Design

The coming @font-face storm

Will font foundries become the next RIAA?

The field of typography for the Web has been changing quietly over the past 15 years, and it’s about to take a dramatic twist.

I can remember online typography being an issue since I first accessed the World Wide Web in 1993. Actually, I had been working in Cambridge for a major publisher for years on one of the “walled gardens” that predated the public Web. Ironically enough, it offered better typography than is generally seen on the Internet today.

F**k you, this is Versailles.

After spending nearly a week in the lightly controlled anarchy of an open source conference, I indulged myself in a day trip to Versailles. Having done the Liberace-esque excess of the palace already, I chose to see that gardens instead.

Michelangelo in the Age of Open Source

After a long review process, a talented but unknown painter by the name of Michelangelo was awarded a huge contract to paint the Sistine Chapel for Pope Julius II.

After a few months of back and forth, the Pope and the artist had agreed on the design of the paintings for the Chapel. Now it was a matter of applying paint to the walls and the 20-meter-high ceiling, and Michelangelo chose the to enlist the help of the Volunteer Guildsmen of Drupalo.

Has Drupal peaked?

Drupal, a leading open source content management system, is at a crossroads. The same traits that have made Drupal a strong framework are likely to create a glass ceiling for its growth and acceptance.

Drupal is the product of a devoted, closely knit developer community spearheaded by Dries Buytaert. In many ways its evolution and structure has mirrored the Linux community as led by Linus Torvalds. Its name is owned as a trademark by its founder, there’s a nonprofit foundation named after the application… the comparisons abound.

Why can't my test results look like this? (1)

This patient-centric diagram combines results for 10 different tests into one single graphic.

The bar chart sorts the results based on how high or low they they are -- relative to their respective acceptable ranges. Results that are low are to the left, and results that are high appear to the right. The bars are split into four areas:

  1. results below the acceptable range
  2. results in the bottom half of the acceptable range
  3. results in the top half of the acceptable range

A travelogue from the Isles of Healthcare (part 1)

To this designer, the past couple months have a been a strange trip to the surreal island that is the healthcare industry. While the rest of the world has been shaped by gut-wrenching change, healthcare has been on its own virtual Galapagos, evolving at its own pace.

The world has caught up to this island oasis, bringing with it the Darwinian forces of technology and the market, threatening the industry's very sustainability. It needs to cope quickly -- and embrace survival strategies that have worked for the rest of the world.

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