Saturday, September 06, 2008

MAKING A LIVING AS A CREATIVE PROFESSIONAL

Every year, thousands of hopefuls seek to enter the design profession without quite knowing what it’s all about, and without having a clear understanding of how a design career is different from that of, say, a fine artist or an illustrator. If you’re getting ready to write a big tuition check to enter a design degree program, or if you’ve just graduated and are wondering what to expect in the working world, this article’s for you!


CREATIVE CAREERS
If you’re a creative person, there are many possible outlets for that creativity—ranging from music to fashion, from architecture to filmmaking. More specifically, if you’re interested in visual communication, you may be attracted to a career in fine art, photography, illustration or design. However, it’s important to understand that each of these visual career options fits a different personal temperament. All of them involve the creation and use of images, but they are not the same in terms of psychology and work process. It’s important to choose the one that’s right for you.

• Fine art
Fine artists tend to work alone, selecting their own themes and setting their own standards. The work is all about personal exploration and self-expression. If you choose a career in fine art, you’ll be able to set your own schedule and you’ll have sole control over your output. Once you are satisfied with a piece, such as a painting or a sculpture, it’s finished and will not change after it leaves your hands. To build a successful career, you must enjoy working independently and be good at motivating yourself to get work done. Your income will be generated through the sale of individual items, so you must produce a sufficient quantity of pieces and do a good job of calculating unit prices. Most sales of fine art are made through galleries on a consignment basis. The gallery takes a large commission on each transaction. Some fine artists also pursue grants to support personal projects. The money, which usually comes from nonprofit foundations or government agencies, is a subsidy—it does not have to be repaid. Understandably, there is intense competition for fine art grants.

• Photography and illustration
The careers of some photographers and illustrators are centered on fine art as well—particularly those individuals who create personal images to sell through galleries or who generate personal projects like limited edition books. However, many more photographers and illustrators accept commercial assignments from business clients. Producing work that meets the needs of a client is very different from producing work just for you. Commercial clients specify the imagery, size and media, and you must meet whatever technical specifications are required for the use or reproduction of the work. You must be comfortable in accepting feedback and making any requested revisions. Budgets and schedules must be respected and, all along the way, you must communicate effectively with the client and keep them happy.
To get assistance in lining up commercial assignments, you may want to establish a relationship with an agent (sometimes called an artist’s rep) who will promote your services, then negotiate the price and terms of each project on your behalf. In exchange, he or she will take a commission. You might also have opportunities to generate licensing income if you have retained ownership of your commercial images and they can later be used in additional ways.

• Design
Unlike fine art, the focus of design is not on self-expression or the exploration of personal issues. Being a professional designer means solving business and communication problems. You are providing expert advice and strategic services to clients to help them succeed in a competitive environment. The impact and results of your work will be measured by multiple sets of criteria—both yours and the client’s. Each project must meet high aesthetic standards, but it must also meet specific business objectives. Most professional design assignments span several different media such as print, online or broadcast. This means that most assignments require a multi-disciplinary team. Projects evolve through an iterative process of multiple design directions and refinements, so you need to be very comfortable with the give-and-take of close collaboration.

There are different ways of structuring teams and different ways of charging for design services. If you are a freelancer who is subcontracting with an established creative firm, meaning that you’ve been brought in on a short-term basis to help with someone else’s project, you’ll be paid a freelance rate. If you accept a staff position as part of a creative team, you will negotiate a payroll rate. However, when you’re selling services directly to a business client, it’s common for design projects to be negotiated on a fixed-fee basis. Some designers are also able to generate income from licensing. Again, this assumes that you have developed and retained ownership of intellectual property, such as product designs or software applications, for which there is additional demand.

• Teaching
For some individuals, teaching might also be a career option, but chances are that it will not be full-time. Most schools of art and design bring in working professionals to teach specialized courses on a part-time basis. There are several benefits to this approach. It gives students access to the latest information and techniques. It also gives them opportunities to develop their personal networks, perhaps learn about internships or freelance gigs and maybe even meet a potential employer. For these reasons, it’s common for instructors of art or design to teach in addition to their client-related activities.

Design Skill Sets
If you’re interested in becoming a professional designer, there are FOUR essential skill sets that you must possess:

1. Talent
The first requisite is talent. You must have an instinctive ability to exercise good judgment in manipulating the formal elements of visual communication such as contrast, scale, color, pacing and typography. You must be able to use them effectively to develop new and appropriate visual solutions to complex communications problems. If you don’t possess this creative ability, or the potential to develop it over the course of your education, then you are not cut out to be a designer.

2. Technical skills
The second requisite for a successful career is technical expertise—mastery of the current tools that are necessary to produce and implement your solutions. Technical skills are a moving target because design tools are constantly changing. For example, twenty years ago the tools of graphic design included T-squares, stat cameras, waxers and Rapidograph pens. Eventually all of those went out with the trash. Today’s basic tools are primarily digital, including such things as QuarkXpress, Adobe InDesign, Illustrator, PhotoShop and Acrobat, as well as Macromedia’s Dreamweaver and Flash. However, twenty years from now these in turn will be gone—replaced by even newer tools. This means that each of us must constantly work to expand our technical skills and stay on top of new developments.

3. People skills
The third requisite is a solid set of interpersonal skills. This means being a good listener and a good verbal communicator who is able to build and sustain positive and productive relationships with others. It means being able to establish and maintain mutual respect. It means having a positive outlook and exhibiting grace under pressure. These positive qualities will motivate others to seek you out. Co-workers will want to have you on their teams and clients will want you on their accounts. Career opportunities will be severely limited for any designer who is perceived to be a lone wolf—defensive, territorial, uncooperative or difficult to understand.

4. Business skills
The fourth essential skill set for a designer is business savvy. In order to advise our clients, we need to clearly understand their business challenges, trends and options. On each new account, we have to come up to speed very quickly. We also need to be just as smart when it comes to our own marketing, financial and management issues. Business savvy is what makes our careers sustainable over the long haul.

Range of Design Disciplines
The field of design is quite large, spanning many different disciplines. This creates a bit of a paradox. A good designer must be enough of a generalist to see the big picture and develop strategies that are comprehensive, but at the same time he or she must be a specialist in one particular design discipline in order to execute strategy successfully at a tactical level. Each individual component of a system must be delivered in well-crafted detail. Ultimately, of course, it’s not possible for one person to know and do everything. You must choose an area of concentration based on your talent and interests, then keep sight of how that piece fits into the larger strategic puzzle. For freelancers and sole proprietors, this means developing personal expertise in a specific area and developing a network of peers in complementary disciplines with whom you can collaborate on an as-needed basis. Larger design firms are able to hire individuals in a range of creative specialties, putting them together in multi-disciplinary teams. Together, they are able to plan and execute comprehensive systems with components that span as many different environments and media types as necessary. Depending on the firm and the nature of the client work being done, the following disciplines may be represented:

• Design planning and research
• Corporate identity design
• Communications and collateral design
• Publication and editorial design
• Brand identity and packaging design
• Advertising and promotion design
• Information design
• Interaction design
• Motion graphics design
• Environmental design
• Industrial design


Different Team Roles
In addition to bringing your specialized design skills to the group, you will also be functioning in a particular team role. Depending upon the project challenges, teams might include individuals in the following roles:

• Strategists
• Designers
• Implementation specialists
• Programmers
• Project managers

There are other possible roles as well, and some people wear more than one hat. In a small firm, it’s likely that you will switch back and forth between roles from one project to the next. In a large firm, however, your role may be less flexible.

Potential employers
The next step in planning your design career is to decide whether you want to be part of an in-house creative department, join an outside consultancy or remain independent. You need to choose the environment where you’ll be most comfortable and will be able to do your best work.

In-house department
Many designers accept staff positions within client organizations. If your goal is to become part of an in-house creative team, there are many large businesses that hire design employees on a regular basis, including:

• Publishing houses
• Entertainment companies
• Broadcasting companies
• Online businesses
• Major corporations

Staff designers are often responsible for maintaining an existing identity system and making sure that there is creative consistency in all materials produced. In-house teams tend to work on recurring projects. Key assignments often come back on an annual cycle that reflects seasonal promotions and major industry events. One of the biggest advantages of working inside a large organization is the opportunity for ongoing collaboration with product managers and marketing executives. For a young designer, this is an incredible chance to participate in long-term strategy development and to see creative challenges from the client’s side of the table. Another advantage that should not be overlooked is that, because of its size, a large company is often able to offer a more extensive benefits package as well as some degree of job security. One negative aspect is that you may have to deal with corporate politics. In a large company, there’s always a certain amount of tension between departments over resources, budgets and decision-making authority.

Outside consultancy
Working in a design firm or an advertising agency is a great option for a young designer because it involves a wide variety of creative assignments from clients in different industries. It’s also a great way to learn the ropes. You’ll have a design mentor plus you’ll learn about business practices and pricing. Corporate clients buy a range of creative services from outside consultancies. Most creative firms position themselves as specialists in a particular discipline, such as corporate and brand identity, marketing and communication systems, public relations, advertising, technology services, interactive design or industrial design. Many advertising agencies belong to large holding companies that are publicly traded. In contrast, most design firms are small and privately owned. In fact, it’s estimated that half of the design firms in the U.S. have five employees or less. Even larger design firms rarely have more than fifty employees.

Your own company
Finally, you may decide that you don’t want to be on anyone else’s payroll. You can choose to remain independent. In the U.S., the Bureau of Labor Statistics keeps track of employment trends in a wide range of occupations. Their information indicates that three out of ten designers are self-employed, compared to one out of ten in the overall workforce. Anyone who chooses to be self-employed must come up to speed on a range of important small business issues, including financial management and the basics of business law. In addition to producing great design, you’re also responsible for all of your own marketing and sales. Your long-term success will be very dependent upon the amount of personal networking and self-promotion that you do.

Staying flexible
At the start of your career, it’s important to get yourself onto the path that is the best match for your interests, talents and temperament—one that will give you opportunities for personal growth and satisfaction. Once you’re on that path, though, it’s also important to stay flexible and remain open to new opportunities. The design profession has changed significantly in recent years and it is continuing to evolve. Larger economic shifts are taking place as well. The U.S. economy is moving from being manufacturing-based to knowledge-based, and employment is shifting from permanent staffing to short-term projects that use independent contractors or temporary workers. This places a growing emphasis on expertise, peer networking, collaboration and technology. Designers are at the cutting edge of all this. Success requires brainpower, entrepreneurship and flexibility. As you advance in your career, always look ahead and keep a broad view.



The author, Shel Perkins, is a designer, educator and consultant with 19 years of experience in managing the operations of leading creative firms in the U.S. and the U.K.

Wednesday, August 20, 2008

My brothers' blog

Diorang ni nampak aktif berblog nie

Zuraidin - http://zuraidin.blogspot.com/

Zikhan - http://akukaudia.blogspot.com/

ada lagi 2 org masih study

Noza & Edi tak sure diorang nie ada blog ke tak

Wednesday, June 18, 2008

Serversea New Account Configuration in Outlook

New Account Configuration in Outlook

SMTP: mail.domainname.com
(If ISP does not allow the private SMTP then use ISP SMTP)

POP3: mail.domainname.com

Outlook Express Configuration:

Open Outlook Express > Tools > Accounts > Mail > Add New Mail > Wizard Started > Enter Full Display Name > Enter Email Address > Enter POP3 and SMTP > *1-Enter User and *2 Password > Finish.

*1-Enter only user like “info” if OS is Linux or if its on windows enter full email in user like info@domain.com
*2-Do not select option “Logon using (SPA) Secure Password Authentication.

Again Tools > Accounts > Mail > Properties > Server > “My Server Require Authentication” this option is located at the bottom and it should be checked, by default it’s unchecked. Do Send/Receive Now.

MS Outlook Configuration:

Open MS Outlook > Tools > Email Accounts > Add New Mail Account > Enter Full Display Name > Enter Email Address > Enter POP3 and SMTP > *1-Enter User and *2 Password > Click on Button More Settings > Outgoing Server > “My (SMTP) Outgoing Server Require Authentication” this option is located at the top and it should be checked, by default it’s unchecked > Finish.

*1-Enter only user like “info” if OS is Linux or if its on windows enter full email in user like info@domain.com
*2-Do not select option “Logon using (SPA) Secure Password Authentication.

Do Send/Receive Now.

Outlook Trouble Shooting

Outlook Express:

Open Outlook Express > Tools > Accounts > Mail > Properties > Server > Verify:

Incoming mail (POP3): mail.domain.com
Outgoing mail (SMTP): mail.domain.com

(If ISP does not allow the private SMTP then use ISP SMTP)

Incoming Mail Server:

Account Name: emailuser
Account Pass: ********
*1-Enter only user like “info” if OS is Linux or if its on windows enter full email in user like info@domain.com
*2-Do not select option “Logon using (SPA) Secure Password Authentication.

Outgoing Mail Server:

“My Server Require Authentication”

(This option is located at the bottom and it should be checked, by default it’s unchecked.)

Now click on next tab Advanced:

Server Port Numbers:

Outgoing mail (SMTP): 25

“This server requires a secure connection (SSL)” should be unchecked.

Incoming mail (POP3): 110

“This server requires a secure connection (SSL)” should be unchecked.

Click on Apply > Ok > Do Send/Receive now.

MS Outlook:

Open MS Outlook > Tools > Email Accounts > View or Change Existing Email Accounts > Select Account and Click on Change > Verify

Server Information:

Incoming mail server (POP3): mail.domain.com
Outgoing mail server (SMTP): mail.domain.com

(If ISP does not allow the private SMTP then use ISP SMTP)

Logon Information:

Account Name: email user
Account Pass: ********

*1-Enter only user like “info” if OS is Linux or if its on windows enter full email in user like info@domain.com
*2-Do not select option “Logon using (SPA) Secure Password Authentication.

Now Click on Button “More Settings” > Outgoing Server >

“My Outgoing Server (SMTP) Requires Authentication”
(This option is located at the bottom and it should be checked, by default it’s unchecked.)

Now click on next tab Advanced:

Server Port Numbers:

Outgoing mail (SMTP): 25

“This server requires a secure connection (SSL)” should be unchecked.

Incoming mail (POP3): 110

“This server requires a secure connection (SSL)” should be unchecked.

Click on Apply > Ok > Do Send/Receive now.

Wednesday, April 02, 2008

Facilitating with Ease!

New and Revised Edition

Core Skills for Facilitators, Team Leaders and Members, Managers, Consultants, and Trainers INGRID BENS, SARASOTA, FLORIDA

Facilitating with Ease! is an updated version of the best-selling resource that offers easy-to-follow instructions, techniques, and hands-on tools that team leaders, consultants, supervisors, and managers have used to learn the basics of facilitation. Complete with worksheets on CD-ROM that can be customized to fit your personal needs, it's a complete facilitation workshop in a take-home format. Facilitating with Ease! shows you how to run productive meetings with skill and authority and includes the information needed to train others in your organization to become confident facilitators as well. The book is filled with dozens of exercises, surveys, and checklists that can be used to transform anyone into an effective facilitator.

Facilitating with Ease, Second Edition is an important book offering all the necessary action steps and materials in a simple and accessible format.

  • Contains dozens of exercises, surveys, checklists, and even customizable worksheets on CD-ROM to transform anyone into an effective facilitator.
  • Designed to be flexible, the book can be used alone or in conjunction with training workshops.
  • Updated edition of the bestselling resource on facilitation.


 

Audience: Facilitators, team leaders and members, managers and supervisors, consultants, and teachers.

Tuesday, April 01, 2008

Greek Salad with Oregano Marinated Chicken


Recipe courtesy Dave Lieberman
Show: Good Deal with Dave Lieberman
Episode: Lite-N-Healthy

For the chicken:
1 lemon, juiced
2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
1 teaspoon dried oregano
A couple good pinches salt
10 grinds black pepper
4 (6 to 7-ounce) boneless skinless chicken breasts

For the dressing:
1/4 cup extra-virgin olive oil
2 tablespoons red wine vinegar
1 lemon, juiced
2 cloves garlic, smashed with the side of your chef's knife
1 teaspoon dried oregano
3 pinches salt
10 to 15 grinds black pepper

For the salad:
2 to 3 hearts romaine lettuce
1 English cucumber, peeled, cut in 1/2 lengthwise, then cut into 1/2-inch chunks
3 vine-ripened tomatoes (about 3/4-pound), cored and cut into 1/2-inch chunks
1/2 red onion, very thinly sliced
1/2 cup pitted kalamata olives, coarsely chopped
1/4 cup crumbled feta cheese

To marinate the chicken: In a non-reactive dish, combine the lemon juice, olive oil, oregano, salt, and pepper and mix together. Add the chicken breasts to the dish and rub both sides in the mixture. Cover the dish with plastic wrap and let marinate in the refrigerator for at least 30 minutes and up to 4 hours.

To make the dressing: Combine all the ingredients in a resealable container and shake vigorously. Refrigerate until ready to serve, and then bring to room temperature before tossing salad.

Assemble the salad: cut off any dark tips and the bitter white bottoms from the romaine leaves. Cut the lettuce into 1-inch strips and place in a bowl that is large enough to hold all the salad ingredients comfortably. Scatter cucumbers, tomatoes, red onion, olives, and feta over the top. You can prepare the salad up to a few hours in advance. Cover it with a moist paper towel and refrigerate until 30 minutes before serving.

To cook the chicken: Heat a nonstick skillet or grill pan over high heat. Add the chicken breasts and cook, turning once, until well browned, about 4 to 5 minutes on each side or until cooked through. Let the chicken rest on a cutting board for a few minutes before slicing it into thin strips.

Give the dressing a good shake and pour it into a nice little serving bowl, using the lid to strain out the garlic.

Toss salad just before serving and fan chicken out on top.

Tips to post faster

Usually , I open my notepad. I mean notepad as a windows application.

Much much faster keyboard response compare to write directly on blogger editing system.

For me when i hit the key , I need to get the response fast.

Ok , write everything then copy and paste then publish.

BRUSCHETTA [ S E R V E S F O U R - S I X]


BRUSCHETTA [ S E R V E S F O U R - S I X]

  • Chopped Roma tomatoes - 6
  • Chopped basil - 1/2 cup
  • Chopped garlic - 1, whole
  • Extra virgin olive oil - 1/3 cup
  • Baguette - 1 loaf
  1. Put chopped ingredients in bowl, salt lightly and stir in oil. Mix thoroughly and set aside to marinate.

  2. Cut bread on angle, into 1/2" pieces and sprinkle oil on top. Grill a few minutes on each side until crispy. Brush one side of each piece with garlic clove.

    Variation: Top with thinly sliced mozzarella cheese topped with roasted peppers and pesto sauce.

Google Docs Aims At Microsoft Office Live With 'Gears'

By Jack McCarthy, ChannelWeb
9:33 PM EDT Mon. Mar. 31, 2008
Google (NSDQ:GOOG) took an important step forward Monday in its rivalry with Microsoft Office Live, reporting that Google Docs will allow users to edit word processing documents offline.

Google said users of its Google Docs word processing application can use Google Gears to save and then edit documents without being connected to the Internet.

"Cloud computing is great, but you need the cloud to make it work," Philip Tucker, software engineer, Google Docs, wrote in a Google blog. "On an airplane, on the shuttle commuting to work, or at home when my cable modem goes down, I want to work on my documents. And, until now, that usually meant saving a copy and editing on the desktop.

"Now there's a better solution. With Google Docs offline, I can take my little piece of the cloud with me wherever I go," Tucker added. "Once enabled, I have a local version of my document list and editors, along with my documents."

The editing feature, Google Gears, is an application programming interface introduced by Google more than a year ago to application developers to create Web applications that can run offline.

The technology already works within Google's news feed reader, Google Reader, and applications from independent Web developers such as task-management service "Remember the Milk," from an Australian-based company of the same name, Reuters reported.

"Everything I need is saved locally," Tucker said. "And I do everything through my web browser, even when I'm offline (the goodness that Google Gears provides). When my connection comes back, my documents sync up again with the server."

With this offline functionality, Google Docs has another important feature that it can sell as it competes with Microsoft Live, which capitalizes on the strengths of its Office suite

Aftertaste

It’s over, i can sense it.

It hurts to just think about everything.

I should be sleeping now but my mind is not cooperating with me.

When i wake up tomorrow, everything will be okay.

Monday, March 24, 2008

Why I am sleepy

I am sleepy at all time.
Why , I am sleepy?

Thursday, March 13, 2008

Malaysian Standard Time





Time is precious, and accurate timekeeping is vital to everyday Malaysian life, as well as to international and high technology activities. On August 5, 1992, the Malaysian Cabinet appointed the National Metrology Laboratory to be the national timekeeper, and to assume a variety of responsibilities, including the:

* maintenance of time interval standards;
* establishment of the national atomic time scale; and
* establishment and maintenance of the local Universal Coordinated Time (UTC), which is designated as UTC(NMLS) by the International Bureau of Weights and Measures.

The national atomic time scale is established and maintained using five Caesium atomic clocks, two of which are high performance and three of which are standard performance. These five atomic clocks are compared to one another in order to detect any abnormality or instability. One of the clocks is designated as the reference clock. By virtue of its participation in the International Bureau of Weights and Measures GPS common view time transfer, the Malaysian atomic timescale is traceable to the International Atomic Timescale.

Please note that this web clock is ideal for everyday time needs, but is not intended to measure frequency or time intervals.

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Sweet and Tangy Glazed Salmon



INGREDIENTS


* 85 g butter
* 330 g brown sugar
* 70 ml lemon juice
* 2 g dried dill weed
* 1 g ground cayenne pepper
* 455 g salmon fillets, with skin
* lemon pepper to taste



DIRECTIONS


1. Preheat an outdoor grill for high heat.
2. Melt the butter in a saucepan over medium heat, and mix in the brown sugar, lemon juice, dill, and cayenne pepper. Cook and stir until the brown sugar is dissolved. Reduce heat and simmer until ready to brush onto the salmon.
3. Season salmon with lemon pepper, and place directly on the grill grate, skin side down. Brushing frequently with the butter and brown sugar glaze, cook the salmon 20 minutes, or until easily flaked with a fork. Reserve some of the glaze for serving.

Learn how to shop for salmon in our Choosing Salmon video.

Tuesday, March 11, 2008


Worked on this since Monday.