Creative Meat Blog
Opinions

Oneupweb : Animated Music Videos for the Soul

Posted by Nicole in Opinions on January 31, 2012 - 6:37 pm

I’ve said it once, twice, three times in my blog posts; I love animation. Animation has a unique ability to translate and speak to our emotions. The only thing comparable to animation is music. When the two combine? Magic. Plain and simple. Below are a few animated music videos that I feel most effectively translated abstract emotion.


Credit
Animator: Sean Pecknold
Song: The Shrine
Band: Fleet Foxes


Credit
Animator: Anthony Francisco Schepperd
Song: Two Against One
Band: Danger Mouse


Credit
Director: Carlos De Carvalho
Song: Do I have Power
Band: Timber Timbre

GD Star Rating
loading...
Opinions

Oneupweb : So You Want to be A Graphic Designer?

Posted by admin in Design, Freebies, Opinions, Tools on January 24, 2012 - 4:42 pm

You want to be a Graphic Designer but no one will hire you because you don’t have any experience. Sound familiar? In general, for any fresh person trying to break into a career pathway, it can be incredibly difficult to get hired. No awesome employer wants to hire a person with no experience but you can’t get experience without someone taking a chance, right? WRONG!

What to do, what to do!?!?

Not to worry, friend, your life is not bleak and meaningless. Many employers won’t hire you without experience, so make your own! This is especially easy in the design world, seeing as how everyone and their mom seems to need something from you. That website you built for Timmy’s Aunt Nancy’s Kitten Mitten business? EXPERIENCE! That logo you drew for that awesome death metal band? GUESS WHAT?!?!?! It wasn’t only fun it was also experience!!!

To make it look and sound professional you need to specify whether is was contract or freelance. Did I hear someone whisper if there is a difference? Why yes, of course there is, silly goose! Contract is someone you do repeat business with on a non-regular basis. You have been contracted to do multiple items or have gone back for more. Freelance is that weirdo you picked up off of Craigslist that needed their hair created into vector art. You signed up for one project and probably won’t be doing more.

But, I don’t have any friends and I don’t want to venture on Craigslist as I am nervous about creepers, help me!

Not to worry there is another, completely viable option: Volunteer!

Not only does volunteering make you look super awesome on your resume, but it also gives you that ever coveted experience. You might also get a chance to make a difference in your community, even around the world! My favorite place to go for volunteering is Sparked. You don’t have to leave your couch and you get the opportunity to help the causes that you are passionate about. If you are a lucky duck you’ll even get the chance to work with some highly recognized causes and companies. Lastly, it’s super easy and walks you through every step of the way, plus you no longer have to feel like a bum for sitting on your couch not showering for weeks on end.

To recap: You need to create your own opportunities to get a kick-ass job. Volunteering is a great resource because it makes you feel good, you get some great experience, you are helping people and with Sparked, you don’t have to leave your cozy man cave.

GD Star Rating
loading...
Opinions

Oneupweb : The Internet’s Dark Day

Posted by Jess in Design, Fresh Meat, Opinions on January 20, 2012 - 3:10 pm

I’m part of the generation who has essentially grown up around computers. We have had an internet connection for so long that I don’t even remember not having one. But Wednesday, January 18th was a game changer for the World Wide Web. In protest of the SOPA and PIPA bills that Congress and the House of Representatives will vote on January 24th, Wikipedia turned off service for 24 hours. Google blacked out its logo. Hundreds of sites, big and small, protested the censorship these bills would bring to the internet. We even joined the blackout by adding black bars to our website.

The statistical results are pretty astounding (here’s a great infographic describing them). There also were some cool design concepts that websites employed during the blackout. Filmmaker Michael Moore blacked out his website and you could essentially use the mouse cursor as a flashlight to cast a circle of light over his message.

Wikipedia was one of my favorites; it reminds me of a post-apocalyptic area where everything has been destroyed. And while a censored internet isn’t exactly comparable to an apocalypse, I think these bills would be very devastating to the internet as we know it.

GD Star Rating
loading...
Opinions

Oneupweb : OOP Naming Conventions

Posted by Robert in Development, Opinions, Tutorials on January 18, 2012 - 6:10 pm

While working with different Object Oriented Programming (OOP) languages and frameworks, I’ve seen quite a few approaches on how to format various items. The line between personal preference and “best practices” has become blurry when dealing with naming conventions.

I have no idea what I'm doing: dog on a computer.Some decent advice on that subject is to adapt to the style of the current environment. However, even within languages it’s not uncommon to find inconsistencies. For example, take a look at the concatenated acronyms in XMLHttpRequest for JavaScript. XML is all uppercase, while Http is mixed upper and lowercase. There is no clear text treatment, making it unintuitive and more difficult to remember.

For this reason, it is a good idea to treat acronyms as words. While not immediately clear, it eliminates the guess work when attempting to recall a particular class, method or attribute; especially since acronyms tend to evolve. For example, the phrase “Away From Keyboard” eventually became “AFK” and is commonly typed as “afk”. By treating it as a word, you won’t have to guess which casing to use, just follow your chosen convention.

So, what if you have the chance to write your own library from the ground up? Perhaps something portable that shouldn’t be married to one particular language or uses many languages; what naming practices should you follow then? Of the examples I’ve seen and used in the past, here is what I personally prefer on a basic level.

class ClassName
{
  public static const MAX_USERS = 15;

  public var variable_name = "foo";

  private var _variable_name = "bar";

  public function methodName()
  {
    // do something
  }

  private function _methodName()
  {
    // do something
  }
}

ClassName

Classes use upper camel case, meaning each concatenated word begins with a capital letter followed by lowercase letters.

class ClassName
{
  // stuff
}

methodName

Methods use lower camel case, meaning the first word is all lowercase, while each additional word begins with a capital letter followed by lowercase.

public function methodName()
{
  // do something
}

variable_name

Variables use lowercase words, separated with underscores. They are dynamic objects that are usually defined on a per instance basis.

public var variable_name = "hello world!";

CONSTANT_NAME

Constants use uppercase words, separated with underscores. They are unchanging values and are typically also static (accessible directly from a class).

public static const CONSTANT_NAME = "foobar";

// accessible through the containing class without a need to instantiate.

var variable_name = ClassName.CONSTANT_NAME;

_private_variable and _privateMethod

Private variables and methods are prefixed with “_” (underscore). They are accessible only from within the object instance in which they are used. By placing an underscore before the name, the scope is instantly recognizable, keeping them separate from public variables and methods.

private var _variable_name= "foo";

private function _methodName()
{
  return "bar";
}

There are other considerations that play even deeper into personal preference, such as curly-bracket “{}” placement for functions vs loops vs if-statements. Spacing for within and around parentheses “()” is equally preferential. How you format your code is ultimately up to you and how you find it the most readable.

Again, what I mentioned above is very generalized and won’t necessarily stand well in some languages. Adapt to your environment and please, do leave comments below. I enjoy reading other programmers thoughts and opinions.

GD Star Rating
loading...
Opinions

Oneupweb : And I Need it Now

Posted by Nicole in Design, Opinions on January 12, 2012 - 2:28 pm

It’s 1:00 in the afternoon. You’ve just gotten back from your lunch and have a deadline due at 5:00 this afternoon. You have no ideas and what you’ve come up with so far just isn’t cutting it. You’re so stressed out that you can’t think of anything and everything you do come up with isn’t working. It’s almost 2:00, now. You’ve broken three pencils and already tried to flee the building. What do you do now?

All designers have been in this position; a project needs to be out the door as soon as possible and there seems to be no solution in sight. So, what do you do when your client needs that project right now and you’ve got no ideas?

Here are a few methods to make you feel Less Stressed and More Awesome (don’t worry, none of these steps involved stopping, dropping or rolling in dirt)

  1. Take a break Step away from what you’re working on and just relax. Take a walk around the building, check out some blogs, have a post-it war with  the neighboring office… It doesn’t really matter what you do, so long as you give yourself a moment away from the project.
  2. Go back to your thumbnails Sometimes we all need a quick trip back to the drawing board. Sit down and look through your thumbnails. If you need to, make a few more sketches for different directions. Stepping away from the computer helps your brain reboot.
  3. Consult with another designer Getting feedback and discussing your problem with another designer can help break the creative roadblocks caused by stress. If you don’t have another designer available, look up examples of similar projects and see how the problem was handled. It might give you the breakthrough you need. And of course…
  4. Don’t Panic!

Stressful deadlines are tough to handle, but making it work can make you feel like a superhero (Exact-o-Man?) and make for innovative solutions you probably wouldn’t have thought of without a little incentive. I wouldn’t say I want to be stressed out every day, but it’s definitely nice to feel Awesome once in a while.

Sneaking out of the building is still an option...

Of course, sneaking out of the building is still an option...

GD Star Rating
loading...