drag-and-drop, or when I had to refer to a web page while writing source code in a text editor.

Small Windows 7 taskbar and improved start menuThe user interface has been greatly streamlined. The “Shut Down” button does what it’s supposed to this time around (avoiding the much-maligned “Sleep” debacle of yesteryear), all third-party system tray icons are hidden by default, even the black gradient behind Vista’s sidebar has been removed. The Aero Glass theme no longer blackens when windows are maximized, allowing your desktop wallpaper to “theme” your experience by shining through every aspect of what you do. It’s as superfluous as ever, but the success of the taskbar’s new transparency versus that of the Leopard menu bar is finally debatable. Furthermore, customization options are rich; tweaking the taskbar to use smaller icons (or even act more like Vista) is a straightforward affair.

Tablet features have been improved, with the virtual keyboard/handwriting dialog (which usually “docks” to the left-hand side of the display) disappearing entirely when you aren’t using a tablet input device. Handwriting has become more sophisticated, with shorthand supported for joining words or deleting characters.

Windows 7 introduces “Libraries,” each a virtual folder used to aggregate similar files regardless of their actual location. If I wanted to be able to access my Dropbox music directory in tandem with my iTunes Music directory, I would simply include it’s location in the Music Library settings and “voila!” One virtual location for all my music, no shuffling of files or hacking required, easy as pie.

Because Windows 7 is essentially a souped-up Vista under the hood, compatibility is impressive. I was able to install and use all the applications I’ve been accustomed to (including the Adobe CS4 suite, Corel Painter X, Firefox and Office 2007) without any significant issues. The only oddity I’ve witnessed so far would be that Adobe AIR apps cause the taskbar to flicker on first run, a minor issue.

The Bad

Windows 7, regardless of the hype it’s received so far, is still a lot like Vista. I would conservatively say that 90% of the interface is close to identical. As someone who felt Vista was a worthy upgrade soured by a laundry list of perceptible obstacles, this doesn’t bother me. But if you were troubled by the Aero Glass theme, the redesigned Explorer, or the “Administrative Action” popups, you’ll find no relief in Windows 7.

win7_power-saverWhat I found most strange were the differences in the activiation of power plans. One of my favorite features in Vista was that it would intelligently switch between “High Performance” and “Power Saver” plans depending on whether or not my laptop was plugged in; the result was that I enjoyed roughly 6 hours of battery life on a full charge. While Windows 7 retains those plans, they seem to have killed this feature, requiring you to manually switch your plan. Needless to say, this gets extremely annoying if you alternate between the battery and power cord on a regular basis.

The Verdict

While only an evolutionary step from Vista, Windows 7 manages to expose many of the best features of it’s predecessor by streamlining the experience and removing obstacles. The result is an operating system which performs with the strength of two consecutive versions. Those anticipating Microsoft’s answer to the unity and elegance of Apple’s OS X will likely still be disappointed; Windows 7 still feels Windows-y. But if the power plan issue is fixed, and if users embrace this operating system with greater enthusiasm than they had for Vista, I predict this will be received as the best version of Windows yet.

Now if they could only streamline that product version nonsense

Notes