tell me what your favorite computing aesthetic was or is. a real one or even fictional!
go ahead! you're being given permission! infodump away in my replies here!
Discussion
tell me what your favorite computing aesthetic was or is. a real one or even fictional!
go ahead! you're being given permission! infodump away in my replies here!
@cwebber "Atari Handheld, ATM Easy Money" - John Connor
@cwebber Max Headroom - trashy cyberpunk postmodernism - 3d wireframe + greenscreen database interfaces, old typewriter keyboards and bell telephone handsets.
2nd Place - Existenz - VR cyberdecks made from pieces of crab shells and fish bones.
@cwebber After cringing hard, seeing early #Unix Window Managers like twm and fvwm, it was such a breath of fresh air to see #WindowMaker. I rocked a WindowMaker desktop from about 1998 to about 2002, in #Debian #linux
@cwebber uh uhhh wireframe 3d models
@cwebber The Cray 2. It was physically striking, especially with the original Flurinert towers, and it was peak computer architecture design.
@cwebber all the computer hardware setups in Serial Experiments: Lain.
For example...
'90s japanese mobile phone culture. Computing never looked that cute since.
https://www.yokogaomag.com/editorial/texting-in-the-90s-japans-retro-futuristic-phone-culture
@cwebber pixel graphics and square boxen.
@cwebber Clicky keyboards with high-gloss color-coded keycaps! Others have already mentioned the Alien movies, which (along with the game Isolation) have some of that. Something about the tactile nature of it and definitely the fact it can be operated without looking - even though my current keyboard is a very quiet mechanical one.
Related - I liked the era when UI buttons looked like buttons, had some bas relief to them, and depressed with clicked. Aqua on OS X. Windows prior to XP. NeXTstep and Irix. I don't need a full skeuomorphic setup, but today's flat design is boring.
But I also really dig the idea of complex multitouch interfaces. Drilling down into data via zoom, rearranging things with a swipe, and more. I feel like we haven't done much in this area - but maybe that's because it's been tried in-house at Apple, Microsoft, etc. and found to have serious downsides. And I'll admit a lot of my love is nostalgia from all the sci-fi I watched growing up in the 80s and 90s.
@cwebber in the early 90s I made a shoulder strap for one of my C64s and ran a fake video cable from it to some tricked out ski goggles for a costume cyberdeck. I still think about it often. 
@cwebber UDE should have become a thing. Fond 2004 memories https://udeproject.sourceforge.net/
@cwebber There's a particular retrofuturistic vibe I really like. The sort of things you see in Serial Experiments Lain, Digimon Tamers, Ghost in the Shell, Tron Legacy...
aurahack and Lena Raine made a Cocoon theme I've been using along the same lines, great vibe: https://radicaldreamland.bandcamp.com/track/phantomaos-advanced-computer-system
@cwebber web os on the last pre
@cwebber early 1990s hypercard, with all the crisp little b&w pixel art icons and careful dithering and tiny sound clips. resedit. using NCSA telnet to log in to an AT&T unix box from an aging mac in the library and read mail in pine.
mIRC running on windows 95. i have a million of those MDI windows-in-windows open. the font is fixedsys. a custom wav file plays when a message comes in on ICQ. in the background, i'm browsing the web with lynx in one of those terrible quasi-terminal windows.
@cwebber hardware design wise I love the early 2000s (GameCube, GBA, iBook G3).
On the interface side I am drawn towards neocities/tumblr style lo-fi/pastel/pixel art aesthetics.
@cwebber VT220 - obsolicious 😋️
@cwebber I loved amiga workbench 3.1 for UI and for case design I think the SGI octane is pretty
I don't know that I can pick just one, but . . .
WordPerfect 3.2 with the little plastic multicolor guide that slotted over the left-side function keypad.
X11 with Motif widgets running on a GIGANTIC 19 inch Sun workstation monitor
The amber monochrome screens on an old VT420 terminal.
My old giant trackball from like 2004 that was about the size of a pool cue and a really comfortable hand rest.
The white 11 inch MacBook from like 2003.
The 2013 series of MacBook Pros. Flawless.
The golden age of Lenovo ThinkPads, including the little X1s that were such great little low power workhorses.
Flip phones. Seriously. My old ultraruggedized Casio flip was such a great device.
LaTeX's default typesetting output. I love that I can get it with Markdown and pandoc now.
ANSI animations and Operation Overkill II on BBS doors over a 2400 baud modem.
EDIT: OH. And workstations from like 1996-2004 that were super well designed for field service. Easy to open and service. LOVE.
@MichaelTBacon @cwebber I'm currently using MotifWM! Been loving it! Customised it to look like Solaris 9 actually! Absolutely great list though
@MichaelTBacon @cwebber "X11 with Motif widgets" - to my mind, they were a nightmare. MacOS 9 UI widgets were awesome, IMHO. An example is seen on the lauriewired.com site.
@MichaelTBacon @cwebber well we both agree on Wordperfect
@cwebber I really liked earlier MacOS X when everything was skeuomorphic and looked like you’d be able to feel the textures if you touched the screen
@cwebber I really like the human-made janky computer systems from the Xenowealth series by Tobias S. Buckell, including "Ragamuffin". Basically, almost everyone in this universe uses advanced alien computer technology through neural interfaces, but anyone who opposes the alien overlords doesn't dare use it because the aliens can take control of it. So the "ragalamina" is old two-dimensional computer tech based on systems we'd recognize, which humans understand and can make trustworthy.
@cwebber I'm in the middle of a field trip (back) to 1990s X11. xedit, xman, .Xresources. I've always admired the bicolour-but-reasonable-resolution aesthetic (black-and-white 1024x768 say, but even 800x600 was pretty ok). And everything it just So Fing Clear. Scrollbars! Grab handles! I also like the Macs from this era (Hypercard and so on). And I have a soft spot for the 4-level gray of NeXT (and BeOS?) though i never used them.
@cwebber Probably just a first love thing. Atari 800XL, attached floppy, and a few controllers.
My sisters and I always fought over the red handled joystick.
An old CRT with dials and a button for switching between Black & White and Color display. The color didn't always cooperate.
we had the regular 800, and my friend had the XL
I was so jealous, though I'm not sure it made any actual difference.
What i really wanted was an Atari ST, which one of my Dad's work friends kids had, and it ran this insanely awesome game called BRATACCUS
And then I wanted an Amiga, and then I wanted a NES. But no, we stuck with the friggin' Atari 800 (and a 2600) all the way up until we got an 80286.
we may have have 2 disk drives and a custom "cartidge emulator" circuit board which allowed for playing pirated games. who can say
sigh
@dannotdaniel @pwloftus @cwebber i think of stuff we used when i was a kid, only a couple of games actually made use of the full 64 KiB RAM on the 800XL (the 800 only went up to 48 KiB)
of which one was Sublogic Flight Simulator 2.0 (cousin of the modern Microsoft Flight Simulator line) which required the additional memory to display the wings/tail in the side/rear views, and to enable radio navigation features
(I still can't believe how much they packed into that flight sim for 8-bit computers!!)
@cwebber I think this is far enough out that I can talk about it without risk of a lawsuit...
One of my favorites is a prototype computer interface that Microsoft was working on in the early 2010s.
I was in Redmond to pitch MS on a partnership with JCPenney. Weird right?
Myself and one other designer (I think we were both interns at the time) put together a proof of concept for social shopping powered by the Kinect. We had leveraged the Xbox avatar design language and interspersed it with real video footage so people could virtually try on clothes and have their friends in as avatars to give feedback. It was based on the feeling that the "1-vs-100" game gave - this ability to get a group together and share a moment in time.
We also had a working prototype for contactless shopping by leveraging RFID tags so you could toss all the clothes you want in a bag and just put the bag on the Microsoft Surface table to scan in all the items and manage payment, as well as tap in to the JCP online store if you needed a different size or color sent to your house as part of the order.
After the pitch, they took us on a tour of their innovation lab, and the thing that stuck with me most was a desk of fully curved acrylic. I don't think they had OLED because the embedded screens were only on flat surfaces, but it was mind blowing.
The device turned on and was mainly controlled via proximity. You walked up and it turned on, much like something out of Iron Man, and then you could put your hands over different spaces to activate them. It felt like I was using the computers in Minority Report.
I still think about that and wish it saw the light of day. Everything was intuitive and made me excited for technology.... back when tech was something that was going to make lives better...
@cwebber old mainframes. IPL, all the weird stuff, line printers, magnetic tapes, maybe even the odd punch card
@cwebber Does the ADM 3A count as a computing aesthetic?
@cwebber Really into quirky thinkpads, the MNT reform pocket and whatever that first CERN web server had going on
@cwebber Alien(s). Just seems eminently practical.
@cwebber The computer interfaces in Alien, Aliens (and Alien Isolation) were so well done, part of the whole æsthetic of those ships. They were so believable!
@cwebber Star Trek's LCARS!
So colorful and bold, with nice shapes. https://www.thelcars.com/