As the parent of a 16 year old girl, one would expect to fight many a battle on a variety of topics. However, I was totally unprepared for what transpired yesterday. In all honesty, I'm struggling with the whole thing.
In school, my daughter is taking a required class on Microsoft Word. As if that weren't bad enough, in class yesterday, her teacher gave them a project: Create a document that uses at least 8 serif fonts and at least 8 sans serif fonts, all of various point sizes. Extra points were awarded for those who added color (the teacher justified this by stating that if everyone used Black, she couldn't award points for originality if students used the same fonts).
I used to think that all those people who believe that they must use every font on their computer for every document, and use all the blindingly bright RGB colors in Word was Microsoft's fault. As a parent though, I try. I really do. My daughter uses Apple's Pages for all of her reports, and they all look clean, neat, and lovely. Being my wife and I are both designers, our home and our conversations are filled with examples of good design.
The parent in me says not to teach her to contradict her educators. The designer in me says to tell my daughter to rebel and to type a single letter-spaced word set in Helvetica, colored black, at the center of the page. Wait, I guess that would be Arial. Sigh.
September 14, 2010
September 12, 2010
Web designers rejoice! Adobe releases HTML5 pack for Illustrator CS5
If you use Illustrator for web design, and if you consider yourself on the cutting edge of web design, life just got a whole lot more interesting. Adobe has just released an HTML5 Pack for Illustrator CS5 that introduces some advanced SVG support, support for the HTML Canvas tag, and support for export to CSS3.
Adobe released the Adobe Illustrator CS5 HTML5 Pack as a technology preview on Adobe Labs (you can get it here) so it isn't a full-blown solution -- it actually takes a bit of grunt work to get it installed. Then again, HTML5 and CSS3 aren't anywhere near complete or fully supported across all browsers, either. Consider this a peek into the future, and a GREAT way to experiment on your own, and live on the blistering edge of web design and development.
Adobe released the Adobe Illustrator CS5 HTML5 Pack as a technology preview on Adobe Labs (you can get it here) so it isn't a full-blown solution -- it actually takes a bit of grunt work to get it installed. Then again, HTML5 and CSS3 aren't anywhere near complete or fully supported across all browsers, either. Consider this a peek into the future, and a GREAT way to experiment on your own, and live on the blistering edge of web design and development.
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