This is so not the fifties. And good riddance! (See last post to make sense of this.)
Moving ideas from an initial concept to a shared vision is one of the most challenging and rewarding aspects of both my vocational and avocational work. Over the last few years, I’ve transitioned from words to visuals earlier and earlier in the process. Since my drawing skill is not much beyond stick-figure level, I use a combination of drag and drop visualization applications to not only communicate ideas, but also to express and refine insights that are actually gained through the work of visualization.
These are some of the tools I’ve been using recently to created animated sketchpad-level visualization. All have relatively low learning curves and all allow one to rapidly move from inner thought to shareable artifact:
Here’s a little video sketch that was slammed together in a couple of hours yesterday morning using BoinxTV and Motion, with materials previously created with FrameForce, Second Life and the iPhone. The use of “Avatars Everywhere” as the theme and slogan didn’t emerge until about halfway through the production.
Free to view or download from Scribd.com or 99¢ for Amazon Kindle.
Why I Hate Ambiguous Vanity Plates. Yeah, I know it’s petty, but ambiguous vanity plates annoy the hell out of me. They set off a chain reaction of useless mental chatter that is more of a distracting driving danger than tweeting in the middle of stop-and-go traffic. And I should know.
Where was I? Of yeah. Ambiguous vanity plates. Like this one. JUDGMNT.
Of course, I jump to the conclusion that it’s some bible-thumping imperative to find the Lord before the end of days. So I think to myself, “How about ‘JDGE-NOT’ bitch!” Then I chide myself for judging him.
But wait. Maybe it’s imploring me to use good judgment about driving. Like not changing ADD medication on a day I need to commute an hour each way.
Oops. Never mind.
17 November 2009 • photos trivial commentary