Mariner, coming soon

July 9th, 2010

https://substance.dev.java.net/release-info/6.1/mariner1-v1.png

Weaving textures

July 5th, 2010

R0011650

R0011649

R0011647

From Weaving textures set.

I remember back in late 90s, just after the invention of DVD, somebody said – never underestimate the carrying capacity of a semi truck trailer loaded with floppy disks. I never did the math though, so here goes:

A typical semi truck trailer is 12.5x8x40 feet which gives 4000 cubic feet. This is 113,267,386 cubic centimeters. A floppy disk is 3.5 inch across, which would be 8.75 centimeters. Assuming thickness of 4 millimeters (it’s actually a little bit less), each floppy is 30.625 cubic centimeters.

So a semi can carry almost 3.7 million floppy disks (3,698,526) which amount to 5,201 GB or 5.07 TB of data. Looks like that guy was right.

Update: a comment pointed out an earlier quote about a station wagon loaded with 9 track tapes. 2400 feet 9-track tape is a 10.5 inch reel. Assuming thickness of 0.5 inch that amounts to 860 cubic centimeters. With folded rear seats, Audi A4 has 50.5 cubic feet of cargo space. That is 1,430,000 cubic centimeters. That amounts to 1662 9-track tapes.

Each tape holds 170MB (IBM 3400 series). All in all 275 GB

Update 2: Chevrolet Caprice has cargo capacity of 106.4 cubic feet. Filled with 9-track tapes would be 581 GB.

Design, uninterrupted #50

July 2nd, 2010

Today’s post highlights the design of WeGraphics.net. A predominantly monochrome theme uses bright saturated orange for the rollover effects and the main action button. The header section uses large letterpress texts and ghost icons (that turn orange on rollover) to draw the visitor’s attention towards the prominent full color action button. Note the background radial highlight with amorphous areas of rotated grid dot patterns that adds a pinch of grunginess to the top of the page. The icon navigation bar is framed with etched separators that have random irregularities along the grooves.

A precise thumbnail grid of sample downloads is framed with another etched separator and is followed by a three-column footer. The footer background is washed away in a few places to “reveal” an underlying square pattern. Instead of being an etched groove, the bottom separator is raised above the surface, while still maintaining the same irregularity as the rest of the separators. I would pay a little bit more attention to the smaller separators in the second footer column and to the consistency of the text shadow effects.