Browser.Sutherland Lyall on websites. e-interiors e-interiors.net the professional web tool for interior designers is at www.e-interiors.net. The idea seems to be that you download three-dimensional images of specific furniture and put them in your own computer model. So far so good, terrific even. The reality is difficult to assess because this can be one slow download. With a fast ADSL See DSL. ADSL - Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line modem it took a minute and a half - in which time you would have logged off and surfed the entire Buckminster Fuller oeuvre elsewhere. I tried it on other computers and modems and it was a tad faster on one of these but when the various bits of the home page emerged it turned out that the main section could only be read by extensive use of the sliders sliders a species of tortoise kept as pets. They have a black shell and a red stripe behind the eye. Called also Chrysemys scripta elegans, red-eared sliders. - on a 19in screen too. You may have better luck: the site was apparently designed on a Mac. But I am irresistibly drawn to that twenty-first century cry: 'Well it works on MY computer'. Zero for brain-damaged site design even if it is 'supported by astute programming' - er, not. Chaumont-sur-Loire gardens Every year there is this wonderful show of small landscapes at Chaumont-sur-Loire some kiometres south of Paris. It's called the Conservatoire conservatoire Noun a school of music [French] Conservatory, Conservatoire a school of advanced studies, usually in one of the fine arts, hence, the students and professors collectively; international des parcs et jardins et du paysage. The 30 or so gardens are small, low budget and, mostly, seriously over the top. It is exactly what is needed by the overly tweedy, cottage garden- and herbaceous her·ba·ceous adj. 1. Relating to or characteristic of an herb as distinguished from a woody plant. 2. Green and leaflike in appearance or texture. border-prone landscape world. This annual shot in the arm has a website, www.chaumont-jardins.com, and, no wimpish wimp Slang n. A person who is regarded as weak or ineffectual: "the impression that he is a colorless, indecisive wimp, and not a leader among men" James J. Kilpatrick. concessions to hopeless foreigners, it's in French. At the time of writing it was just a home page but the promoters promise me they will have complete coverage by the time you read this. ICANN (Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, www.icann.org) A non-profit, international association founded in 1998 and incorporated in the U.S. It is the successor to IANA (Internet Assigned Numbers Authority), which manages Internet addresses, domain names and the huge number You may recently have tried to buy an office website name and discovered that all the arch.coms and arch.nets and arch.orgs had long since been sold to the Masons or the manufacturers of specialist preformed lintels. The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers See ICANN. (body, networking) Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers - (ICANN) The non-profit corporation that was formed to assume responsibility for IP address allocation, protocol parameter assignment, domain name system management, and root server system (ICANN) has just started to solve this by releasing seven new suffixes starting with .info. No, ICANN isn't contemplating releasing dot arch. But lurking See lurk. (messaging, jargon) lurking - The activity of one of the "silent majority" in a electronic forum such as Usenet; posting occasionally or not at all but reading the group's postings regularly. in the electronic shadows is New.net at www.new.net. New.net? It's a US company which has started up an alternative naming system and is currently selling such suffixes as .shop, .video, .love, .arts, .mp3 and more - and the Internet establishment is coldly furious because ICANN's credibility is based purely on general consensus, not god-given right. A friend of this column recently bought a site with the suffix suf·fix n. An affix added to the end of a word or stem, serving to form a new word or functioning as an inflectional ending, such as -ness in gentleness, -ing in walking, or -s in sits. tr.v. .fm, (because it sounds like a radio station call sign) and another bought a site with a .tv suffix - useful for video companies and the Sydney Mardi Gras Mardi Gras (mär`dē grä), last day before the fasting season of Lent. It is the French name for Shrove Tuesday. Literally translated, the term means "fat Tuesday" and was so called because it represented the last opportunity for . These are perfectly legitimate place suffixes, originally allocated to Southern hemisphere island groups. Having few computers and modems they sold their Internet birthrights for millions to Western entrepreneurs. But these aren't New.net. It's a maverick and, just maybe, the collective international architectural establishment could persuade it to set up a dot architecture suffix. Renzo Piano Renzo Piano (September 14 1937) is a world renowned Italian architect and Pritzker Architecture Prize winner. Biography Piano was born in Genoa, where he still maintains a home and office (Building Workshop). Building Workshop An ordinary architectural practice can use its website as part of its marketing thrust. Heropractices have a kind of obligation to do a lot more than that. You expect a well annotated and illustrated oeuvre complete, footnoted history, bibliography, efficient search engine and fast downloads. The Renzo Piano Workshop Foundation official site is at www.rpwf.org. Nice blue grey opening page with small graphic and six choices: Piano, Works, Archives, Exhibitions, News and The Workshop. In Works you have a choice of four decades and in each decade a thumbnail of the major projects. Click on, say, the Cy Twombley gallery of 1993 and you get a 300 word text and a link to photos and drawings and another link to a database which gives the basic credits, a list of archived drawings, and a bibliography. In the latter there are links to Amazon where you can order the relevant book. Back in the text, key words are highlighted: click on them and they provide additional elucidation. Click on a drawing and you'll be asked i f you want to download a DXF DXF - Drawing Exchange Format reader from Autodesk. It's terrific. No clever tricks, plain, fast-downloading text in the main - and the content is organized in a lucid way which can only have been devised by a librarian - or at least someone who cares deeply about information-delving. This has to be the most useful hero-website going. Goldmine in Bolivia Finally an odd and delicious site: www.latuti.com/directorio/index.app?cat=50. It's part of a bigger Bolivian site called Latuti.com which is otherwise in the language of the country, Spanish. There is an extensive architecture/building section and somebody has been searching promiscuously for architecture-related sites. It's a treasury, and full of unexpected pleasures. |
|
||||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion