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iWork Smarter, not Harder (Part II)

iWork

In iWork Smarter, not Harder I mainly talked about Pages, but the iWork suite also consists of Keynote and Numbers.

Keynote is for giving presentations, and if you’ve ever used PowerPoint, well, it’s like that, except you don’t want to kill yourself while you are using it. I mean, I’m sure there are people who enjoy using PowerPoint. I think they are called masochists. (I kid, I kid!)

PowerPoint, you’re fine for the Windows-wielding corporate drones of the world. Make your charts & graphs showing projections for the 4th fiscal quarter… someone has to do it. Is it my background as a designer that makes me feel like Keynote “gets it” where PowerPoint does not? I don’t know… but I actually like using Keynote for building presentations. In the olden days (2006) I’d probably be all hellbent on using S5 or some (web-)standards based presentation thingy, to avoid using a PDF, or a PowerPoint file, or some other thing I deemed “evil” or such… but I guess I’ve mellowed a bit… and, I like Keynote.

As for Numbers, I have less use for it, but appreciate the fact that I have a spreadsheet application that runs on my own computer instead of the cloud, and feels cleaner and functions better than the offerings of NeoOffice or OpenOffice. I tend to use spreadsheets as spreadsheets and not databases, as many people do, so I don’t use it a lot. I did find that making charts & graphs was pretty damn easy. I never knew how to make a damn chart in Excel, but Numbers was intuitive. In the olden days (2004) I’d probably be all hellbent on writing some Perl code to generate an SVG file if I needed a graph. It is nice to have Numbers around as an option though.

So while I’m thankful for these useful tools, I’m still a fan of writing HTML for presentations, and (being able to) write code to generate charts & graphs. I mean, choice is a good thing… right?

See Also: iWork Smarter, not Harder (Part I)

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To: Dad (Cat)

To: Dad (Cat)

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Madeline drew this for me… we’re not sure when, maybe a few years ago, but we just found it in a stack of papers, and she asked me to “save it” so I told her I would save a digital copy of it. So here it is. (P.S. It’s a cat.)

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Today’s Lunch: Waffles!

Today's Lunch: Waffles!

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Today I had waffles for lunch. They were delicious! Waffles aren’t just for breakfast, they’re good any time of the day!

In other news, I attended coworking at Bucketworks last night with Ashe Dryden. After the RubyMKE Meetup Matt Gauger stopped by and donated some equipment for the latest Time Lapse Bot upgrade. Patrick Schley also showed up and talked about plays and juggling.

The sad part is, all the work I did at coworking ended up getting reverted today, as the upgrade to RoundCube failed. That’s ok… I’m sure I’ll try again!

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12 Robots Falling

12 Robots Falling

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No one knew what they were thinking, or more appropriately, what they were calculating. A dozen robots fell from the sky. They couldn’t fly. They had no jet-packs, or hover mechanism, or anti-gravity generators. It was like some robot lemmings game gone terribly wrong. Luckily, no humans were harmed, but the Robot Investigation Unit has still not discovered the motives behind this strange occurrence. Still, the question remains… who programmed these robots to do what they did?

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Art vs. Design

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This drawing was inspired by the old phrase “Pioneers get the arrows, settlers get the land” which is mainly used to describe early adopters, who are the first ones to try something new, thus paving the way for others to follow, but ultimately getting “hurt” along the way. (Either by paying too much, or failing at something, or whatever.)

When I was younger I used to see this conflict between art and design. I believed that art was something you created for yourself, while design was something you created for someone else.

Over the years I’ve probably given up a bit on that belief, and I certainly know that there are blurry bits in-between and things cross over into both domains… Still, it’s something I’ve never really gotten a handle on as far as being able to fully articulate it.

I’ve never really discussed this idea with others, but would love to hear what others think about art, design and how they relate (or don’t relate) to each other…