![]() ![]() Just as every designer has their own way of working, they have their own software preferences. All of the above software programs are alternative options to Abode’s package. ![]() Sketch gave UI/UX designers alternative options to use, instead of working with Photoshop and Illustrator alone.Īnd, just a couple of years ago, software like Sketch (Bohemian Coding), Affinity Designer & Photo, InvisionApp (Prototyping), Principle (Prototyping) and Macaw (Web design tool – just to name a few) did not exist. Sketch for the UI/UX industry was released in September 2010. With the ever-shifting creative industry, Adobe users wanted more than what Adobe Illustrator and Photoshop provided for example: prototyping tools and more specialised UI/UX programs.Įnter the new generation. Adobe has come a long way since then, with 21 software programs currently available in Creative Cloud (CC).Īdobe software is incredibly powerful in multiple ways, and hosts millions of users worldwide. Although CC’s new features included a monthly subscription service and year-round updates, a number of users were unhappy with the new model. Adobe released the first version of its full Creative Suite in September of 2003, with six programs available in the standard edition.įast forward a couple of years to 2011, when Adobe announced the new Creative Cloud (CC), and released it two years later in 2013. The first-generation software releases from Adobe were Illustrator in 1987 and Photoshop in 1988. We all know about the software powerhouse that is Adobe. Developers have created an effective way of working, supplying us with an improved and more effective way of communicating our ideas. The software currently available for designers offers more specialised solutions for working than any of the previous versions that came before. Today, new applications and utilities debut seemingly every other week.’ – Khoi Vinh, Subtraction. ![]() I didn’t go to the gym for four months because I didn’t need to.‘Just a decade ago, competition among the tools for digital designers was muted, at best. ![]() “We were shovelling 80 buckets, each 50 pounds. Tauskela’s group ran 20 large tests, each involving four students hand-filling a container with tons of silt, sand, and gravel. There’s currently little understanding of what makes one landslide more dangerous than another. was different,” even where two were close together, says Ms. “Some didn’t go very far, and some went really far.”ĭifferences in internal water pressure may be the reason, but those are hard to measure in the field. “We’re basically recreating those landslides in the lab.” It all relates to British Columbia’s landslides last summer. The wet mix whooshes down and spreads out on a flat area, “and we measure everything – how fast is it going, how far does it go, what shape is it in? And then more science-y stuff – what is the water pressure within it? How does this pressure develop? How does it go away?” “We fill it with water so it’s nice and wet, and open the door of the flume, which is two storeys tall.” “We’re doing large-scale testing,” says the second-year master’s student in civil engineering. Unstable hillsides can slide away fast, so Lisa Tauskela keeps pouring tons of soil down a massive flume to understand how. ![]()
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