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Essay 1 of 3 for MdN Magazine March/April 1995
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| I briefly contributed a series of short essays for MdN Magazine in Japan at the invitation of Prof. Yuichi Inomata of Tama Art University. I stopped because I saw that rapid change required actual work, rather than my unneeded, feisty discourse.Graphic
design is at a standstill. Many designers attempt to move forward.
earnestly exploring the digital realm with the fastest computers,
the most memory, the largest monitors, and the biggest hard disks.
Yet they all fall short of defining the next revolution in visual
communication design. They fail because their Macintosh-fueled design
tools are explicitly programmed to express a finite set of visual
expressive styles, hence implicitly guiding designwork performed
with these tools along precisely defined stylistic axes. Designers
who seek to break free from these constraints are usually the first
in line for the latest upgrade to KPT** or any other similar tool
that even slightly breaks from the run of the mill. In the old days,
originality wasn't sold in stores.
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The download described in this essay is available [here]. It is designed to run on a pre-OSX Macintosh for a resolution of 640 by 480 pixels. There is no guarantee that it runs any longer. |