Geekicity

I am a geek. If you know me, odds are at some point you have thought to yourself, “wow, I love this guy, but he is truly a geek.” I actually appreciate that I have a large amount of geek-two-o running through my veins, nourishing my very life blood. So I thought of some examples of my geekdom.

ex. 1: I distinctly remember multiple instances where I was in a REAL life situation that went quickly sour and thought to myself, “CTRL+Z!” (for those computer illiterate or those who aren’t well versed in the realm of keyboard shortcuts, these are the keys you push to Edit>Undo an action on the computer) I only remember ONE time when I actually said it aloud. Thankfully, I was 15, with a bunch of Boy Scouts, who had no idea what that meant and thought I might just have a mild case of Tourettes syndrome.

ex. 2: Until I graduated high school (and potentially a little time after that) I was that guy who you could guarantee had a Bobba Fett (Star Wars character) action figure hanging from his rear view mirror. I also played with said action figure. Bonus: I set up Galactic Warfare in the attic of my garage with micro machines with at least 3 of my friends (I will NOT name names because at least ONE of those friends is only geek when he’s not around girls)

ex. 3: I was sitting in a bar/restaurant, not drinking (which most people consider GEEK, I consider prudence) getting OVERLY excited about iPhone apps with a good friend of mine/roommate/non-geek. We were getting really loud discussing how amazing BUMP, the iPhone app that when you hold your phone in your hand, and pound it with someone else with an iPhone & bump, you can exchange all your contact info. I find that exciting. Most people, however, consider it geek.

ex. 4: I listen to books on iPod. The 5 books I’ve listened to in the past month:

  1. Halo: Ghost of Onyx A book based on a video game. It’s the THIRD of a series that I read the first two of in real books.
  2. Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy My favorite book of all time. Also my favorite movie of all time. If anything I’ve said so far wasn’t geeky, this one should take the cake for you.
  3. The Restaurant at the END of the Universe The Sequel to Hitchhiker’s Guide.
  4. So Long And Thanks for All the Fish The Sequel to the Sequel to the Hitchhiker’s Guide
  5. Life, The Universe & Everything The Sequel to the Sequel to the Sequel to the Hitchhiker’s Guide. The last book in the series. Which is why The list stops here.

So, in the spirit of all good-hearted-geek bashing, if you know of any good examples of MY geekdom or wish to air your own personal geekiness, feel free to do it here. Odds are 1. I already know about them and have done worse, 2. No one will ever read past the first sentence of this anyways.

Caveat: Geeks & Nerds are not the same thing. Geeks have an air of confidence, mostly because they know people know they’re geeks and don’t care, and can still some how manage to awkwardly get to at least a second date with a beautiful hispanic genius girl. If this is you post here.

Business Cards?

I’m designing business cards. Any thoughts on the FOUR mockups I have currently? Which do you like better?

Mockup 1

Front:

the front of my first mockup

Back:

back of mockup 1

Mockup 2

Front:

mockup2

Back:

mockup2back

Mockup 3

Front:

front of mockup 3

Back:

mockup3back

Mockup 4

Front:

mockup4

Back:

mockup4back

5 FREE websites you NEED to know about

I love surfing the internet. Maybe it’s a product of our generation, a lot of us grew up on it. It’s come a long way, though, since when I remember first using it. Open AOL, dial up, watch an episode of Thundercats while you wait. Connected.

Now, you open your computer and you’re bombarded with emails from Amazon, eBay, and some guy from Kazakhstan telling you that you’re the beneficiary of some large some of money and all you need to do is send your name, address, credit card information, & social security number.

So I’ve sorted it out and found 5 websites that are totally WORTH getting on the internet for.

So, sit back, enjoy, and DON’T reply to the guy from Kazakhstan with your social.

Productivity

Lovely Charts

http://www.lovelycharts.com

lovely chartsThis is a MUST have for anyone who needs to organize their life, a project, or their office. All you have to do is register (for free, of course) and begin your new chart. It allows you to drag elements that are already defined for you onto a grid and link them. The grid is MASSIVE & you can zoom in, out, or move it around to your heart’s desire.

If you’re a perfectionist it gives you the ability to align & arrange to create a perfect flow chart. Not only this, but you can click the “create & click” button (it’s the one with the big knot) and simply click an element and drag to the element you want it to connect to. Boom. It’s connected. You can copy, cut & paste (don’t try keyboard shortcuts though), even SAVE your project for later use, all from the menu at the top of the page, and then when your project is all finished, export it as a jpg or png to print off and tack to the wall.

Things to be aware of: You can’t save more than one project with the free subscription, but if you really like it, skip getting a latte one day (ok, maybe a LITTLE more than 1 latte PRICE: $5), and you’re good for a year! You can also print, link your projects together, and link with others. So, win-win.

Colour Lovers

http://www.colourlovers.com

Colour Lovers splash pageThis is an excellent source for anyone trying to get an idea for color trends, palettes or patterns. Whether you are repainting the house or designing a website or ad campaign for someone, the palette options here are incredible and endless.

If you want to create a new palette, all you have to do is click on “Palettes” in the main menu and click “Create New” in the menu below that. Simple. It has a the option to use a simple color picker or you can use hexidecimal code, RGB, HSV or CMYK. It even has the ability to pick from a plethora of patterns and give them complex palette colors.

Check me out on Colour Lovers

Play

Pandora Radio

http://www.pandora.com
pandora radioIf you’ve spent any amount of time with me, you know how much I love this site. Any website that can ask you for a band you like, and after you tell it, gives you hours of music that you LOVE has got something going on. You can create multiple “stations” with music you like, mix a few bands into one station, and listen to hours of CD-Quality music, with NO commercials & no lame DJ.

If it happens that you DON’T like a song the radio plays, you can skip it, or give it a thumbs down. The thumbs down & thumbs up “guides” Pandora to pick the music you like. It’s just to amazing for words.

Things to be aware of: Pandora DOESN’T like to be minimized, but you can use tabbed browsing and have it in the background playing…practically unnoticeable. If you really get into your work, after about two hour you might notice the music stop playing. No worries. click back over to Pandora and a window is there saying, “Are you still listening?” Click yes, and you’re back in business.

Check me out on Pandora!

Connect

LinkedIn

www.linkedin.com
LinkedInI know, I know, It seems like there are TOO many social networking sites now. Who could forget when MySpace (does anyone over 13 use that anymore?) & Facebook began to explode with popularity (each currently having over 200 million users)? All kinds of new social networking sites have sprung from the woodworks, but LinkedIn is one worthy of investing time & effort.

LinkedIn is basically an online Resume that can be found by 35 million people & businesses in the same fashion as Monster.com. LinkedIn, however has a few features that Monster.com does not have:

Pulls BLOG Feeds. When you give it your blog url, it automatically pulls your blog titles to let people looking at your profile know what you’re working on.

Kudos, fine sir! You can recommend friends & co-workers, get recommended BY friends & co-workers, and even give “kudos” which is basically like writing a reference for a person. (You will find the more kudos you WRITE, the more that are written about you)

Show thyself approved. You can link to multiple websites that you’ve created including your portfolio, your blog, your company’s website…the list is endless really. This is a great feature because it lets potential employers see multiple facets of your life: work, play, & passion.

Know how much you lack. Your completion percentage is posted on your page, so you know how much more you lack to have a complete LinkedIn resume.

User-specified address. One thing that stands out above Monster.com & Facebook, is the ability to use your name as your LinkedIn public profile url. For instance, http://www.linkedin.com/in/chaseadams is my url, so it’s really easy for potential employers to find you.

There’s a really great article in MacLife (May 2009, no. 28) about how to put together a stellar LinkedIn resume (p89), and I was going to link to it on their site, but it was hard to find, so head over to your local Barnes & Noble, pick up a copy, and get linked in.

*If you become a member, or already are one, click here to add me to your network.

Twitter

http://www.twitter.com
We Are Clouds Twitter PageI wish the “IF I had a nickel for every time someone asked me that…” age old adage was true about Twitter. This one wouldn’t have made the list because I just assumed it was like Facebook, in that everyone know what it was. Boy was I wrong.

I joined it last year, and didn’t really do much with it, but in the past month I have heard more “tweeting” about Twitter than you could imagine. I have at least 2 people a day ask me what it is, and is it worth it. And my answer: Absolutely

Here’s the beauty of twitter. It’s simple. It’s fast. You can write whatever you want about whatever you want from your computer, your phone, your iPod Touch, and be done with it in a matter of seconds.

Twitter is what I would consider a “micro-blog”, the ability to write about your life, in not so many words, and keep everyone up-to-date. You can add links to photos, websites, other social networking sites, and do so by creating what are known as “tiny-urls”.

All you need to start tweeting, as every other site mentioned here, is an e-mail address.

Things to be aware of: You only have 140 characters to capture what your life is like RIGHT now. So I use an Adobe AIR (download here) program called, DestroyTwitter (download here). It allows you to see your friends tweets & your tweets on your desktop, and shorten URLs, shorten your tweet (tweetshrink) & upload pictures (twitpic)

Also: You can link your facebook to your twitter so that your twitter updates also update your facebook status…it’s a HUGE timesaver! E-Mail me to find out how!

Follow We Are Clouds or Chase Adams on twitter!

Hopefully some of these sites are new, and ALL are relevant or useful to you.

Create a paperclip from scratch in Adobe Photoshop

The other day I was sitting at my desk and thought to myself, “Paper clips are so cool. They do such a great job at keeping things organized and still maintaining that ‘disheveled, unorganized look’.” This unorthodox thought process led me to also think, “I bet a paper clip would be really cool as a design element for my website.” So I decided to try to replicate one, from scratch, in photoshop.
I thought it turned out pretty good. So good, in fact, I decided I’d show you how to do it.

  1. Create a new document (cmd+n for macs ctrl+n for pcs; this is a VERY useful keyboard shortcut to know) with a width of 300 px & height of 400 px @ 72 dpi. (The 72 dpi is only important if you want to create web-only graphics)

  2. Select the circular marquee adobe photoshop eliptical marquee tool & make a large, symmetrical circle by holding the shift key as you drag the circle.eliptical selection

  3. Create a new layer (cmd+shift+n on macs or ctrl+shift+n on pcs), name it “top turn” & stroke the marquee on the inside through Edit > Stroke with a width of 10 px with a stroke color of black (#000000).
    Edit - stroke
    Result:
    Stroked elliptical marquee

  4. Now, deselect your marquee by using Select > Deselect or cmd+d, and Repeat step 2 with a circle about half the size of the first circle, & repeat step 3 (naming the layer “bottom turn”).
  5. Now left align those layers by selecting the Move Tool (keyboard shortcut of V).
    left-align those images

  6. Create a new layer, naming it “straight aways”, and using the rectangular marquee, create a rectangle that is as wide as the smallest circle, and has ends at the center of both circles. The circles can be moved later, so it’s not that important to align just yet, but it is important that it’s the exact width of the smallest circle. When you stroke the rectangle, it is imperative that you stroke the inside in order for it to look right. Stroke it at 11 px, rather than 10 px.
  7. Now align all layers left, & “clear” out the parts of each layer that aren’t part of the paperclip. For instance, the bottom of the top circle, the top of the bottom circle, and the horizontal bars of the rectangle. The best way to do this non-destructively is to use the layer mask, which is at the bottom of the layers palette.
    • layer mask button
  8. Select the “top turn” layer, and use the marquee to select the top half of the circle. When using marquee to select what you want to layer mask, select what you want to show. Repeat the same steps for the subsequent layers. If you feel the straight away layer isn’t long enough, simply use Edit > Free Transform (or cmd+t for macs, ctrl+t for pcs), and drag it vertically. Be sure not to let it change horizontally, because it will adjust the width of your straight sections, making for a “disconnected” paper clip.
    top turn

    • After you’ve layer masked:
      post layer mask

    • Tip: If the straight sections don’t quite line up with your bottom circle, use the marquee to select the right half of the straight section, select the Move Tool (V), and simply use your right or left arrow buttons on your keyboard to move it directly over the right side of the bottom circle.
  9. At this point, your paper clip should look like a dull, “clip art”-esque paper clip. This is where the magic of layer styles comes in.
    paper clip clip art looking thingy

    • Tip for Noobs & Professionals: Go to your history palette (if you can’t see it select Window > History), and create a snapshot of your work before moving onto the next step. This way, if anything goes terribly wrong in the next step, and you continue without realizing you’ve made a horrible mistake along the way, you have your snapshot to revert to.
  10. Select all of the layers you’ve created (do not select the background layer) and merge them by selecting Layers > Merge Layers or using cmd+e for macs or ctrl+e for pcs. Now you should have one layer, which you should rename “paper clip”. Now using the eliptical marquee, create a symmetrical circle, to go at the top of the “bitter” end of the paper clip (the long, right straight part) to make it look rounded, and fill it with black by selecting Edit > Fill or pressing D to reset your foreground color to black, and using option+delete on macs or alt+delete on pcs to fill it with the foreground color.
    marquee top of bottom
    filled top of bottom
    Do the same for the top circle’s loose end.
    marquee bottom of top
    filled bottom of top

  11. Select the effects button (fx) at the bottom of your layers palette, and begin by selecting “drop shadow”. This will make our paper clip look like it’s above the page that it is clipped to.
    effects button

    • Use these settings:
      drop shadow settings
      drop shadow paper clip

  12. Next, under the effects button, select “Bevel & Emboss”, and use these settings:
    bevel and emboss settings
    bevel and emboss paperclip
    Now we’ve got some “3d” effects, it’s time to make the paper clip really “shine”.

  13. Under the effects panel, select “Satin” and use these settings:
    Satin layer effects
    Satin effects paper clip

    • I found that playing around with the contour shapes really helped to tweak my paper clips “almost touchability”. So roam. Play. Find new things.
    • One more little finishing touch. Create a layer mask on your “paper clip” layer, make a  rectangular marquee at the “big circle” loose end, and fill it with black, which will make it look like it’s “clipped” to another piece of paper. It may look strange right now, but we’re going to use a really neat-o, not so well known blending option.
    • Double click on the effects title under your layer and click on Blending options.

      effects are here

    • In the Advanced Blending section you’ll find a check box that says, “layer mask hides Effects”. Check “yes”, Romeo!
      layer mask hides effects turned off
      layer mask hides effects on blending options effects palette

    • As you’ll see when you check it on & off, the layer’s effects assume that the “layer” itself is being hidden by the layer mask when the check is off, and makes it do some really funky effecting. When it’s checked on, it makes it almost like the entire layer, effects & all, are hidden behind whatever it is your paper clip is clipped to. The work around for this used to be to merge this layer with another layer & simply cut off the part that looked “icky”. This is nice, because it keeps your effects entact & allows you to make it look like it’s a truly, used, paper clip.
  • Your finished paper clip should look a little, if not entirely, like this:
    finished paper clip

  • Hope this tutorial was helpful, please feel free to review the tutorial itself, as it was my first ever.

FBC Loganville PhotoShoot

Today was the first official WE ARE CLOUDS photoshoot!

I went out to Loganville FBC to take staff photos for their website & I must say it was incredible. I was a little nervous it was going to be quite awkward, to say the least, because it was, in fact, my first shoot.

I was going to take a bunch of candid photos inside against a backdrop, but when I was roaming the grounds I found the perfect field., so we set up some furniture and & props and snapped away.

We got some amazing shots, and it seemed like everyone had a fun time (including me).

Chet Fowler Loganville FBC Ministry Village Director
Wayne Naugle Loganville FBC Youth Pastor

Daniel Godfree Loganville First Baptist Church Executive Pastor
Ronnie Kendall Loganville First Baptist Church Senior Pastor

Stephanie Cannon Loganville First Baptist Church Communications Director