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Peter Rivera
SVP, Interactive Design
& Development
Rachel Been
Photo Editor, AOL Living
Allison Bucchere
VP, AOL Lifestyle Design
Michael Costantino
Principal UI Designer & Information Architect
Jason Cranford-Teague
Director, Web Design Standards
Rich Foster
Creative Director,
Key Experiences
John Kilpatrick
VP, AOL Entertainment Design Studio
Bill Knight
Creative Director,
Experience Design
Milissa Tarquini
Director, UI Design
May 8th 2009 6:27PM


Shameless Promotion Department:


We've just released our PIXCETERA app in the Apple iPhone store. The experience was designed and created by the Key Experiences team within MediaGlow. We kept the experience very simple, very focused, and basically ported the value proposition of the site onto the hand-held device. Users can explore hundreds of original world-class photo galleries created by the photo-editors of the site as well as galleries published from across our content network. Check it out and let us know what you think. The app is significant for us in that it solves both a technical and UI convention for delivering photo browsing experiences within our upcoming iPhone apps. Very soon look for releases for "The Unofficial Apple Weblog" (www.TUAW.com), as well as Asylum.com. In the meantime, enjoy the pictures on PIXCETERA!
Mar 15th 2009 10:11AM
I love how the designers of this IBM micro-site interpreted their subjects (along the bottom) into stark and simple iconography while staying true to a consistent visual language. Very often we're tasked with taking cliches and making them fresh and invigorated. I think this team has done that well here across these 14 concepts.

Feb 26th 2009 9:54PM
I was stuck for a couple of extra hours at the airport in Dulles and I noticed this amazing visualization of the Internet from AT&T Labs and a company called "Lumeta". Yes, I know these have been done before, but rarely with any sense of aesthetics in mind. Alas, some extensive searching revealed no aditional information on this monstrosity (it is rather large). It is one of those things you'd really like to get a copy of, but for some reason, a company smart enough to map the Internet is not smart enough to put an URL on the poster to follow up on their creation. Something this cool deserved a "How We Did It" type of explanation somewhere. Oh well. If you are in Dulles or Reagan airports, be sure to check it out. It color codes major nodes and networks, and that faint gray "haze" is actually thousands of labels for major servers in the network. A great marriage of science and design.

And apologies for the quality of the picture. It was taken with my phone.

Jan 28th 2009 11:38AM
No, that's not the name of the latest band featured to be featured on Spinner this week.

Just yesterday, I was sent a link to an amazing photograph of President Barack Obama's inaugural address. I've come to find out that the photo has practically gone viral, with over 2 million views in the first 5 days it was posted, so I'm potentially not the first person to share this with you.

I had a rather strong reaction to the image itself, the story if its creation, as well as the interactive element, and the combination inspired me to go out on a declarative limb: This is THE image that depicts everything historical about Barack Obama's election. A grand statement, I know, but read on and I'll attempt to explain.




New York photographer David Bergman blogged about covering Barack Obama's inauguration on January 20th, 2009. "I covered my first inauguration and what an inauguration it was," he writes. "Before Tuesday, I had photographed five presidents and covered big events including the Olympics, the Super Bowl, and concerts like Live 8 and Live Earth. But this one was the biggest. It deserved a big photo."

When he says big, he means big.
Jan 9th 2009 10:31AM
Over the holidays, I started following several prolific design tweeters (via Twitter). Here are some inspiring links a couple of them shared that I thought you'd enjoy as much as I did.

Beautiful web typography
http://sixrevisions.com/web_design/20-websites-with-beautiful-typography



Logo design inspiration
http://www.logospire.com

Aug 19th 2008 10:42AM
Our interactive design team came together for several hours of inspiration and sketching over the past couple days. It was great to get our NY and VA offices together via video to take a big picture break. Several designers led the inspiration discussions (which I'll blog about later this week) and our UI Directors led our sketching exercise. They planned an interactive group exercise for us, freeing our ideas by eliminating the limitations of the computer while focusing on broad strokes without the noise and clutter of details.

Our exercise reminded me of this Core77 video of a design director at Converse sketching a summer sneaker concept in under five minutes -- it's pretty cool:



Core77 also recently launched this interesting sketching site. Check it out for more inspiration on varied techniques and conversations. How does sketching improve your creative process? What tools do you swear by?
Jul 21st 2008 7:52PM
Filed under: beautiful things

Previously, Peter commented about the coolness of Piclens, the plug-in that allows a user to navigate through photos in three dimensions most specifically in Google Images and Flickr. I personally was hoping for the plug-in to work with some of the agencies I browse for content... it would make my job seem more like Blade Runner, which I always include under suggestions on work surveys...

Other Blade Runner 'flight' experiences:

One that immediately pops to mind is Blaise Aguera and Arcas development for Microsoft, PhotoSynth. The program renders thousands of high-res images into a three dimensional wire-frame that one can maneuver and zoom through. Think of flying around the Eiffel tower, and deciding to focus on a single beam to detect the urban touch of bird poo. That good.



A simple alternative is Airtight Interactive's flash template called the PostcardViewer, which creates a photo gallery on splayed postcards navigable with arrow keys. I once built part of my portfolio using this template, but found it a little dizzying for advertising content. The whizzing aspect is a lovely cheap thrill, and totally worth throwing a family album in there.

Why just view images when you can jump inside of them like a swimming pool?

Jul 8th 2008 3:23PM


Last month, Moviefone launched "top video trailers" for the second version of the iphone's web applications. Now, when you look up movie showtimes, you can view the top trailers with the bundled video application built into the iphone. A great way to make a movie decision while viewing trailers on the best mobile video player.

This update is coming just in time for the new
3G phones this month!

enjoy
Jul 3rd 2008 10:59AM

The team has just refreshed our AIR-based Top 100 Video widget with a great new Intel-sponsored skin. Download the latest version to apply a groovy new Intel desktop to your computer. To get to the desktop file click the in-stream Intel ads that appear at the bottom of the videos. Several performance improvements were also made to this release.

As if that were not enough: the FUZE "unbreakable" campaign microsite has just launched within AOL Music. Conceived in a brainstorm with Coke's online media agency, this advertiser program shows just how advantageous it can be to wrap great programming around a rich advertiser experience. The Flash site was built by the development team within two weeks (!), after a design gestation period of approximately three weeks (that is concept to sketch to approved design). We were fortunate in that the work was accepted by the clients very early in the process. They were great partners in that regard and helped us make the deadline by expediting approvals and empowering the AOL team to make it happen.


Check out the hammer and try to find the hidden clues :-)
Jul 2nd 2008 9:51AM


For those of us that think visually and like to click on pictures (ok, that's most of us btw), PicLens is a pretty amazing app that brings the Web to life as a visual medium. Just download the extension and PicLens turns image and video feeds from top sources into an interactive "wall of media" that animates smoothly across your screen. So smoothly, in fact, that you may actually get motion sickness playing with it (like I did).

Like most interactive things it really has to be experienced to be appreciated. If you have ever felt that image or video search should be more compelling than this one is certainly for you. I recommend everyone on my team try it out. Though if you haven't wanted a more visual, interactive Internet than this plug-in will probably go into the "cool things" bookmark graveyard you never go back to visit. I do believe the new "Shop Amazon" feature is a stretch though.

Speaking as the General Manager of PIXCETERA, this one is a tough act to follow I must admit.
Jun 23rd 2008 11:41PM


Wordle is poetry design meets thrift store shopping. Take a bundle of words, a quote, a shopping list, a love letter gone awry, and ingest the sentences into wordle. Your words are regurgitated as a well designed and seemingly organized thought cloud. Wordle randomly mixes and matches font, layout, color, language, and your input, into a gallery piece or a printable design.

I started creating one a day, documenting my daily food intake. That guilty bag of blue M&M's suddenly became sandwiched between coffee and asparagus and perpendicular to turkey instead of hanging over my head.
Jun 5th 2008 10:52AM
Well, considering that that experience has little to do with words, I'll just say "check it out"...



But, if you like to read, the site says: "VUVOX is excited about the coming introduction of a new personal expression platform - called COLLAGE. This dynamic media creation suite will enable everyone to easily turn their photos, videos, text and audio clips into interactive story panoramas." At last someone finally built one of those. Been waiting... Thanks to Jonathan Meyers for the tip.
Jun 2nd 2008 1:33PM
PIXCETERA is a fully fleshed-out celebration of the craft of photography and has, as its central innovation, the ability to dynamically "read" galleries being published across the AOL network and consolidate them into one website (some innovations are not so obvious). Our users clicked billions of photos last year so we're hopeful that bringing all of this amazing programming work into one website fulfills an unmet need for them.

It is important to note that the site is not trying to compete with flickr as a UGC play (I myself am a faithful user of the site). Though we do have plans for user upload and gallery publishing and favorites, the main concept here is to bring the best programmed photography experiences in our network into one simple interface and provide the user the ability to "skip" across topics effortlessly.

One of my favorite little features is the ability to reskin the interface to white, gray or black so you can view photos in your own neutral tone of choice.

We've only just begun so expect some interesting innovations out of the pixcetera team over the coming months. And please let us know what you think.

May 29th 2008 10:23AM


The first MediaStorm workshop projects launched recently, featuring a fine cast of photographers including Lucy Nicholson of Reuters and Carolyn Cole of the Los Angeles Times. The workshops took place the first week in May, giving photographers a canvas to define a New Yorkcentric story with audio, video, stills, and production.

I recently took a look at Reuters photographer Lucy Nicholson's piece and was impressed with the combination of media Lucy utilized. She told the story of the famous New York Naked Cowboy from an intimate perspective, incorporating a narrative from his girlfriend as well as the Cowboy's described auto-biography. The quality of the editing and production work was class.

The workshop, if interested in attending, is not for amateurs. The admitted photographers in this first round are at the top of the photojournalism field. It's compelling that MediaStorm is single-handedly helping talented photographers compose multifaceted narratives.
May 14th 2008 10:40AM

MUTO a wall-painted animation by BLU from blu on Vimeo.

An ambiguous animation painted on public walls. Made in Buenos Aires and in Baden.

This is simply amazing.
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