The Animation Art of Chuck Jones

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Chuck Jones! How many hours days, weeks, months? did I spend as a youngster in front of the tube, immersed in the wild worlds of one of America’s most gifted animators? Funny, yes, humor is always present in Jones’ work, ranging from the sly to the slapstick. But beyond the humor the dramatic graphical style, coupled with a sense that he felt completely free to explore whatever extreme idea came to mind, what was really appealed to me. Perhaps his work was a factor in my decision to pursue a career in the visual arts, who knows?

Da What’s Up, Doc? The Animation Art of Chuck Jones | Graphics.com.

Evolvere l’attuale portale di Roma Capitale in un’ottica web 2.0

Il Comune di Roma, anzi Roma Capitale sperando che prima o poi qualcuno metta fine a questo abominio lessicale da ventennio, non sa che in Campidoglio hanno votato e cambiato le regole per la Sosta, nuove tariffe per le strisce blu1, e quindi rimanda ad una pagina dell’ATAC (che a quanto pare non segue Muoversi a Roma2) pubblicizzando un servizio di pagamento elettronico del parcheggio a tariffe sbagliate:

Parcometro a monete: per pagare la tariffa ordinaria 1 €/h (fuori ZTL), 1,20 €/h (in ZTL), per pagare la tariffa per sosta breve (€ 0,20 per 15 minuti), per pagare la tariffa agevolata giornaliera (€ 4,00 per 8 ore) è possibile utilizzare monete da 5, 10, 20 e 50 cent di euro e da € 1,00 e € 2,003

In tutto questo, pare che Marino oggi sia in giro per cassonetti:

Forse cerca il capitolato dei portali4.
Prima di evolverli in ottica 2.0, forse sarebbe il caso che capissero cosa significa comunicazione istituzionale multimodale.

* * *

  1. Roma Capitale | Sito Istituzionale | Leggi la notizia
  2. Sosta, nuove tariffe per le strisce blu
  3. ATAC S.p.A. | Azienda per la mobilità | strisce blu
  4. Roma Capitale | Sito Istituzionale | Bandi e avvisi.
  5. eDue – Si esce poco la sera, compreso quand’è festa

Universal Serious Bug

Computer users pass around USB sticks like silicon business cards. Although we know they often carry malware infections, we depend on antivirus scans and the occasional reformatting to keep our thumbdrives from becoming the carrier for the next digital epidemic. But the security problems with USB devices run deeper than you think: Their risk isn’t just in what they carry, it’s built into the core of how they work.

That’s the takeaway from findings security researchers Karsten Nohl and Jakob Lell plan to present next week, demonstrating a collection of proof-of-concept malicious software that highlights how the security of USB devices has long been fundamentally broken. The malware they created, called BadUSB, can be installed on a USB device to completely take over a PC, invisibly alter files installed from the memory stick, or even redirect the user’s internet traffic. Because BadUSB resides not in the flash memory storage of USB devices, but in the firmware that controls their basic functions, the attack code can remain hidden long after the contents of the device’s memory would appear to the average user to be deleted. And the two researchers say there’s no easy fix: The kind of compromise they’re demonstrating is nearly impossible to counter without banning the sharing of USB devices or filling your port with superglue.

“These problems can’t be patched,” says Nohl, who will join Lell in presenting the research at the Black Hat security conference in Las Vegas. “We’re exploiting the very way that USB is designed.”

Da Why the Security of USB Is Fundamentally Broken | Threat Level | WIRED.

Anche questo video fa tutte strisce

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5DHYe4dhjXw

A voi non pare che ultimamente il logo Apple originale con la mela a strisce arcobaleno (nell’ordine sbagliato), si veda un po’ troppo spesso? Anche alla fine di questo spot, si vede per mezzo secondo circa alla fine.
Siccome Apple è famosa per non fare cose a caso (e comunque tre coincidenze fanno un indizio™), chissà che vorrà dire anche perché Cupertino conosce bene il valore monetario e comunicativo dei simboli.

Da: Apple – MacBook Air – TV Ad – Stickers – YouTube.

Inspecting Yosemite’s Icons

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I want to focus on my favorite visual update in Yosemite — the dock icons. Before Yosemite, Apple maintained a system for icon design through a checklist of mostly unstated and understood guidelines paired with a few specific recommendations in the Human Interface Guidelines (HIG). With Yosemite, that system becomes more consistent, and regular, yet the HIG remains silent on the specifics.

Anche perché, a parte il cerchio, le altre sembrano solo centrate sulla griglia…

Immagine ed articolo da: Inspecting Yosemite’s Icons.

Non fa primavera

Binary Compatibility and Frameworks
While your app’s runtime compatibility is ensured, the Swift language itself will continue to evolve, and the binary interface will also change. To be safe, all components of your app should be built with the same version of Xcode and the Swift compiler to ensure that they work together.

This means that frameworks need to be managed carefully. For instance, if your project uses frameworks to share code with an embedded extension, you will want to build the frameworks, app, and extensions together. It would be dangerous to rely upon binary frameworks that use Swift — especially from third parties. As Swift changes, those frameworks will be incompatible with the rest of your app. When the binary interface stabilizes in a year or two, the Swift runtime will become part of the host OS and this limitation will no longer exist.

Da Swift Blog – Apple Developer.