Captain
CEO of America Online
- Joined
- Jun 14, 2022
- Messages
- 125
- Reaction score
- 542
- Awards
- 58
Donate and support Agora Road's Macintosh Cafe to keep the forum alive and make any necessary upgrades to have a more pleasant experience! Update: I configured the site with Brave Browser, so you can send tips to the site with BAT.
- Upgrade now for donation only awards! In Three Tiers
-- Agora Gold
-- Agora Silver
-- Agora Bronze
Upgrades like "moods" username customization, profile customization, custom backgrounds, banners and much more!
It will be under Account Upgrades
Submissions for Tales of Agora Road Issue #4 is OPEN!This thread has been viewed 1193 times.
No wonder shopping malls died. I remember loving the mall as a kid, but when I became an adult I hated it. I don't remember what it was like as a kid, but as an adult it was mostly empty.One of my local malls in 1995ish and today. This modern mall architecture has no soul. I didn't know how lucky we were living in a time when designers could balance neon, modern, and nature. Sigh
I'm unsure of the name for this style, but I love PC's where all of the hardware is built into a mechanical keyboard. Something like an MSX or Commodore 64. Recently I was thinking that when it becomes time to replace my current computer, I would like to build a modern version of something like that, but when I looked into it I couldn't find any shells for sale. I did find one company that made a Commodore 64 shell for modern PC's but literally everything in their shop was sold out so I assume they're done.View attachment 75621
Check out this sweet terminal from the early 80s. Loads of cool design features, the keyboard being designed to nuzzle into the screen is really fun, and the general shapes cut by the thing are pretty nice.
Compare that to current hell:
View attachment 75622
I swear to god that this obsession with everything being so small has basically led to things just being the shape of their internal components and there's just not enough room to do anything cool anymore at all. When you mix that in with the prevailing minimalism, everything just seems so austere and lame. If it doesn't need to be moved, it doesn't need to be tiny and light. Hell, I wanna see a modern flatscreen where the stand is just a big fuckoff piece of plastic that grows out the back of it instead of some shitty plastic stick, maybe then I could have something that looks cool on my desk rather than having to trash the stands immediately and put my monitors on arms.
I miss when electronics came in fun colors.Everything has to be bright and sterile. It was much cozier when it was darker. Modern minimalism is so cold and lonely.
You nailed the term. It almost wasn't gradual at all. There's was a pre-2012 and a post-2012 (maybe post-2015 actually?) where design turned to shit everywhere. All "big" websites adopted the same look, advertising stopped being about putting in effort (I remember watching ads on TV that had great charm in their animations near 2008). Many moved from serif typefaces to sans serif ones. A lot of games have the same user interface (almost nothing, maybe a minimap and some text). Hardware is all following one of a few trends (ultra-thin laptops, phones with notches and no bezels nor headphone jacks, heavy RGB computers, and a few others)this obsession
(he's talking about material design, which looks like a psychopath's user interface)Skeuomorphism became very dated [...]
The idea was to create a revolutionary digital-first interface design language for digital natives, getting rid of old physical metaphors.
Honestly I remember being around at the time and being somewhat excited for the flat design thing coming in, especially with some stuff the skeuomorphism had been pushed so far that things were starting to look fucking ridiculous. If I'd known where it would end up though, I don't think I would have been so hyped for it. If nothing else though, I think that a decade of this minimalist stuff has kinda left people not knowing how the fuck to design anything anymore - you can just see things becoming lower and lower-effort, and I wouldn't be entirely surprised if this isn't a result of new "designers" entering the field who've grown up with only this stuff, and thinking that a company's name in Helvetica is the height of design.You nailed the term. It almost wasn't gradual at all. There's was a pre-2012 and a post-2012 (maybe post-2015 actually?) where design turned to shit everywhere. All "big" websites adopted the same look, advertising stopped being about putting in effort (I remember watching ads on TV that had great charm in their animations near 2008). Many moved from serif typefaces to sans serif ones. A lot of games have the same user interface (almost nothing, maybe a minimap and some text). Hardware is all following one of a few trends (ultra-thin laptops, phones with notches and no bezels nor headphone jacks, heavy RGB computers, and a few others)
I've read articles like this https://www.avenga.com/magazine/skeuomorphism-neumorphism/ and it's just like reading something from another planet.
here's a quote from the article
(he's talking about material design, which looks like a psychopath's user interface)
I could go on, but it's just a matter of decency rather than usability, so I don't know what to do about it.
It feels like everything moved from idiosyncrasy to homogenization, but thankfully we can still find (simulacra of) those older things. They are removed from their original context, almost OOPArts, and oftentimes static rather than alive and changing, but it's better than not having them, at least.
I find it fascinating the depths of how bad architecture can get because this same comparison can be made with a medieval building vs the 90s mall. Most premodern buildings are more aesthetic and have more soul but things have degraded so much that even the 90s mall is nicer looking than current minimalist malls. The difference is staggering if you see them side by side. At my university, literally everyone I know prefers the traditional designs of our oldest buildings to the concrete and glass garbage buildings made in the 70s or now.One of my local malls in 1995ish and today. This modern mall architecture has no soul. I didn't know how lucky we were living in a time when designers could balance neon, modern, and nature. Sigh
Except for the cable.being designed to nuzzle into the screen is really fun, and the general shapes cut by the thing are pretty nice.
This isn't entirely true. Mobile phones have increased in size. Handheld gaming consoles have increased in size. These products are being marketed towards a global audience, so you're wanting to go for globally good qualities, not locally good(i.e. within design or within aesthetic communities). Even Laptops if you look at width and height, have moved more to 13" and 15", where before it used to be 11" and 13" "netbooks"(which have become your tablets).I swear to god that this obsession with everything being so small has basically led to things just being the shape of their internal components and there's just not enough room to do anything cool anymore at all. When you mix that in with the prevailing minimalism, everything just seems so austere and lame.
This format of PC exists, it's called a laptop. Don't like that it's not headless? Rip off the screen and plug in a display port cable to your monitor. For high computation uses, this is a bad format for a PC as you add thermal considerations to the keyboard. It can't give off heat on the top, or the bottom, only the sides. It has to cable to the monitor, it has to take more peripherals, and it has to be low vibration(meaning most thermal cooling options are off the cards).I'm unsure of the name for this style, but I love PC's where all of the hardware is built into a mechanical keyboard. Something like an MSX or Commodore 64. Recently I was thinking that when it becomes time to replace my current computer, I would like to build a modern version of something like that, but when I looked into it I couldn't find any shells for sale. I did find one company that made a Commodore 64 shell for modern PC's but literally everything in their shop was sold out so I assume they're done.
I guess I'll contact them and see if they ever plan to restock. If not, maybe I'll put a single board computer into a mechanical keyboard and run Linux on it. I'm not sure what I'd do with it though, since I don't think I would ever use Linux for my main PC.
You're right. It's the natural evolution of finding out what works best from a psychological manipulation point, following from 2007 where social media started going on, 1st gen of Iphones came out, Big Bang Theory(and decay of what memes were happened). I've written about this before, and put 2007 as the year it went bad, but 2012 is probably the point where the frog really felt the boiling water.There's was a pre-2012 and a post-2012 (maybe post-2015 actually?) where design turned to shit everywhere.
If a way of doing things becomes homogenised, it also becomes idiosyncratic. This happened in the 90s and 00s with skeumorphic design for OS GUIs being idiosyncratic. As for skeumorphic design becoming dated, it's because the metaphors required context, and that context has dissolved away with technological progress. I.E. The skeumorphic design for a folder, most people don't keep folders. The skeumorphic design for saving, most people don't keep floppy discs. Arguably CDs and DVDs are becoming rare now too. This changing context. Arguably context changes too fast nowadays, that it's better to go do mintrubbing over timeless arguments... like rounded corners vs sharp corners.It feels like everything moved from idiosyncrasy to homogenization, but thankfully we can still find (simulacra of) those older things. They are removed from their original context, almost OOPArts, and oftentimes static rather than alive and changing, but it's better than not having them, at least.
Brutalism was the only glass and concrete building style that looked good and had an aesthetic. Bland flat walls and glass are shit.I find it fascinating the depths of how bad architecture can get because this same comparison can be made with a medieval building vs the 90s mall. Most premodern buildings are more aesthetic and have more soul but things have degraded so much that even the 90s mall is nicer looking than current minimalist malls. The difference is staggering if you see them side by side. At my university, literally everyone I know prefers the traditional designs of our oldest buildings to the concrete and glass garbage buildings made in the 70s or now.
Meh, at least I can put my monitor and my keyboard on a desk without a keyboard drawer, flat screens all the wayView attachment 75621
Check out this sweet terminal from the early 80s. Loads of cool design features, the keyboard being designed to nuzzle into the screen is really fun, and the general shapes cut by the thing are pretty nice.
Compare that to current hell:
View attachment 75622
I swear to god that this obsession with everything being so small has basically led to things just being the shape of their internal components and there's just not enough room to do anything cool anymore at all. When you mix that in with the prevailing minimalism, everything just seems so austere and lame. If it doesn't need to be moved, it doesn't need to be tiny and light. Hell, I wanna see a modern flatscreen where the stand is just a big fuckoff piece of plastic that grows out the back of it instead of some shitty plastic stick, maybe then I could have something that looks cool on my desk rather than having to trash the stands immediately and put my monitors on arms.
you can have flat screens and design that's better than just "it's another black square"Meh, at least I can put my monitor and my keyboard on a desk without a keyboard drawer, flat screens all the way
Until videos are rendered in oval shapes, I'm afraid a sqaure is the most space-efficient shape there is for a monitor screenyou can have flat screens and design that's better than just "it's another black square"
I have no idea what you think i'm on about but here's a 2-minute doodle of the kind of thing I imagine when I look at that old terminal and modern flatscreen and try to think of the latter with inspiration from the former. I don't know where you got "oval screen" from.Until videos are rendered in oval shapes, I'm afraid a sqaure is the most space-efficient shape there is for a monitor screen
Website design on the other hand I entirely agree. I love simple, functional Web 1.0 stuff and despise shiny Javascript overuse. I never get people who complained about Wikipedia's old look (among other websites) being "dated" and applaud its new design that forces you to scroll endlessly, covers half the screen with whitespace, and hides stuff away in menus for no reason. And even with the new design, Wikipedia is much better than the average modern website. I really learned to hate modern UI once I had a smartphone with strict data limits.
soc media and web3 toowho want to save money by copy and pasting everything
Thread starter | Title | Forum | Replies | Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
![]() |
The Vibe Shift | Current Events, Philosophy, & Paranormal. | 4 |