IFCU Avatars
•January 26, 2008 • Leave a Comment





The first task of a new member/student of IFCU is to create their avatar. It will be photographically based, conceived of as “a close up that introduces a character.” It can be treated, distorted, but it (1) has to recognizable. (2) should convey some sense of character. (3) should want to make your audience know more about the person behind the face.
All new avatars will be posted for peer review to determine if they are recognizable and also to gather some sense of what the image makes the viewers feel, think. It is the first instance of the nascent filmmaker discovering the audience responding to their work.
All avatars (staff, and instructors as well) will be framed at 2.35:1 aspect ratio (classic theatrical anamorphic widescreen ratio). These avatars will exist in multiple variants throughout the site, at various resolutions as they are used to visualize networks, classmates, individuals on the IFCU Map, and so forth.
IFCU Portfolio: 72 Photos
•January 24, 2008 • Leave a Comment72 Photos is a web photography portfolio that has an interesting look which might be extended to the whole of the IFCU Portfolio.
Couchsurfing
•January 24, 2008 • 1 Comment
Take a look at how Couchsurfing implents their Search Feature. Select country, city, then populate the map with surfers. Click on the map “pins” to get a glimpse of the individual surfer, and can click through to see their full profile. Not elegant, but an effective, responsive interface. Question: should the IFCU map (including Jaman, IFCU Crashpads, Six-Degrees, etc) be based on the Gmaps API? Is is possible to use something sexier like Google Earth? Or is it possible to skin Gmaps in a way that gives it a less pedestrian look? A sidenote: notice the bandwidth selector in the upper right.
Sexy Screencasting
•January 23, 2008 • Leave a CommentThis unassuming promo video (for Social Annotating service Diigo) is a great example of making a screencast that doesn’t suck. A combination of a house music groove, plus lots of appropriate “camera” movement — movement which helps clarify meaning — makes the thing move. We need to find out if they built this the hard way, or if there is screencasting software that facilitates this kind of work.
Lightswitch
•January 22, 2008 • Leave a CommentNot adoptable, but certainly a instance of the kind of inherent (no-need-to-document) useability and wit IFCU needs. Turn it on here.
Free Range Studios
•January 22, 2008 • Leave a CommentFree Range Studios is an interestingly advocacy-oriented multi-talent shop, combining marketing, identity and design. Additionally, and most intriguing, they’re the most successful viral web-movie producer, with credits including The Meatrix and the remarkably effective — and appalling — Story of Stuff. (Watch.)
I’ve looked at their web design portfolio, and they’d have to up the bar to make it for IFCU, but I’m interested in talking to them because (1) they typically work for rather straightlaced entities and thus their designs must reflect this and (2) they have a real gift for using storytelling to make their point.
Jaman. For Partnership. In Some Way.
•January 18, 2008 • Leave a CommentJaman: Movie download service for world cinema Whether we just do Ford’s globe portal into Jaman (with some attendant relationship), or we get more solid with them. Thinking.
Animation
•January 16, 2008 • Leave a CommentStephen Watkins, a young Australian animator who’s just joined a San Francisco firm (www.gunshop.tv, who look like bozos) is ideal for producing IFCU promos. He’s very talented, and has two very different styles he’s demonstrated, both of which have real charm. One is a naif cutout animation look:
The other is a surrealist look:
If we like him, we should bring him in early, because we’ll want to tie the animation look/style in with the site’s look, and keeping on eye on the Secondary Identity for IFCU.
Animation
•January 16, 2008 • 1 CommentThis is an old KCRW Theatrical Promo. The filmed-but-cutout style of the human animation has stuck in my memory for over ten years now and makes me wonder abt using something organic like this in terms of avatars. (Don’t worry, I know it’s way outside the box.)
Overheard in NY
•January 16, 2008 • 2 Comments

OINY is godawful ugly, with priceless content. I wonder if we could do something related — overheard on the set? This sort of thing lives or dies by the wit of the participants, and the number of the participants, so it would only, if ever, be a part of v.2.
Foamee
•January 16, 2008 • 1 CommentFoamee is a ridiculous idea that nevertheless evokes the idea of gratitude for small favors. There’s something here, globalized, attached to IFCU crashpads and… something….
Font: Felt Tip Roman
•January 16, 2008 • 1 CommentHand printed font with strong character, reads very well on screen.
Sidebar Creative
•January 16, 2008 • 1 CommentSidebar are the guys who created the design of this blog theme (which is excellent) and claim to be god’s own gift to web design. In fact, their hubris is quietly icky; take a look at their contact form on their home page. Still, maybe they’re really that good.
Simple Bits
•January 16, 2008 • 1 CommentSimple Bits is a small web design studio. Their personal site is an excellent example of clean, limited palette that is still friendly and retains interest, all while having excellent readability .
Perceptive Pixel (Multitouch)
•January 16, 2008 • 2 Comments![]()
This is about a technology that we should not merely anticipate, but drive towards in IFCU v2. Basically, it’s the best part of Minority Report, and what’s particularly interesting is that multitouch displays inherently support multiple users at one time. Obviously, this sort of thing would have to be an on-the-ground feature. The demo is remarkable.
Pagico
•January 5, 2008 • 1 CommentPagico is an online organizer, but what interests me is their interface design. Clicking on the link will open Pagico in another window that you can check out the right side buttons. The highlighting of the button is very elegant, and I like the way the content fades as it changes. Also, the gray navigation buttons at top acquire color as they mouse-overed. I think this site has found a nice balance between clean, uncluttered design, and enough flashiness to be interesting.
Roger generally prefers lighter themed sites, but I’m fond of the “professional” quality of the dark-themes, something which is echoed in many production applications for editing, vfx, and, of course, color correction.
I expect that different “zones” of IFCU will have different, though related, design and color schemes.





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