Why Nerds are Unpopular - And The University Social System now by default

October 25th, 2008

This article was written by Paul Graham, Someone who out of no where changed how i saw the world for better, and reassured me that I was always on the right track.

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Code and Design, Black and white.

September 14th, 2008

“In matters of principle, stand like a rock; in matters of taste, swim with the current.” ~Thomas Jefferson

Now you’ve got to admit when a web developer sees a statement like this, he can’t help but nod his head in agreement. I’ve been thinking about this for a while.

People relate to art in many ways, some more positively than others. In the respect of web design, its a whole new ballgame. From outright lack of understanding/respect/priority by clients to the latest in Web 2.0 designs, it really pays to understand how you can deliver the product that catches the customer without bending beyond breaking point. Graphic Designers must improve their current skills and learn new ones to stay relevant in the industry. In other words, if design is like swimming in the ever changing currents, be a slick salmon.

Developement on the other hand, is rock solid. Provided you have an understanding of what needs to be done (and how to tell the computer to do it), you can more or less do anything.  Years and years of experience isn’t something you wake up one morining and throw away. Instead of completly new technologies (though this is still the case) we are seeing more revolutionary ways of solving problems using  currently existing languages and technologies (an example of such a case is Web 2.0). If you make an error that evaded being red-flagged, it’s only a matter of time before it manifests itself in a 1000 size version. As a friend of mine said, “evolution, not revolution” - meaning? Get your code right the first time and spent the rest making it better.

It just goes to show how Code and Design are much more similar to a 2 faced coin - both sides are too important for one to play tail.

Who do you think you are?

September 5th, 2008

Yes, that’s the question I believe everyone at some point in their lives ask themselves. Sometimes, by virtue of asking that question, the individual has, either through external or internal events, come to some form of proverbial “fork in the road”. Chances are if you know who you are, you know what your want to do with your life, and will know what choices to make. Hence the fork in the road - do you know who you are?

There was a period in my life I was so confused as what step to take next simply because I hadn’t resolved this issue within myself. After some serious soul searching, like everyone should in a while, I found it!

Read below and see how it applies to you. I hope you are inspired. Read the rest of this entry »

Where do your memories take you?

August 9th, 2008

Back in the High School days, a friend of mine had a SNES console, which was the in thing at the time. I used to spend the weekends when I could. As is always the case, one video game catches your imagination. The sheer excitement I had even watching was vivid, even to today, although the memory with time becomes exaggerated.

Many years passed and I stumbled on the game in the most unexpected of places. Shock was quickly replaced by nostalgia as I ceremoniously played it one more time, while the trip down the memory lane lasted. I remembered my friend, how life moved us apart, what school life was like, and how much spare time children have that’s a God send compared to the young adult life. For a brief moment, I wanted to be a child again, free from expectations/responsibilities. Ironically, somewhere between childhood and adolescence, such luxury is unwittingly traded for an obsessed need for some form of “convenient independence” - the type where one wants to enjoy the privileges without the responsibilities. Sound familiar? All this thinking because of a 15yr old 2D game.

So, where do your memories take you?