Monday, May 12, 2008

My Paper on Funny Garbage

Funny Garbage has been in the forefront of web design, interactive entertainment and broadcast production for over 10 years. Their slogan is “making the web worth watching” and they do just that. On their web sit you can view some before and after screen shots of this company’s work. Funny Garbage designs with a lot of bright colors and exciting imagery. Everything they have done is very pleasing to the eye.
John Carlin and Peter Girardi started the company in 1996; each of who had extensive experience in the world of art, design and media in general. Funny Garbage now has a reputation as one of the most creative and innovative interactive design companies in the world. Funny Garbage has been one of the preeminent producers of interactive and tradition media; creating large scale web sites, advanced user interfaces and con ten t that consumers want. Has produced successful projects for some of the most important companies and consumer brands in the world. Including Fox, PBS. NASCAR, Bloomberg, Intel, Disney, Comcast, Viacom, Nike, Lego. Funny Garbage is dedicated to innovative Research and Development, particularly in the area of advanced user interfaces that help people find and store what they want on screen. Music To Go is an example of original software that Funny Garbage spun out into a separate company, which builds music download stores and promotional marketing campaigns for hundreds of radio stations across America.
This company has a great website that includes a very entertaining and thought provoking blog, which is very important in the field of graphic design. Currently, Funny Garbage remains in the forefront of both web development and broadcast production. They also design a lot of online projects, including a prestigious web site and analytic database for New York City's Department of Cultural Affairs through The Alliance for the Arts, and are producing content for a number of TV networks including Disney, Cartoon Network and MTV. At the same time our development of original intellectual property continues to grow with successful rounds of investment in Music to Go, the digital strategy company for terrestrial radio we co-founded, and new projects with Maria Bartiromo and L’il Jon.
When the interest in innovative web sites waned around 2001, FG turned to traditional media production such as the show "Crank Yankers" for Comedy Central as well as maintaining its web production through work for Bloomberg and Viacom; notably developing sites and applications for Noggin and The N, which became leaders in the new wave of web design.
Funny Garbage has some of the most fun designs out on the market today, no wonder why they are so successful. This company is an inspiration to young graphic designers entering into the work place. They put a fun spin on all of there work and this is very evident even if you visit their website for only a few minutes.




Scribblevision is an online “animated coloring book” that Funny Garbage developed for Noggin, the children’s cable network.

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Sunday, May 11, 2008

Movie

This is the video that plays when you click the "Watch the Trailer" button

animated gif

Final Site

Sunday, May 4, 2008

Video Pop up

Today i added my video pop up screen. I decided to use a trailer for Prom Night. I found my video on AOL video. I then saved the quicktime movie as the appropriate name. The video makes my website look very professional i am really happy with how my site is coming along.

Saturday, May 3, 2008

slicing

Today i took my first stab at slicing my website. It was difficult and frustrating at first but I think I finally got it! Now i am a Pro.

Watching my website work and come together is really exciting i cant believe I made this myself!

Friday, May 2, 2008

revisit to the definition of a screenager





screenager
(1) From Douglas Rushkoff's 1997 book "Playing the Future," a screenager is a teenager who spends a lot of time at a computer screen. Screenager activities are sending e-mail and instant messages, downloading music and movies, gaming and Web surfing

When designing a project for a specific target audience you must keep them in mind through out the whole process.

Thursday, May 1, 2008

What makes a good website?

Today i decided to do research on what makes a good website here are some of my findings...

1. Purpose:
This is the crux of what we talk about when we're up on our soapbox. You'll hear us use the word 'objectives' a lot. Why do you have a website? What its purpose? How are you going to measure your success?

2. Design:
We're talking about things like colour choice, alignments, visual interest, and meaningful metaphors.

3. Message:
Content is king. Every page in your website needs a goal. You need to understand who your target audience is and what you want them to do. Then you must provide them with the appropriate information and a meaningful call to action.

4. Architecture:
How are your pages organized? Is it intuitive? Will your target audience understand? Think about Disney.com will differ from Microsoft.com.

5. Usability & Accessibility:
HTML is still a coding language and it needs to be well formed and accessible. Not everyone who visits your site is perfectly enabled. Some people have disabilities, some have slow connections, some can't install the Flash plug-in. Knowing your target audience and your goals certainly helps to set your usability and accessibility standards.

6. Online Marketing:
Appealing to the search engines is a game. Get it wrong and you'll find yourself banned. Do it right and you'll be rewarded with lots of free, targeted traffic. It's not difficult, it just takes experience and planning

7. Technical Stuff:
Is your domain easy to remember? Is your ISP reliable? Do they have 20,000 other websites hosted on your server? Do they support the right technologies for your website to grow?