LinuxDay 2006: the (two) week after

November 8th, 2006

So the Lin­ux­Day is gone this year too… It has been an amaz­ing expe­ri­ence, I talked about inkscape at 50-60 people. And most of them were really inter­ested in what I was saying, and this is a real miracle :)

By the way, if you want to have a look at my slides, you can find them at http://​lug​bari.​org/​b​i​n​/​v​i​e​w​/​M​a​i​n​/​L​i​n​u​x​D​a​y2006, next to my presentation’s title: “Inkscape: grafica vet­to­ri­ale su Linux”.

0 Comments, tagged with Graphic, Linux

Reboot the homepage

September 6th, 2006

Usually works in this way: you open the home page of your site and you’re tired of seeing always the same graphic and the same layout. Then you want to do a redesign but this rarely hap­pens, since it requires a lot of time and you don’t have enough.
The ques­tion is: does this redesign is really needed? 95% of it doesn’t.

Doing the redesign of your own site requires big efforts both in time and in money terms, since from time to time, when you’re the devel­oper of your­self, you never know when you really done the work. This hap­pens, at least to me, very often. I do a site, then after two or three weeks I would to redesign it since its layout just bored me.

The matter is that many times this work is unneeded and undesidered. It’s not rare to see some very nice and orig­i­nal design dis­ap­pear after not so much time because the author decided its time to burn the old design and to do another one.

This word​press.com host­ing doesn’t allow to change the css (if you don’t pay a15$ fee), so the prob­lem doesn’t exists for this blog, but exists for many other sites I have.

So, what do you think about this? Is this just a my own prob­lem or it is a wider one?

0 Comments, tagged with Graphic, Web

Using inkscape to design a phone receiver

June 3rd, 2006

Yesterday I had to design a new logo for a prod­uct that’s going to be launched on the market by a friend of mine. Since it was a VoIP-related ser­vice, I thought that the logo could include some­thing like a phone receiver.
I can’t show you the logo itself, since the prod­uct hasn’t yet been launched, so let see this post like an inkscape tuto­r­ial where I explain how to design a phone receiver. Maybe, when the prod­uct will be ready, I’ll made an entire tuto­r­ial about the logo design.

Phone receiver modelThe first thing we need is an image that we’ll use as model. I used the image you can see on the right.

Note that’s a PNG with an alpha chan­nel, so Inter­net Explorer users could have prob­lems to see it. It’s not impor­tant, by the way, to have a per­fect shaped model.
So, open inkscape, create a 400x400px doc­u­ment (File->Document Preferences->Custom Canvas) and then import the model (File->Import…).

After this, create a rec­tan­gle (press F4 or click on the rec­tan­gle icon) that has, more or less, the same size of the image and put it under the model (if it goes over, press PgDown to put it down).

Create another rec­tan­gle and cross it with the other rec­tan­gle in this way:

Then select both the rec­tan­gles and press Ctrl + - or click on Path->Difference. In this way you should get some­thing like this:

Now, by keep­ing selected the result­ing rec­tan­gle, edit it as a path by using the path trans­former tools (press F2 or click on the icon on the tool­bar).
Select the upper and bottom left cor­ners (hold shift pressed to select both), then add three new nodes by click­ing twice on . Then select the inter­nal nodes (the nodes that should stay with­ing the phone receiver) and add a new node. You should get some­thing like this:

Now select all the left-​side nodes and make selected nodes smooth by click­ing on the right icon ). Then move the nodes near the model shape to have some­thing that has more or less the same shape. In the end, you should have this:

Now move the model away (keep it near the shape you cre­ated now to use it as a ref­er­ence). Now, make smooth all the remain­ing nodes and try to model them using the lines that appear when you select them in order to have some­thing like this:

A tip: for the inter­nal nodes, keep that lines really shorter in order to have just a rounded corner. If you need more pre­ci­sion, add new nodes where you think you need them (I added other two nodes on the top and on the bottom of the phone receiver).

So now remove the model and you’ll have your phone receiver ready to be used!

0 Comments, tagged with Graphic

Microblogging

July 29th

twitter (feed #2)
Python's date & time functions are horrible. Really. [krat]
2:31pm via Twitter
twitter (feed #2)
Wondering whether I should buy a new set of hearphones or if I should try to fix the old ones [krat]
11:13am via Twitter

July 28th

twitter (feed #2)
discovered beeseek (http://beeseek.org), looks like a very interesting project [krat]
6:08pm via Twitter

July 26th

twitter (feed #2)
just wrote down some help numbers for my next trip, the most important one being the italy's embassy [krat]
2:12pm via Twitter

July 24th

twitter (feed #2)
that's what I call hot weather [krat]
2:00pm via Twitter

July 23rd

twitter (feed #2)
Looking for an (italian|english)<->bulgarian dictionary [krat]
2:05pm via Twitter
twitter (feed #2)
home, sweet home. [krat]
10:10am via Twitter

July 22nd

twitter (feed #2)
Heading to bulgaria (sunny beach) this summer. Not one of the classical holidays places, that's for sure. [krat]
8:50am via Twitter

July 19th

twitter (feed #2)
I hate hotels. [krat]
2:32pm via Twitter

July 17th

twitter (feed #2)
Back in Italy. Discovered this P3 disgusting thing. Want to go back in Spain. [krat]
12:20pm via Twitter

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