Jay Robinson

I design the web @Sencha.
  • March 15, 2010 7:43 am
    It is often lamented that Douglas Noël Adams, author of the supremely excellent Hitchhiker’s Guide To The Galaxy, did not live to see the debut of the iPhone. Many people made the connection between Apple’s iPhone and the fictional device for which Adams’ book series is named—an electronic device that could tell you everything about anything, and was very useful for getting out of an interplanetary jam. If the iPhone wasn’t the true coming of the HHGTTG, then the iPad certainly is.
As a tribute to Adams and to the Apple iPad arriving next month in the form of this do-anything device, I have made a wallpaper which bears the same words as each and every Hitchhiker’s Guide: “Don’t Panic!” I hope you do enjoy and make it your own.
Download Don’t Panic wallpaper for Apple iPad
Douglas Adams was a massive Apple fan, or should I say Macintosh fan. He was an early devotee to the platform and his archived articles on usability and human-computer interaction remain as humorous as they are insightful. Tragically, the British author died of a heart attack in 2001. View high resolution

    It is often lamented that Douglas Noël Adams, author of the supremely excellent Hitchhiker’s Guide To The Galaxy, did not live to see the debut of the iPhone. Many people made the connection between Apple’s iPhone and the fictional device for which Adams’ book series is named—an electronic device that could tell you everything about anything, and was very useful for getting out of an interplanetary jam. If the iPhone wasn’t the true coming of the HHGTTG, then the iPad certainly is.

    As a tribute to Adams and to the Apple iPad arriving next month in the form of this do-anything device, I have made a wallpaper which bears the same words as each and every Hitchhiker’s Guide: “Don’t Panic!” I hope you do enjoy and make it your own.

    Download Don’t Panic wallpaper for Apple iPad

    Douglas Adams was a massive Apple fan, or should I say Macintosh fan. He was an early devotee to the platform and his archived articles on usability and human-computer interaction remain as humorous as they are insightful. Tragically, the British author died of a heart attack in 2001.

  • March 6, 2010 9:31 am

    "I don’t want to know about PICT files. I don’t want to know about TIFF files (I don’t. They give me the willies). I don’t want to have to worry about what file type to ask MacWrite II to save my work in so that I can get Nisus to read it and run one of its interminable macros over it. I’m a Mac user, for heaven’s sake. This is meant to be easy."

    — The late, great Douglas Adams, writes about his ideal computer in 1989 and inexplicably describes the iPad, the computer that lets you ignore the other stuff and simply get to work.