Last Modernist

April 22, 2012

Light Table by Chris Granger is a great concept for that “different” IDE, especially for people just beginning to learn how to code or coders who want to learn a new language.

Light Table is on Kickstarter.

More about the concept of Light Table here.

April 16, 2012

Finished yet another antiquarian catalogue cover…

March 20, 2012

Just published my first tiny Extension for RoboFont: SidebearingsEQ. 

Equalize sidebearings of all or a selection of glyphs in a font.

SidebearingsEQ on github

December 8, 2011

And another antiquarian catalogue cover… ergh no 14, yes.

Notes: 3

November 20, 2011

Fuck your methodology, paradigms, your belief in math, recipes and literature references. Look at what you got and take it from there. 

I mean, there must be something inside you qualifying you for the job you’re doing, no?

October 6, 2011

Without you I’d probaby still be hating computers as much as I did in ‘93. Thanks Steve.

Without you I’d probaby still be hating computers as much as I did in ‘93. Thanks Steve.

August 31, 2011

 
Now there’s really no excuse any more for not using Compass/Sass for those who find installing/running it a bit too techy:
Scout - Compass and Sass without all the hassle
Run self-enclosed Compass without touching the command line.

Now there’s really no excuse any more for not using Compass/Sass for those who find installing/running it a bit too techy:

Scout - Compass and Sass without all the hassle

Run self-enclosed Compass without touching the command line.

Notes: 2

August 31, 2011

Post Title

And if you don’t believe me (see my post below, http://lastmodernist.tumblr.com/post/8971322167/editor-on-fire ), you proably believe Mr Chimero. 

viafrank:

“Do I need to know how to code?” is a question that comes up with sure-fire consistency in design circles. I’ve seen it asked by so many, from uncertain design students in classrooms worried about their chances of landing a job, to seasoned professionals at conferences seeing their pool of print projects slowly evaporate. The question is being asked with even greater frequency as of late, because Adobe has launched their product Muse, which promises designers the ability to “create unique websites without writing code.” So, if a designer wants to work on the web, should they take the time to learn this dastardly “code” or instead rely on software like Muse?

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Notes: 604