Clappy,
thanks for the ILoveSketch link… IStillLoveCorelDraw, lol…
Did you know- AutoDesk’s coming out with their own version?
http://vimeo.com/2419011
So much for AutoDesk sitting on their non-cutting-edge asses, eh? :lol:
10000hours;
so you wanna be an outlier, eh…? Good for you.
Here’re my 2bits, but don’t take them personally, they’re actually intended for all and no one in particular;
In CG, getting the various mini-big-pictures wrong can’t be helped, for starters, not only is everything a cheat, everything’s also cheat-oriented (goal).
At times we’re in on it, but at times we get caught up interfacing with them as tools/procedures/workflows… in this regard I can’t think of a more heinous software than ZB, it’s such an ingenious cheat, you get sucked into “The ZSpell”…
Confounding this is how you can function and produce so much without understanding/appreciating the underlying dynamics/constructs, but overall we’re more likely to just misconstrue them in some rational/minor way…
-except for Digital Tutors, they can pull a Darwinian Award every 3 minutes…
Impartiality is paramount, as we can get caught up in biases etc… knowing this doesn’t help… being conscientious about it, I think really does.
So there’s this queasiness that can ever floor you when you have to revamp some cozy mental-model that just crumbled on you, big deal, it’s normal for the brain to not like it, you just got dumped back to square one in your own video-game, and it ain’t the first time either, lol, but taken like a game, it can become an acquired taste…
btw, I don’t think you can actually ‘think outside the box’, I think you can only (pause) upgrade the box you think in. There’s no friggin’ exterior to the box, but from cardboard to penthouse, we can definitely remodel.
I’m not toe-may-toe toe-mah-toe`ing you… The difference between the two, I believe, is the very extent that the mind can literally accomodate the one over the other.
10000hrs and many of you are probably familiar with “Blink” by Malcolm Gladwell -and if not, check out his spaghetti-sauce lecture on www.ted.com, in fact I’d like to recommend this one awesome site for it’s almost 500 mini-lectures (18 min on average) by some of the world’s leading and coolest brains, so if TED is news to you, you’re very welcome, go ahead and treat your brain to a joyride… (you can also peruse their lecs on youtube).
Anyways, his book and my point being, the mind can, in a blink, manifest/communicate thru physical sensation/discomfort, what is wrong with the box/paradigm/situation; from a gut feeling to a bad taste to an eyesore etc - so - honing in on the flaw, imo, works way better from within the box than stepping out into the void, lol…
Ever started an artwork/project only to lose interest/steam/mojo? Is your backburner some project retirement home no one visits…? If so, you sir/madam have a case of the artist’s mental clap, (no relation to Clappy),
also known as perfectionism…
-Hi, my name is guringo and I’m a recovering perfectionist…
Here’s what happens, perfectionism leads to overwhelmingness, which in turn leads to procrastination (David M. Burns, MD, author of 15 yr bestseller on cognitive therapy,“Feeling Good”) and it can go on to self-invalidation and self-depreciation, you get the idea…
Why? Cuz shooting for the moon is shooting yourself in the foot. The greater you bloat your goal, the more you ‘lucrativate’ it, the greater you’re screwing with your depth-perception; before setting out, it’s so pretty or grandiose and you can almost touch it, isn’t it…?
The remedy is setting average/moderate goals -weekly, daily, and even per session, stick to it and you’ll be nipping it in the bud and your stamina will stay the course…
One great little aid for hardcore perfectionists- the egg-timer. Set it for 45-55 min session and make sure to actually break for 10 - even/especially/whatever… this ‘training’ is far more important in the longrun than whatever task you were in the middle of…
And moderating your goals doesn’t mean being average/mediocre, it just means accomplishing things with positive bio-feedback, and ease, before proceeding forth.
Training doesn’t make ‘perfect’, it makes mastery… and if resistance is futile, persistence is fertile…
On the hand, and I’m paraphrasing someone here from a CGTalk interview; in CG, it takes 10% of the time to achieve 90% of the result and 90% is spent on that last 10%… so don’t let that throw you off your game…
cheers, -G
10000hrs - I’ve been around this forum for ages, and I joined back then just to query certain things, but they got resolved before posting… I’ve been comfortable keeping my mouth shut, and now I can’t shu-