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Dreaming spheres.


So we're not so dumb that we don't know Don't know (DK, DKed)

"Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party.
 that a lot of the above silly twiddles are camouflage, diversions of attention for image files being secretly loaded. A colleague reckons that websites should have a mandatory 'skip introduction' button on the home page. It might persuade lazy web designers to find out how to load images fast. It can be done, and is done quite often. The interesting site of young US practice Kolatan MacDonald Studio at www.kolatanmacdonaldstudio.com starts off with the website name which grows and when it looks set, and only then, you can click on it. Its characters break up and turn into drifting slightly smudgy smudge  
v. smudged, smudg·ing, smudg·es

v.tr.
1. To make dirty, especially in one small area.

2. To smear or blur (something).

3.
 coloured dots. More upload camouflage, you think. You click on the red one and out scrambles the word 'portfolio'--which you notice is repeated in a row across the bottom before the word zooms out at you and the screen is changed to some monochrome spherical spher·i·cal
adj.
Having the shape of or approximating a sphere; globular.
 blobs of different sizes doing a dreamy dream·y  
adj. dream·i·er, dream·i·est
1. Resembling a dream; ethereal or vague.

2. Given to daydreams or reverie.

3. Soothing and serene.

4.
 Brownian movement Brownian movement or motion, zigzag, irregular motion exhibited by minute particles of matter when suspended in a fluid.  around the screen. Click on a smaller blob--but look, you go off and do it, and remember that if you click on the small grey circle you get a description and another scheme comes up if you click on one of the smaller blobs at the bottom and ...
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Title Annotation:Browser
Author:Lyall, Sutherland
Publication:The Architectural Review
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Oct 1, 2004
Words:214
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