design

80 percent of Facebook users still using old site design

Nicholas Carlson · 08/25/08 10:00AM

Four out of five Facebook users have yet to move to a redesigned version of the site which launched earlier this summer. It's an overwhelming rejection of a project that was said to be Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg's "baby." A Facebook flack tried to put a positive spin on the stat: "Around 20 percent of our users have now migrated to the new platform and it has been received well after people get used to it."The redesign is one of those things we actually like, so at first I was a bit surprised to learn that users hate it so much. I asked a non-tech scene friend whether he uses the old or new design. His answer: "Old, because the new one is ugly and annoying." And then I remembered that Facebook users also hated the News Feed so much when it came out that 587,715 of them joined a group called "Students against Facebook News Feed" in just one day. Expect similar riots in September when Facebook will force its users to migrate to the new platform.

10 user interfaces of the future

Nicholas Carlson · 08/18/08 03:40PM

Sure, your iPhone 3G's touchscreen is nice, but with Ringo, a "holographic shadow," you don't have to touch anything. According to this clip, a Ringo-enabled mobile device's buttons will project onto the ground in front of you. Skip to 1:15 in the clip embedded below and see handy this could be when it comes to walking directions from Google Maps. The only holdup? Ringo doesn't exist yet. Neither do the other 9 user interfaces Smashing Magazine features in its list of "10 Futuristic User Interfaces." We know that won't stop you from ogling them inappropriately.

How Google looks to the colorblind — better

Nicholas Carlson · 07/25/08 01:20PM

Blogoscoped's Philipp Lenssen put Google.com through a colorblind webpage filter and came up with the above image. The first O and the E, usually red, look golden, just like the L, which usually looks green. Blogoscoped's colorblind readers confirm the tool works. Writes one: "I am partial red/green color blind and must say that I did not notice the difference until I opened Google.com to compare it." Funny thing is, compared with Google's actual kindergarden colors, we like the understated look.

Where did the Facebook ads go?

Owen Thomas · 07/21/08 03:40AM

Developers have been raging about Mark Zuckerberg's redesign of Facebook's user profile pages, at last unveiled today. But advertisers might soon find reason to fuss, too. The new design has no conventional ads — not the banners sold by Microsoft; not the smaller, demographically targeted ads sold by Facebook in its Social Ads program. True, there's some white space on the right where ads might go; but the page's HTML source code doesn't have any hooks for ads in that area. Should advertisers be horrified that Facebook is taking some of its most-viewed inventory — users' profile pages — off the market?

George Lois to Design 02138 Cover

Pareene · 07/18/08 03:17PM

Relaunching your niche magazine in this miserable market and dismal culture? Get legendary designer George Lois on board! He cannibalized his old Esquire work for Radar, and now he's lending his talents to pretend Harvard Alum mag 02138 (can't believe we got the name of the mag right on the first try, sigh). If it wasn't late Friday afternoon we'd mock up a funny photoshop here. But now YOU CAN'T MAKE US. Anyway Lois is still awesome and cantankerous so it will probably be good, unlike the rest of that miserable magazine. The relaunch cover story? "The Harvard 100, the magazines annual ranking of the top 100 living alumni. " [NYP]

New Facebook profile goes live

Nicholas Carlson · 07/14/08 05:20PM

The much-anticipated and long-delayed redesign of Facebook's profiles are live. Click through to see yours. We'll continue to harp on Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg for his poor interpersonal social skills, but we have to credit him for an outstanding job with the redesign. We're relieved to find the new profile is both clean and rich with big pictures, videos and comments. Ugly apps designed by less aesthetically aware third-parties are gone from sight. Even moving the user photo from the left to the right side of the profile somehow works. Not everyone is a fan. When we told one widgetmaker "looks pretty good," he responded "if you like FriendFeed." "Or Tumblr," we joked. It's funny because it's true — we do like Tumblr.

Try not to panic: Facebook moves profile picture to right side

Nicholas Carlson · 07/09/08 05:20PM

Responding to Facebook's latest iteration of its soon to be launched site redesign, user Josh Taylor Cross from Canterbury High School writes: "Please don't. Like...really....DONT." The cause for alarm? You might want to sit down. Facebook's latest mockups show profile pictures moved from the left side of the page, where they've been since founder Mark Zuckerberg first created TheFacebook.com, all the way to the right. Will society survive?

Redesigned Facebook launches next week, really this time

Nicholas Carlson · 07/08/08 12:20PM

Facebook users will be able to "start exploring" the site's controversial new redesign on July 14, founder Mark Zuckerberg's flacks announced yesterday, through one of their typically annoying Facebook updates. (Have they never heard of email in Palo Alto?) A full, official launch will come a week later, in time for Zuckerberg's keynote address at the company's F8 event, a gathering for developers. Facebook had originally announced it would launch its redesign in early April, but that was before independent Facebook-application makers got a look at the changes and completely freaked out.

Segway CTO leaves to join Apple design team

Paul Boutin · 07/07/08 12:20PM

Doug Field, described as "the driving force behind Segway" on the company's customer forums, is leaving Segway for Apple, where his role will be "a VP of product design" according to a Segway coworker. (Just nosy: If Field is not the VP of product design, but a VP, then how many vice presidents of product design does the company have?) A few years ago, Steve Jobs slammed the Segway as "this incredibly innovative machine but it looks very traditional," and challenged Field to design "things that would make you shit in your pants." Will Field make good on that? Video or it didn't happen, Doug.

Gurbaksh Chahal to pretend to be poor, learn life lessons in new Fox reality show

Nicholas Carlson · 06/20/08 02:00PM

Now we know why BlueLithium founder and short-time Yahoo employee Gurbaksh "G" Chahal decorated his $6.9 million penthouse with tacky animal skins and a cheap-looking chandelier. To look rich for middle America. Chalal is starring in a Fox "reality" show this fall called The Secret Millionaire. In it, G will live among poor people and pretend to be one of them. But before doing that, he'll have to convince Fox's audience at home he's used to living a fabulously wealthy lifestyle. Hence, the decorations, G's decorator tells us in an email defending his efforts.

Girl-On-Girl Magazine Covers: Shameless, Popular As Ever

Hamilton Nolan · 06/19/08 04:34PM

The new issue of W is a fine example of a shameless girl-on-girl magazine cover: to this day, one of the surest ways to guarantee sales on the news stand, regardless how vapid the interior editorial content may be. Whether you loathe it (exploitation!) or love it (exploitation is hot!), it's a design trope almost as common as the between-the-legs A-frame photo. Below, five more famous examples from the recent past. The only way to fight the enemy is to know the enemy.

23andMe looking for designer comfortable with "vague" as directions

Owen Thomas · 06/18/08 05:00PM


Designers, want to torture yourself in a contract position surrounded by smarmy, know-it-all PhDs who give you only the vaguest of instructions and expect you to master the intricacies of biotechnology overnight? Lured by the promise that you might one day get hired on full-time and get stock options at a company backed by Google and run by Google cofounder Sergey Brin's wife? Unbothered by the fact that the California Department of Public Health has just banned the company's service? Then, dear visual-thinking friends, this position for a graphic designer at 23andMe is for you! The job description:

Facebook's Wall comes down

Nicholas Carlson · 06/13/08 12:40PM

Facebook has removed the "Wall" from its redesigned profiles. Early screenshots of the redesign featured a separate tab for the popular feature, but the latest shots show the Wall, where other users can leave comments on a profile, with the user's News Feed — now just called the "Feed." Users will be able to filter the Feed to see only Wall posts. Facebook-app developers, already exasperated by the redesign process, tell us they don't like the idea. Says one: "Mixing in 'X wrote on Y's FunWall" along with more personal messages from friends may deteriorate the quality of the new Wall/Feed feature as a whole." Put another way? Widgetmakers don't like losing their privileged position in the News Feed. Full screenshot of the new look, below.

Why Google wants to be small

Owen Thomas · 06/09/08 12:20PM


The sudden appearance, in millions of browsers, of a new icon for Google was jarring to many users, though the change was slight — a capital "G" replaced by a lowercase "g". An E.E. Cummings-esque affectation? Perhaps, since the change was driven by overworked, underoccupied Google VP Marissa Mayer. She says she made her designers go through more 300 variations before settling on a lowercase blue "g". After putting her employees through the wringer, she's now outsourcing the mess to Google users But if you read Mayer's rules for an icon, though, you'll see she's set to reject anything but the one she chose.

The "heart" of Facebook's redesign

Nicholas Carlson · 05/22/08 10:20AM

Facebook revealed its site redesign for reporters yesterday. Here Facebook product manager Mark Slee demonstrates the "Feed tab" what he calls the "heart of the Facebook's new profile."

The look of Facebook, past, present, and future

Nicholas Carlson · 05/21/08 11:40AM

Facebook will update its profile design in the next couple of weeks, a change rendered momentous if only by the millions who have known no other interface to their obsession. Below, check out the new look. Then compare it to Facebook profile designs from a past as distant as 2005. You remember the time, right? It was before Facebook's spammy apps, before the stalker-friendly News Feed, and before they let in all the jailbait high-schoolers. Come, journey with us into the lost youth of Mark Zuckerberg.

Between The Legs: The Most Copied Layout

Hamilton Nolan · 05/21/08 11:21AM

The "A-frame" shot—between the legs, with something framed in the middle—is called the "most frequently copied trope ever used" in the design world. PRINT Magazine pulls together a great collection of novels, movie and theater posters, ads, comic books, magazines, and album covers that all use the device, in a cacophony of legs that quickly goes from edgy to uniform. The best from five different mediums, after the jump:

Screenshots of Facebook's new design and all the old ones too

Nicholas Carlson · 05/20/08 06:20PM

Facebook released screenshots of its soon-to-be updated redesign today. Of note: The social network's designers moved the applications menu and search bar to the top of the screen. Banner ads will move to the right of layout, leaving the left mostly blank. Because we know change is hard, we've embedded screenshots of Facebook's older designs below.