design / research

This has been a very strange week. I've heard rumours that I'm on vacation but I'm too busy working on web projects to notice. I've been revisiting some writing from earlier in the year which has inspired a week-long obsession with all things GUI. To that end, I thought I'd fill the bloghole with a trio of interface related links. What follows is an assortment of material that I've been looking at recently - make of it what you will.
Igor Eskinja's Untitled (pictured above) is a play on the rank and file of desktop space. I love the ghostly reflections cast by his floating folders and the tension of the trash can interrupting the base of that wall as if to remind the viewer "this is indeed perspectival space". Eskinja has a real knack for creating illusionary scenes and his archives contain some very clever work. [via vvork]
Long before the world of pre-fab, modular video mixing software there was Jitter, and before that there was nato+0.55. A few months ago, Create Digital Motion contributor Vade posted the the above video and a brief summary of the legacy of nato+0.55. His reading of the software is bang on and the idiosyncratic interface and aesthetic of this tool are still relevant a decade later.
To continue our interface nostalgia, this promotional video for the Xerox Star has recently been making the rounds. Introduced in 1981, the Star was the first commercial application of the "desktop" computing metaphor. The Star, and the earlier Alto were key influences of Apple's Macintosh and all personal computing thereafter. Watching this video drives home the point that the workspace of the digital desktop really hasn't changed that much over the last quarter century. [via JS Sheffield]
Hey G. You might appreciate
Hey G. You might appreciate the artist showing at the next dbot, particularly Kristen and Atom:
Kristen Peterson
Drawing Research
Atom Deguire
ps -- why does your anti-spam filter include a math question? It's not like computers are any good at.. I don't know.. MATH. :)
SPAM detritus
Links noted! I haven't made it out to Dbot in far too long so I will circle the next date on my calender. As for the Spam question, if you create a user account you won't have to answer the difficult math challenges. If you want to know why it is there, start a blog, get a bit of traffic, and then spend hours of your time combing through your SPAM filter trying to find *actual* comments and trackbacks. The Captcha process can defeat most scripts and bots. The amount of SPAM that even a modest weblog like this gets bombarded by is astounding.
Completely unrelated - if you are in the market for any penis extension supplements or World of Warcraft Gold Farming operations, just let me know and I'll sort you out..
i love world of war craft extensions..
I know, I know. I just find it funny that we're math to defeat spam bots.
1 + 3 = 4!
I am human!