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Posts Tagged ‘Scripting / Coding’

Cut & Paste Design Competition

Check it out. The Cut & Paste design competition is rolling soon!

Over at PhotoshopTechniques.com, we’ve tossed similar ideas around behind the scenes, but for many reasons never went anywhere with it. The whole idea of remixing Photoshop live is really taking off, and I’d really like to see the same concepts applied to things like coding and scripting, as well as audio and video mixing.

First, for the record, at PsT, we talked about doing this kind of thing in a chat room environment, so the invitees would be able to log in and watch a couple of folks go at this not in competition, but as a party kind of thing. We also thought about it as a live thing to do at events that were not geared only towards showing off or competing, but again as an attraction during design events. For online stuff, though, there wasn’t really the technology out there do pull it off until recently. Now, with Adobe Connect, it would be possible to host semi-private online events. I’ve been looking for ways to monetize presentation-tier applications like Connect for a while, and it seems that if a company is using a Connect Pro account, they should start looking at increased return on investment (ROI). Marketing an exclusive event like this could be a key way to get one’s name out there.

Other areas I see potentially taking off here are also growing in cult status, and cults mean dollars. Just as Guitar Hero is drawing obscene amounts of pulp interest, current hot-shot geeks could benefit from hosted competitions for coding. In fact, there are a handful of competitions where small teams are given a task (usually a design brief for a site or application) and a very limited amount of time to complete it. The genius of these kinds of competitions is that it keeps the real world in the design ethic. By that, I mean people at large get an opportunity to see what actually goes into the process, while other designers or coders get to see how they can solve problems more efficiently in a brainstorming scenario. This covers not only graphic designers, but coders and other technology-based ‘artists’ as well.

For the individuals in competition, it means they have to rely not only on a rather large bag of tricks (gained by real-world experience), but they have to draw on that resource in creative ways with very little time to deliberate. For groups, that means small teams have to be under the leadership of a very strong creative director who communicates clearly and succinctly, and knows the ability of the talent available. Both of these have strong analogs in the business world, and are immediately useful.

Imagine an integrated competition where ‘agencies’ are pulled together from a talent pool and given a design brief. I see something like this going down… A brief is worked up for some particular charity that will be kicking off or getting a make-over. Creative directors are given a 1/2 day with the brief in advance, and a team of talent (perhaps the next 1/2 day is the creative directors negotiating for players like in a fantasy sports league). Once the teams are formed, each team gets the next day to take the concept to completion – marketing, design, code development, and deployment. That would include photographers and videographers, design/retouching gurus, editors and code warriors of various flavors, all working in tandem toward a unified vision. This might be too complex to show ‘live’ in a studio, but if the teams were brought together in a central location, each one with studio space (say, a convention center) could check in every so often and broadcast updates via RSS/Twitter, and maybe have an embedded reporter gathering a development story that would be edited down for 3-minute consumption bites.

Talk about the epitome of agile structure!

In less complex scenarios, each of these elements could be broken out into directed or free-form demonstrations. We already have all kinds of things like this on television, from houses to personal improvement. Now, I absolutely hate ‘reality’ tv that follows the pathetic shells of celebrities or freaks of society being, well, freaks of society. But put for a good cause (like a charity) or showing real talent at its peak, that’s something I can get behind.

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Getting bent in AIR

I haven’t been much into scripting or programming lately, choosing instead to focus on visual design and photography. However, the new stuff coming up around visual effects makes it a compelling new arena for creative artists who want to tackle the latest and greatest tools. Aaron Conran has blogged about the new Pixel Bender Explorer script that allows you to apply PB effects to AIR applications.

At the moment, the effects are mostly eye candy, but it’s not a far stretch to imagine this kind of capability being more widely used for information display at many levels, whether for data-driven infographics or for visual feedback during interaction.

If this sort of thing turns your crank, check out Aaron’s blog and the Adobe AIR Team blog.

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Flash panels via ExtendScript!

Adobe – Developer Center : PatchPanels: Integrating your ExtendScript

Want to get started on building Flex applications for your shiny, new Master Collection? Start here!

This one starts off by getting the foreground RGB value from the host CS4 suite application, and share that information across Flash, Photoshop and Illustrator CS4. Get your scripting hats on :)

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You can turn Wacom pressure options on and off right up in the Options bar. When you have a tool that supports pressure sensitivity selected, click the pen icon over a transparency to control the Opacity and choose the pen icon over a bulls-eye to control the brush size. (via planetphotoshop.com)

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Are simple tasks taking longer in CS5 than CS4? Check out this tip fromMac Performance Guide: Edit your Preferences and adjust your Cache Tile Size to optimize your setup for the kinds of images you work on. MPG suggests just cranking it to 1024 and forgetting it. What works for you?

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Have you explored the blend modes available in Photoshop? If so, you can get to most of your favorites by using a shortcut: Shift + Option/Alt + (first letter of blend mode). For example, Shift+opt/Alt+M changes the current mode to Multiply. The shortcut list isn’t complete, but you can round out and update the shortcuts [...]

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Perpetually…

I'm tinkering with the new site. Bare with me while I try a few things out! In the mean time, check out my photo gallery.

Fun Stuff

Keep checking back for tutorials, tips, discounts, coupons, etc. relating to Photoshop and photography. I'm working on some deals with very cool vendors, so be sure to sign up for the RSS feed (when I get it going). Here from Facebook? Then you found one of the links (click on 'discounts' above).

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