Categories
Editorial

Focus on the art

I read an interesting article by Tobias S. Buckell on the truth about making a living as an author. I’m not an author but pretty much all my income comes from creative arts, mainly photography, and what he has to say rings true to me too:

I’m playing the long game. And maybe I don’t know what I’m doing, I’m pretty open to that, but I’m always happy to report on what’s going on. Each successful career I’ve seen, though, requires a ton of hard work, and many people I see trying any method with a focus on shiny and new and ‘beating’ some system often flame out and fall away. Lots of people who’re doing the right thing and working hard flame and fall away too.

Making a living off art is hard.

But that isn’t a sexy sell.

That isn’t to say you should give up. Fuck that. But I am going to say: get ready to work, don’t expect riches. Focus hard on the art.

And pay attention to those charts and adjust your expectations accordingly.

I’ve taken some hard knocks and setbacks in my pursuit of a photography career but these words are valuable – keep working hard, keep plugging away, focus on the *art* first and foremost.

Source: Survivorship bias: why 90% of the advice about writing is bullshit right now
by Tobias S. Buckell

Categories
Editorial

CSS London Tube Map, by John Galantini

Over at Beautiful Pixels they’ve highlighted a remarkable CSS creation by freelance web developer John Galantini. He’s made a version of the iconic London Tube map using nothing but CSS, HTML and jQuery.

Check it out, it’s practically perfect in every way and a great example of what can be done in web code these days.

Categories
Editorial

Previously, on Arrested Development

Here at Chez My Glass Eye we’re massive Arrested Development fans (well, apart from that naff Season 3 storyline about Mr F and the crazy British girl, which I guess is why people say Season 3 was the weakest) so we’re very excited about the 4th season launching on Netflix this week (May 26th, 2013). Our Netflix sub has been renewed and we’ve started tucking in to House Of Cards and old AD eps while we wait.

In case you haven’t seen it yet, here’s the trailer for the new season:

If you’re new to the show, Arrested Development loves its running gags and that trailer is packed with them, but I didn’t really ‘get’ the opening at the airport. Is the gag that he’s at an airport? That the handle is hot? Something to do with the taxi driver? I guess I’m not as big a fan as I thought I was…

Enter NPR’s fantastic guide, Previously, On Arrested Development, which lists and brilliantly ties together every running gag from every episode of the show, cross-linked with the episodes each gag appears in and who they relate to. Go ahead and click a few, it’s all interactive and for fans of the show it’s fun finding stuff you might have missed, or even forgotten about.

And the airport gag in the trailer? It’s a reference to George Bluth’s Cornballer gadget, which causes third degree burns when people use it. Mother of God! It all makes sense now 🙂

Categories
Editorial

Juliette Garside’s clickbait Apple articles in The Guardian

In the last couple of days, the Guardian newspaper published two brilliant pieces by Juliette Garside about Apple, and why they’re going down the pan one way or another.

I say brilliant, I mean brilliantly trashy. Pure and utter click bait. And it worked, hundreds upon hundreds of comments piled in below the speculative, lazy bullshit and bollocks she spewed out onto the page. Brilliant for page hits, brilliant for advertising revenue for the Guardian.

This week I took Guardian Tech out of my bookmarks, they don’t need my eyeballs when they’re publishing that sort of crap. I prefer to read well-reasoned insight, not have my time wasted by clickbait. It’s why I avoid anything by Daniel Eran Dilger these days – life’s too short.

To be honest, after the Guardian’s resident Apple cheerleader published of Apple Maps "don’t worry – its very good", a pronouncement he based on having given it a bit of a go between his house and the Guardian offices and that’s all, I should have stopped reading their nonsense then.

Categories
Other

Creation, consumption & the ‘post-PC world’

I am getting frustrated with continuing arguments over whether the iPad, or tablets in general, are capable of ‘content creation’ or whether they are only good for ‘content consumption’; and what ‘post-PC world’ even means when PCs are still the most used device in professional computing.

The whole “is it any good for content creation?” question needs to be taken out back and quietly disposed of – for one thing because the answer is “Yes” (that’s why there’s so many text editors, photo editors, drawing apps and music apps available in the App Store), and for another thing because the question is a classic strawman, limiting respondents to a binary answer that doesn’t accommodate all the options.

iPads are, I would wager, largely bought by average members of the public. How many average members of the public ‘create content’ on any device at all, even on their desktops and laptops? Just because a lot of people don’t create content on the device does not by any means relegate it to being purely a consumption device by default, and yet that seems to be the argument so many critics subscribe to.

A much better question to ask, if we’re going to analyse how the iPad is used, is “how can it be used to assist you in your job or hobby?” or to spell it out, “how can it be used for things other than reading books, watching videos, listening to music, and other activities typically referred to as ‘consuming content’?

(And don’t get me started on the glibness of reducing the appreciation of an artists work into mere ‘consumption’ of their ‘content’ – I imagine the sorts of people who use the phrase willingly as soul-less shallow husks of humans. Just so you know.)

Off the top of my head, here’s a few that are neither creation nor consumption as usually defined in this argument:

  • using it as a teaching aid
  • making photo selects during a shoot
  • taking payment via Square
  • flogging wares on eBay
  • running a stocktake from a spreadsheet
  • using a reference book/app specific to your vocation (hello doctors and pilots!)

Why ask this question of tablets, anyway?

Let’s take an average multi-functional office in an average industry that doesn’t focus on creation (think ‘The Office’ if it helps) in which everyone uses a computer for variety of officey-things, such as analysing finances, making purchases, organising shift patterns, closing deals, chasing leads. Whatever. I don’t work in this (or any) office so I don’t have much experience, but you can’t tell me that everyone in that office that uses a computer in some way for their work would categorise everything that they do that isn’t ‘consumption’ as, by virtue of it being the only other option, ‘creation’. Their computer is a tool.

If you wouldn’t demonstrate a computer’s validity as a tool by asking “But can it do content creation?” why is it appropriate for a discussion of tablets?

Of course, just because you can do something work-related on a tablet doesn’t always mean you would want to. I could perform tweaks to my RAW photos on an iPad using Snapseed, but unless I need to in order to send a client a shot quickly, I’d rather just wait till I got home and put them through Lightroom due to the extra power, screen space, functionality and finesse of control.

Instead I use my iPad on a shoot to transfer photos, review them with the client and make selects there and then while still shooting. I’m not creating content with it in this instance but it’s still a valuable work tool and far more than the dumb consumption device it’s often made out to be purely because a sizeable segment of users do nothing else with it.

(I could do this on a MacBook Air and gain powerful on-site editing, but I rarely need the editing, it’s harder to pass around, and the client navigates it less intuitively without my guidance, so I don’t.)

The Post-PC World

That’s another phrase that’s getting everybody riled up for nothing, “the post-PC world” – it’s a currently-hot phrase often used by those looking for a zippy buzzword to tie their computing article to, but it’s been mis-appropriated or at least misunderstood ever since it was handed to them on a platter by some cunning tech man (Steve Jobs?) looking to neatly highlight the shift in computing trends towards tablet-like devices.

The way it’s being mis-used to portend the imminent death of the desktop or laptop is not how it was intended, in my opinion. It doesn’t mean we are in a ‘PC Is Dead’ world, because it’s clear the PC is not dead at all. It means we are in a world where PCs are no longer the only way to compute. Tablets, particularly iPads I guess because that’s all I really know, are computers that have adapted to a new way of using them: with our fingers. So are smartphones, frankly, in so far as they are computing devices that allow you to do computery stuff.

So ‘post PC world’ to me means ‘post All-Computer-Stuff-Must-Be-Done-On-A-Desktop-Or-Laptop world’, which clearly isn’t as slick.

Am I making any sense at all? I do to me, but sometimes I lose sight of what I’m saying as I spew it across the screen. Feel free to get involved in the comments.

(Test link to Skimlinks)