View allAll Photos Tagged Graphical,

a modification of www.viemu.com/a_vi_vim_graphical_cheat_sheet_tutorial.html for colemak layout.

 

Please ask if you want it as SVG or PDF.

 

Colemak TypeMatrix version: www.flickr.com/photos/sermoa/5421396271/

graphical user interface (GUI, sometimes pronounced gooey)

Please, no graphical invites

no graphical GROUP ICONS, INVITES, or AWARDS please (they will be [sadly] deleted) - just comments and critiques ---

 

please click here: www.flickr.com/photos/qmusaget/?details=1" to see HOW our streams should be preferably [or at least optionally] viewed ---

Adolf Hohenstein (Saint Petersburg 1854-Bonn 1928) was a German painter, advertiser, illustrator, set designer and costume designer. He's considered the father of the Italian poster art and an exponent of the Stile Liberty, the Italian Art Nouveau. Together with Leonetto Cappiello, Giovanni Mario Mataloni, Leopoldo Metlicovitz and Marcello Dudovich, he's considered one of the most important Italian poster designers.

Adolf moves to Vienna where he grows up and completes his studies. His travels take him to India, where he decorates the houses of the local nobility.

In 1879, he settles down in Milan, Italy. He becomes a set and costume designer for La Scala and other theatres. There he meets the musical publisher Giulio Ricordi, and in 1889 begins to work for the Ricordi Graphical Workshops, where he shortly becomes the artistic director in charge of the graphical part. He'll create the posters for La Bohème and Tosca, as well as publicity for Campari, Buitoni and Corriere della Sera, numerous postcards, covers for scores and booklets. His work will continue to cover the theatrical dimension: scenarios and wardrobes for several works, among them Giuseppe Verdi's Falstaff (1893) and a major part of the works of Giacomo Puccini, from the sketches of the Villas to posters of Madama Butterfly (1904).

(From Wikipedia)

Please, no graphical invites

A complex graphical process. I have composed three images into a panorama image (Affinity Photo), than I have processed this pano with FotoSketcher 3.40 ("Pen & Ink Sketch 1" preset), than imported into Affinity Designer to add the stripes. BW version here.

Graphical representation of a neuron.

Dedicated to one of the first and best flickr friends I made here. She showed me a lot about graphical style, and about square photographic composition.

 

Check out michaelab311 if you get a chance.

 

Thanks!

Looking beneath a wooden garden table at the early morning shadows.

graphical user interface (GUI, sometimes pronounced gooey)

no graphical GROUP ICONS, INVITES, or AWARDS please (they will be [sadly] deleted) - just comments and critiques ---

 

please click here: www.flickr.com/photos/qmusaget/?details=1" to see HOW our streams should be preferably [or at least optionally] viewed ---

graphical user interface (GUI, sometimes pronounced gooey)

Walk in the forest / Waldspaziergang, Burggrafenberg, Wuppertal

Command Line Interface - CLI

Type: Text

 

Static, Disconnected, High-Low, Directed, Recall

 

Graphical User Interface - GUI

Type: Graphics

 

Responsive, Indirect, DBL Medium, Exploratory, Recognition

 

Natural User Interface - NUI

Type: Objects

 

Evocative, Unmediated, Fast Few, Contextual, Intuition

oddments - following an idea for an image that just came from nowhere - and probably belonged there...; )

graphical draft for the second M8 Stickersession -

Thanks a lot :-) M8 www.flickr.com/photos/-m8-/

graphical user interface (GUI, sometimes pronounced gooey)

www.landscape-design-advisor.com - This colorful 2d landscape architecture rendering was created using 2d shapes and architectural symbols from 2d Landscape Architecture. The sketch gives a bird’s eye view of a luxury beach resort, displaying every feature with full color 2d graphics, including trees and shrubs, outdoor furniture, people, and vehicles. Realistic landscape texture maps were used to create lawns, parking lots, and outdoor spas. These symbols and graphical representations make the 2d landscape architecture image come to life. For more member photos, visit us at www.landscape-design-advisor.com, follow us on Tweeter and Like us on Facebook for a free gift!

no graphical GROUP ICONS, INVITES, or AWARDS please (they will be [sadly] deleted) - just comments and critiques ---

 

please click here: www.flickr.com/photos/qmusaget/?details=1" to see HOW our streams should be preferably [or at least optionally] viewed ---

Big bold graphical goodness. Welcome to the inner world of Chinese supermarkets. (Reminded me of the "Super Discount" album cover, French house music from mid-90s, classic album)

 

Caojiadu, Shanghai, April 2009

What can I say about this picture ?

 

Well, It's probably my favourite, taken with my old Pentax SMC-FA 50mm F/1,4...

 

I hope you'll enjoy it as much as I do.

 

Thank you in advance for you comments...

Fence panel and concrete post, side-lit by the late afternoon sun.

Christophe Carreau, Graphical Production and Scientific Valorisation, ESA Science Directorate,presenting the Rosetta mission to the visitors, at the ESA Pavilion, Paris Air and Space Show, on 19 June 2015.

 

Credit: ESA–P. Sebirot, 2015

I'm making graphical versions of my favorite own twitter posts (navel gazy? sure!).

 

Here is my original twitter post.

One of the many Rio Grande Games in the Board Room was Women & Men, but the box illustration immediately led me to begin calling it Amputees & Men. Subsequent conversations about the nature and victory conditions of the game were not suitable for reprint.

 

25 Dec 2008. This photo now has more than 1,300 views, making it the most-viewed item I've got on Flickr, and yet it has zero comments. Interesting.

 

23 Apr 2009. 2,007 views. No comments.

Architectural details.

graphical user interface (GUI, sometimes pronounced gooey)

graphical user interface (GUI, sometimes pronounced gooey)

Pop Art style Graphical Portrait, Rotten, created by DGFX from scratch. Drawn using portrait images as reference

 

Multi colour graphic. It takes two photo editing programs and about 2 hours to do, i multi layer and multi expose the image and redraw it adding colour, swapping out the canvas a few times, just working with blocks of colour.

  

Museum description reads: The Xerox Alto Boasted the world’s first “what you see is what you get” (WYSIWYG) editor, mouse, graphical user interface (GUI) and bit-mapped display. Its pop-up menus and icons became the model for the Microsoft* Windows* and Apple* Macintosh* interfaces of today.

 

The DigiBarn site has some good information on the Xerox Alto, along with some cool videos on the Star, a commercial derivative of Alto.

 

GUIdebook also has information on the PARC technology based Star including screenshots, ads, and articles.

 

BCPL and Mesa were the system languages for the Alto. Don Woodward has written a Mesa Virtual Machine in ANSI C called Dawn, and you can find it here. Dawn will run Xerox workstation software packaged on "Dawn virtual disks". Don has created a simple one that boots a plain vanilla Xerox Development Environment. To try it out for yourself download the Dawn Binary for Windows and the Dawn virtual disk. Place the files in the same directory and run Dawn.exe. Here is a synopsis of the Xerox Development Environment.

 

Inspired by a 1945 Atlantic Monthly article by Vannevar Bush about his "memex" automated library system, Douglas Engelbart published: Augmenting Human Intellect: A Conceptual Framework in October 1962. These ideas led to the development of NLS which incorporated a windowing environment, and served as the inspiration for many of the Alto’s features.

 

The development of Sketchpad, an interactive object oriented graphics system by Ivan Sutherland also had influence on the Star’s UI.

 

See the original 1968 NLS Demo here.

 

If you are interested, I recommend taking a look at:

 

A Decade of Research: Xerox Palo Alto Research Center, 1970-1980

A series of papers showing the early research of Xerox regarding computers. Includes the first reference of the term "windows" in computer nomenclature.

ISBN: 0835213277

 

Fumbling the Future: How Xerox Invented, Then Ignored, the First Personal Computer

ISBN: 1583482660

 

Charles Toepfer 2007

PictionID:54487443 - Catalog:Map CCAS graphical - Title:Array - Filename:Map CCAS graphical.jpg - ---- Images from the Convair/General Dynamics Astronautics Atlas Negative Collection. The processing, cataloging and digitization of these images has been made possible by a generous National Historical Publications and Records grant from the National Archives and Records Administration---Please Tag these images so that the information can be permanently stored with the digital file.---Repository: San Diego Air and Space Museum

More probings with my trusty lens.

"Mind the Gap" will be very familiar to the older users of Bank Underground tube station's public address system recording.

Simple graphical street photography can have major impact. It's the perfect combination of geometric architecture and strong directional sunlight that makes this shot so eye catching! Thanks to Eric Forey for the image, recently published in Australia. ow.ly/SF7Rx

1 2 ••• 40 41 43 45 46 ••• 79 80