BigShinyThing

Celebrating the pop culture of web design

glittery gif

The Web has — inarguably — come a long way since the early 90s. As online has become increasingly integrated into the lives of ‘ordinary people’, so has the nature of web design changed. From the realm of ramshackle amateur production, through the work of a generation of Flash-obsessed ‘web designers’, to today’s world where back-end content management and a slew of themes and templates enable instant production of everything from blogs to online enterprises. These transformations of form and content are generally viewed as progress.

Right then. Forget about all that ‘progress’ for a bit, and settle down with a nice slow dialup connection to view Olia Lialina’s illustrated online essay Vernacular Web 2: a celebration of animated GIFs, MIDI soundfiles and glitter! glitter! glitter!

[...] Everything that became a subject of mockery by the end of the last century when professional designers arrived, everything that fell out of use and turns up every now and again as the elements of “retro” look in site design or in the works of artists exploring the theme of “digital folklore”: the “Under Construction” signs, outer space backgrounds, MIDI-files, collections of animated web graphics and so on.

Lialina nails her intent with a quote from Henry Jenkins’ 2002 article Blog This!:

“We learned in the history books about Samuel Morse’s invention of the telegraph, but not about the thousands of operators who shaped the circulation of messages.”

To rephrase him, I’d say we’ve studied the history of hypertext, but not the history of Metallica fan web rings or web rings in general.

This is all good stuff. From the historical archives of dancing hamsters and animated cursors, Lialina brings us up-to-date with the vernacular design cultures of MySpace, Facebook and the rest. Essential, entertaining reading (if somewhat hard on the eyes).

[Via Nettime].

Need to Know

The Only Game in Town

Fingers crossed…

XDR-TB

This matters. Get involved.

Chrome, The Cloud, McCloud

Google explains its new browser, comic-book style

Our Big Shiny Lifestream Thing

Hello, world.

Cute Overlord

Cute Overload’s calendar sold out in a day. We ask, what’s their secret?

The New News

Pew’s latest research on news consumption in the US.

Listless

It’s that time of year again…

Product Displacement

UK culture minister says product placement “contaminates” TV programmes.

BBC Twitters Parliament

A bit more political transparency in the UK

Lessons from Tyra

From supermodel to media brand.

Genius as a Product

And how to make a business from it

IM bttr

Surprise! Using IM improves kids’ linguistic skills.

Twitter “Not Pointless” Shock

Microblogging officially tips over into the mainstream

Web 3.0 Starts Today

No, really.

RIP Albert Hofmann

Inventor of LSD dies aged 102.

Make3D (Does Exactly That)!

The latest contender for ‘coolest imaging/photography tool’ turns snapshots into 3D scenes. And it works!

Skirting the issue

Women in Johannesburg have been staging a miniskirted protest

Overheard on the tube

What did the twentysomething guy say to the other twentysomething guy?

Flickr Burns

More Flickr zeitgeist

How to advertise in social media

Stop the clock!! We saw another ad on the internet!