vuelto magazine layout

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Vuelto Magazine Layout Helen He

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Page 1: Vuelto magazine layout

Vuelto Magazine Layout

Helen He

Page 2: Vuelto magazine layout

Client:Vuelto Magazine

Background:Vuelto magazine is a new magazine company located in northgate. They are a group of young people trying to bring a positive impacts towards the soci-ety through the mean of media. Their magazine is inspirational, showing the active lifestyle and have a positive influence on the audience. Target Audience:Mainly people between 18 to 30 who likes to have a better lifestyle.

Problem: Vuelto magazine needs some layout design for these articles.

Solution:This article is about the development of telecommunication and the important role of technology.

The page layout is going to be simple and easy to read for this topic because the content in the reading is historical and informational. Create icons to make the page more interesting.

Tone:The color pallet will be clean and light, scientific type but easy to read.

http://issuu.com/vueltomagazine/docs/vueltofinalonlinemagazine?mode=window&backgroundColor=%23222222

https://www.facebook.com/Vuelto

Page 3: Vuelto magazine layout

Sketches

Page 4: Vuelto magazine layout

Type: Orbitron (regular)Font size: 29

The Evolutionary Trend of Telecommunication Device

Type: Candara (regular, Italic)Font Size: 12, 16

If you needed to communicate with a distant relative, you sent a letter. If it was particularly urgent, you

would have sent a telegram. Not until the advent of the telephone did real-time long distance communication become

Color pallet:

Page 5: Vuelto magazine layout

Inspiration

Page 6: Vuelto magazine layout

Inspiration

Page 7: Vuelto magazine layout

The way that people communicate with one another has evolved so much in the last 100 years that it’s dif-ficult for some to imagine how messages were sent before the rise of high-technology.

If you needed to communicate with a distant relative, you sent a letter. If it was particularly urgent, you would have sent a telegram. Not until the advent of the telephone did real-time long distance communication become possible. Still, while our com-munications technology is ever-evolving, facilitating a real-time back and forth remains the goal. It is only the medium through which we express our ourselves that changes.

This communication trend should come as no surprise, as through history we can see signs of people contriving means of com-municating with one another

when out of earshot. Most of these technologies specialized in doing one thing very well: send-ing life or death messages. From smoke signals to lighthouses, primitive messaging systems con-veyed information that enabled survival. This form of simplified communication over long dis-tances was key to our survival. In today’s world, where more people reside in the concrete jungle than the plains of Africa, our communication systems have shifted from aiding survival to greasing the gears of society. Whereas in the past a letter may have been sufficient to get a mes-sage across, the focus today is on a shorter and shorter response

time. Indeed, there exists an ever-increasing trend to shorten response time while at the same time allowing a greater amount of information to be conveyed. From Facebook updates to Tweets, everyone is talking.

This is, on the whole, a good thing. Most forms of communica-tion are conducive to strengthen-ing the glue that holds society together. Even within the last 25 years, we have seen an evolution in the way that people keep one another in the loop. In the early ‘90s, if you needed to tell some-one to call you, but couldn’t, or didn’t want to call them your-self first, you would have paged them. The recipient would see

The Evolutionary Trend of Telecommunication Device

Page 8: Vuelto magazine layout

your number, and know that they should get in touch. Today, you would simply shoot off a quick text message. If you needed to show a long-distance family member a photo, you faxed it, most likely in black and white. Now you simply send an email, upload it to a photo website or send it to their mobile phone.

Indeed, society has become a sort of worldwide connected network in its own right. Facilitating this transformation is a series of technical advanc-es, the fuel for which seems to be a demand for smaller devices and an ever-expanding thirst for data. We are inquisitive creatures, and we want as much data as we can get our hands on. It comes as no surprise, then, that handheld communica-tions technologies are so popular--in particular, the smartphone.

The smartphone is perhaps, in as much as we can presently conceive, the epitome of communica-tions technology. Consider a handheld device that can facilitate not only real-time voice communica-tion, but video as well. This is a device with which you can check stock prices, find recipes, access en-cyclopedias and find directions. At the heart of the smartphone is the concept of “apps,” or mobile applications. It is apps that give the smartphone its smarts, and in fact, differentiates it from other types of phones. There are apps available for just about any task you would need to complete on the go. The smartphone is communications technol-ogy come full circle. With real-time voice and video technology covered, we have once again begun creating communications technology that can en-hance our life and help ensure our survival.

For instance, recently an app was unveiled for the iPhone that can measure a person’s heart rate. How it works: various and subtle shades of pink, red, purple and green in the face convey information to the app about the temperature of the skin, which in turn allows the app to divine information about

blood flow and rate. To pull this minor miracle off, you simply point the phone’s camera at the target’s face with the app engaged, and wait. As a bonus, the app doesn’t require physical contact with the target. While quickly determining heart rate may not be a life-or-death event, and while a stetho-scope is likely a more practical and accurate device for doing so, the groundwork is nonetheless pres-ent for apps like these to make a huge impact in the average person’s day-to-day life.

At the end of the day, the forecast is for communi-cations technology to become ever-smarter, and to continue to find new and exciting modes of expres-sion. Whether you conduct business with someone on the other side of the planet, or buy and sell stocks from your living room with your smart-phone, you participate in this great evolution.

Page 9: Vuelto magazine layout

F r o m smoke signals to

lighthouses, primitive messaging sys-tems conveyed information that enabled survival. This form

of simplified communication over long distances was key to our survival. In today’s world, where more people reside in the concrete jungle than the plains of Africa, our communica-tion systems have shifted from aiding survival to greasing the gears of society. Whereas in the past a letter may have been sufficient to get a message across, the focus today is on a shorter and shorter response time. Indeed, there exists an ever-increasing trend to shorten response time while at the same time allowing a greater amount of information to be conveyed. From Facebook updates to Tweets, everyone is talking. This is, on the whole, a good thing. Most forms of communication are conducive to strengthening the glue that holds In today’s world, where more people reside in the concrete jungle than the plains of Africa, our communication systems have shifted from aid-ing survival to greasing the gears of society.

The Evolutionary Trend of Telecommunication Device

The way that people communicate with one another has evolved so much in the last 100 years that it’s dif-ficult for some to imagine how messages were sent before the rise of high-technology.

Page 10: Vuelto magazine layout

The way that

people com-municate with one an-

other has evolved so much in the last 100 years that it’s difficult for some to imagine how messages were sent before the rise of high-technology. If you needed to commu-nicate with a distant relative, you sent a letter. If it was particularly urgent, you would have sent a telegram. Not until the advent of the telephone did real-time long distance communication become possible. Still, while our com-munications technology is ever-evolv-ing, facilitating a real-time back and forth remains the goal. It is only the medium through which we express our ourselves that changes. This communication trend should come as no surprise, as through history we can see signs of people con-triving means of communicating with one another when out of earshot. Most of these technologies specialized in doing one thing very well: sending life or death messages.

From smoke sig-

nals to lighthouses, primitive messaging systems

conveyed information that enabled sur-vival. This form of simplified communication over long distances was key to our survival.

In today’s world, where more people reside in the concrete jungle than the plains of Africa, our com-munication systems have shifted from aiding sur-vival to greasing the gears of society. Whereas in the past a letter may have been sufficient to get a message across, the focus today is on a shorter and shorter response time. Indeed, there exists an ever-increasing trend to shorten re-sponse time while at the same time allowing a greater amount of information to be conveyed. From Facebook updates to Tweets, everyone is talking. This is, on the whole, a good thing. Most forms of communication are conducive to strengthening the glue that holds society together. Even within the last 25 years, we have seen an evolution in the way that peo-ple keep one another in the loop. In the early ‘90s, if you needed to tell someone to call you, but couldn’t, or didn’t want to call them yourself first, you would have paged them. The recipient would see your number, and know that they should get in touch. Today, you would simply shoot off a quick text message. If you needed to show a long-distance family member a photo, you faxed it, most likely in black and white. Now you simply send an