Writers' Community!
Home Page Two Columnists Q&A Submit an Article FAQs Contact Author Login
Article Submission
We Need YOUR Articles!
We'll Promote Them for FREE!

Author Login

New Authors
Register Here


Now Serving 7,759 Authors
70,412 Quality Articles
& 4,004 Current Users Online!
Featured Authors
Ben Morrish (7,936)
Steve Kovacs (4,545)
Sandra E. Graham (7,883)
Fran Larson (2,271)
Joel Hendon (16,285)
Shari Vaudo (418)
David Tanguay (9,577)
Michael Ramzy (633)
Missing Link (766)
E. Raymond Rock (3,068)
Gregory Lewis (1,603)
Nancy Daniels (1,550)
Mark Parsec (15,056)
David Pekrul (3,696)

View All Featured Authors
Most Recent
Creating the Perfect Website Design

How To Create An HTML Image Background For Your Webpage

Analyze Keywords Using Adwords Keyword Tool and Excel Macro Function

If You're Making These Web Site Mistakes, You're Scaring Prospects Away

Perl of Wisdom, Perl of laughter

PHP’s Paamayim Nekudotayim: The secret’s in the code.

The Macromedia Flash man looks to LEGO for a System.

Your Website Concept

What Makes A Good Website?

How To Build a Basic Web Page

Home » Categories » Website Technologies » Website Design » The Macromedia Flash man looks to LEGO for a System. » Printer Friendly

The Macromedia Flash man looks to LEGO for a System.

Rated 3.5 out of 5
No Reader Ratings Available ?
Rate It  /  View Comments  /  View All Articles submitted by m6net
Submitted Monday, June 30, 2008
m6net (4,292)
M6.Net
Log in to become a member of m6net's Fan Club!


When it comes to computer technology it is often the case that it takes a large number of people working together to create something new and ingenious. However, we do know from experience that sometimes it is an individual human being who cracks the code' that leads to a new way of doing things. For isn't that what technology is, new ways of getting things done? In the case Of Macromedia Flash we have look to one person in particular, Jonathan Gay. This one guy pretty much revolutionised the way animation and sound can now be manipulated to reflect an artist's vision via contemporary computers and the Internet.

Here are a couple of Flash examples that just so happen to have been drawn up for articles that I've written in the past (Is this shameless self-promotion?): http://ezinearticles.com/?Internet-Dating:-Future-Internet:-Human-Collaboration-Example-2 & id=76006 This is the article,

http://www.m6.net/articles/images/article2.swf is the accompanying animation, and

http://www.gavinillustration.com/ is the website of the artist who collaborated with me at the time. Here's another one: http://searchwarp.com/swa32978.htm, with its Flash created by the same graphic artist: http://www.m6.net/articles/images/neopet.swf. What do you think? Well, this is the simple side of Flash. It gets a lot more detailed, diverse, and can reach great visual depth as you probably already know. http://www.sqcircle.com/ is an example of some pretty good Flash creativity.

So what's all this got to do with LEGO then? Well I was reading an autobiographical article by the Flash man himself at http://www.adobe.com/macromedia/events/john_gay/ and he tells simply and frankly how his whole method of developing ideas comes from the same process he used as a child when he played with plastic coloured blocks of LEGO. Is he a genius? Maybe...but most probably he's not. The higher probability lies in the idea that he's a human being like the rest of us, but who has worked very hard throughout his life (sometimes for fun, sometimes for survival/paycheques, sometimes for both) and he's found a system of evolving ideas that works. This is the system he used to develop both Flash recently and LEGO when he was a little younger.

  • Choose a problem: Build a LEGO ship.
  • Develop a vision: What sort of ship will it be? How big will it be? What will it carry?
  • Build: Build the framework of the ship.
  • Fill in the details: Design and build the details of the ship, ramps, doors, etc.
  • Test: Drive the cars (Matchbox, Hotwheels) around the ship and sail the ship while exploring the house.
  • Refine: Take parts of the ship apart and make them better.
  • Learn: Take what you learned from building this ship and use it to build a better one next time.
  • So what can hopeful web developers and graphic designers get out of all this? Well, you could get the realisation that creating something new isn't as hard as you once thought. You might just need a systemand could it be that you've already subconsciously built systems throughout your life just by being alive and interacting with the world around you? Or possibly you might remember that you don't need to be a genius to build something that helps human beings have a better existence. You just need to be someone who works diligently with focus, perseverance, and a goal in mind.

    Do you remember that friend in Elementary School who had built their own LEGO creations? Sadly, I wasn't one of those kids. I was happy just to build the designs that were explained with instructions and a picture on the side of the box. It always blew me away when a kid would show me how they had built an entire football stadium, race track, or airport. Then there are the grown up kids like Google co-founder Larry Page who built a functioning inkjet printer out of LEGO blocks while at University. Check out http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LEGO under the Fan culture and community' section and you can read more about incredible LEGO inventions and the people who envisioned and then created them.

    Just remember, it's human beings that created LEGO, built amazing things from it (fully functional padlocks, pendulum clocks, and a harpsichord to name but a few), and it's human beings who create the Internet, websites, and computer technology. It could be time to have a little bit more faith in yourself and in your personal systems of work and productionYou could be the next creator of something that changed the world as much as Macromedia Flashor even LEGO! Find a system that works for you, let your imagination run wild, and let us all see what can come from your personal interests and unique individual perspective on life.



    tweet this!



    Reprint Rights

    Log in to become a member of m6net's Fan Club!

    No comments yet.


    Send a private message to m6net about this article.
    Was this article helpful to you? Leave a Public Comment or Question:

    This Article has been viewed 53 times.
    Article added to SearchWarp.com on 6/30/2008 1:34:50 AM.
    View other articles written by m6net (4,292)


    If you found this article interesting, you may want to check out:

    Disclaimer:  All information on this site is provided for informational purposes only! By no means is any information presented herein intended to substitute for the advice provided to you by any health care or other professional or organization.


    Today's Most Popular
    How to Create a Splash Page for Your Website?

    Creating Dynamic Website Content with PHP - MySQL

    Photoshop’s Pen Tool for Tracing Vectors

    Direct-To-Plate Printing versus Digital Printing

    Choosing An Effective Website Colour Combination

    The best way to obtain a website on the cheap

    Does Your Website Need Some CAPTCHA?

    Unique Grunge Effects on Photoshop

    Build A Successful Website For Dummies

    Examples of Bad Web Site Graphic Design

    Viewed Live and Saved. Load Time: 0.109.

    Home  |  Page Two  |  FAQ's  |  Contact  |  Terms of Service  |  Article Submission Guidelines  |  Questions & Answers  |  Privacy  |  Mission / About
    Copyright © 1999-2009 SearchWarp.com, All Rights Reserved - SearchWarp.com is an IcoLogic, Inc. Company