designed by apple in california book download free

'Designed by Apple in California' book review. I grew up immersed in art books. My mother lectured on history of art and architecture and later taught art education. Some of my earliest memories involve seeing enormous books filled with everything from Michelangelo to Miro, and countless trips to museum and their gift shops, and all the books that inevitably followed us home. Our shelves were filled with them and our coffee table often overflowed. One of the biggest purchases I made as a child were copies of the original Graffiti hardcovers of The Dark Knight Returns and The Watchmen . They were over a hundred dollars each and drained me of my savings at the time. I couldn't believe books could cost so much. But, as I poured over the art and behind-the-scenes material, every page felt worth it. They, and the others I carefully added to my collection over the years, varied in price but each contained art I admired, stories that inspired me, and gave me something to hold that felt worthy of the material it contained. They're among the few physical books I still possess, the ones that fill my shelves and overflow my coffee table today. Each one, in its own way, has educated and inspired me, taught me about process and craft, and given me insight into the passion and pain of creation. That's the background and baggage I bring with me to Designed by Apple in California . A new, lavishly — ludicrously — produced photo book, it aims to celebrate and document the historic collaboration between the late and , and the crushingly brilliant team they put together at Apple. Eight years in the making, it includes 450 pictures spread across 300 , all shot by photographer Andrew Zuckerman. Available in both regular 10.2 x 12.8-inches or 'plus' sized 13 x 16.3-inches, it's got a price tag as big as its bindings — $199 and $299 respectively. That the book exists at all, and at the price point it does, has generated just exactly the expected amount of internet angst you'd expect. Some claim it as a signal that Jony Ive is closing a chapter of his career, perhaps to start the one, at Apple or elsewhere. Others see it as a final farewell to the man who founded and returned to save Apple in impeccably printed form. Still others see it as yet another sign of hubris and avarice from a company increasingly disconnected from its core customer base. About this review. I've spent the last couple of weeks immersing myself in the larger version of Designed by Apple in California . My colleague, Serenity Caldwell, took a look at the smaller version (and took almost all the photos and the video for this review). In an effort to provide greater context, I've also asked several prominent Apple accessory makers to share their thoughts on Designed by Apple in California for this review as well. Production. Designed by Apple in California is packaged as impeccably as every Apple product. The opening is more of an unveiling, deliberately crafted to lead your through the process and set the stage for your initial experience and first impressions. In this case, there's a weight to it, especially the larger version, that almost feels like gravity. And when you unwrap it, you feel like you've just discovered some long-lost tome, or received some fabled manuscript. That or simply, "Oh my god, heavy! HEAVY!" The cover is white but textured. It's so white and so textured that I was immediately afraid I'd somehow dirty or lint it up before I even looked at it. A couple weeks in, though, and it's fine. (Probably because I'm so paranoid about it.) The front has an Apple logo deeply embossed. The spine, the title — Designed by Apple in California . And it crackles when you open it. "I've never felt paper like this. I didn't know there was paper like this." That's what raced through my head as I began to leaf through its pages. German-milled and gilded with silver edging, because of course they are. I can't swear to it, but the larger book feels like it has even heavier paper. Not so much that you want to reach for a spatula to help flip them, but enough that the ridiculousness of that thought made it into this review. It's absolutely amazing paper, though. Crisp, substantial, not too tacky or too slick, and it makes the term "archival quality" sound insufficient. This, it feels like, was designed for Voyager. Dan Provost, Studio Neat. "I am an absolute sucker for nice coffee table books, so Designed by Apple in California is right up my ally. If this were a book of just product photography, it would only be mildly interesting, but the deconstructed products and manufacturing tools elevate the book to something more insightful and educational to students of industrial design. "I would have loved to see more commentary from design team members, or see more of the design process (sketches, early prototypes, etc), but when it comes to Apple being anything other than tight lipped, I'll take what I can get." The ink is "low-ghost", which basically means the images in Designed by Apple in California appear exactly where and how Apple wanted them, without aberrations in the printing process creating "ghost" images in around them. The process itself is also done with eight-color separation. Most printing is four-color: cyan, magenta, yellow, and black. Doubling that up provides for greater accuracy, for example by including orange or metallic inks. I'm not sure which colors exactly Apple ended up using, but the results are remarkable and durable. The photos look like the products and that's no likely to change or discolor with age. I also don't know the resolution Apple used to print the pages but it's the equivalent of "Retina" to my eyes. Thanks to the inks and the density it doesn't so much look like a book as it does the products burned into two-dimensions. It's an incredibly involved and intricate way to make a photo book but also exactly the way Apple would make a book. This is, after all, the team that bead blasts aluminium, chamfers edges, and painstakingly dyes and polishes phones until they're jet black. Some of the photos are captioned at the top but not all of them. Unfortunately, the ones that are captioned are the more obvious ones. Apple includes a separately printed insert tucked into the book that provides details on the products and a glossary of terms, but having the captions next to the photos wouldn't just be more consistent, it would be more useful. When you see the deep reds, the silver sheens, the richness of the reproduced leathers, though, that's where your attention goes. Designed by Apple in California doesn't come off as incredibly high-end production for its own sake, but as incredibly high-end production in service of the content. Brian Holmes, [Pad & Quill](/e? link=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.shareasale.com%2Fr.cfm%3Fb%3D695070%26m%3D54540%26u%3D885495%26afftrack%3DUUimUdUnU40329YYw%26urllink%3Dhttp%253A%252F%252Fwww.padandquill.com%252F&token=4wUZdb69. "Good product art is both beautiful and functional. When you look at Designed by Apple in California , the images tell that story well. "You can have something beautiful but if it does not perform well it's not memorable. Many of the pages in this book display products that evoke memories not only of beauty but of how well these performed in our daily lives." Content. Opening Designed by Apple in California is like opening a time capsule. Not the Apple-branded router — an actual box containing relics from the past. Page after page, everything from the original Bondi Blue iMac from 1998 to the is laid out before you, naked and raw. Many of the products, from Mac to iPod to iPhone to TV to iPad to Watch, and their accessories, are photographed against stark white, recreations of the product renders that have filled Apple marketing material over the years. Others are "behind the scenes" versions of the same — spilled out and laid even more bare, their parts and processes exposed for all to see. The book doesn't just show off things like the stages of a red iPhone case's creation, though. It shows off the objects used in creation. There are tools here, drills and things for which I know no name. There are wooden boards that contain the guts of what would one day become the . There are designs that worked, like the original iPhone, and ones that didn't, like the buttonless iPod shuffle. There are designs that don't hold up well in retrospect, like the wide iPod nano, and ones that remain timeless, like the tower . It's there that Designed by Apple in California shows the most profound trends in the company's design evolution — the move from desktop to mobile and computers to computing appliances. Apple is both leading and following the market that way, since we're the ones voting with our purchases, but seeing that old "cheesegrator" makes me wish Apple could somehow figure out a way to give us the best of both. Patrick O'Neil, [Olloclip](/e?link=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.anrdoezrs.net%2Flinks%2F100048246%2Ftype%2Fdlg%2Fsid%2FUUimUdUnU40329YYw%2Fhttps%3A%2F%2Fwww.olloclip.com%2F&token=HdGXvJVn. "I am blown away by Apple's book "Designed by Apple in California". It's amazing to see the detailed design process used to create Apple's products. Have you ever had that feeling of not being able to breathe? That was my reaction as I flipped through every page of the book anticipating what was next. "I think it was the perfect tribute to Steve Jobs. Thank you for sharing Jony Ive and Apple." The style of the photography fits the greater body of "visual catalog" work we've seen over the years, and it absolutely fits with Apple's aesthetic. I have mixed feelings about it, though. Even when you turn the page from a perfect original iPhone to see one worn like the Millennium Falcon, it comes off as oddly sterile, presented without any sense of the human who took it from there to here. For objects that have so influenced our world, seeing them so steadfastly removed from it is beautiful. but lonely. Perhaps juxtaposing the product shots with more real-world shots would have made for a more meaningful balance. Also, as a designer and someone with deep and abiding admiration for Apple's work, Designed by Apple in California comes off as too much photo and not enough book . Interspering the pictures with stories from the design team, even just a few key moments that stood out and meant the most to them — the pivotal successes, failures, and gambles that lead to both — would have elevated Designed by Apple in California to something more. We've gotten snippets of those kinds of stories here and there before, as part of interviews and profiles, accounts of how the teams avoided the wrong shade of dormitory orange and found precisely the right size of big and bigger. And they're not just delightful, they're inspiring. Again, there's the product details insert that provides brief descriptions of materials and process. But while the work can and does speak for itself, the working demands a human voice. Andrew Green, Twelve South. "What a great book. It is wonderful to see the world-shaping Apple industrial design language unfold and evolve page-to-page. It is impossible to appreciate the breadth of work without a retrospective like this collecting the artifacts all in one place. "That said, I've never seen a retrospective released without also signaling a fundamental shift to the 'next' phase - whatever that may be. I can't help but feel like this is a bookend to one body of work, and perhaps the beginning of the story of another." Conclusion. For some people, the very idea of Designed by Apple in California stinks. It comes off as the height of pretension and the sign of a growing disconnect between the company and their customers. $200 for a book of Mac and iPhone photos? Of objects on white backgrounds? The Visual Dictionary series manages that for $5 on clearance! How is this deserving of any amount of fuss, much less a ludicrously uptight and expensive book? For those for whom Mac or iPhone are objects , and profound influences on how they've come to understand design and its role in the world around us, Designed by Apple in California is a treasure trove of exquisitely bound inspiration. Finally! All the products that shaped modern consumer electronic design and a glimpse of how they came to be! Take my money! Those extremes show why Apple can't just release a book to release a book, not when their every action and inaction is litigated and dissected online with a fever of, well, the social web. I do believe Apple and their executives tend to be plain spoken and can generally be taken at their word. Here, then, is how Apple's chief design officer, Sir Jonathan Ive, introduced Designed by Apple in California : "The idea of genuinely trying to make something great for humanity was Steve's motivation from the beginning, and it remains both our ideal and our goal as Apple looks to the future. "This archive is intended to be a gentle gathering of many of the products the team has designed over the years. We hope it brings some understanding to how and why they exist, while serving as a resource for students of all design disciplines." That's the simple truth of Designed by Apple in California . It collects and catalogs the products willed into the world by Steve Jobs, Jony Ive, and the team they assembled in Cupertino. It's a collaboration that meant everything to those involved and one that changed both our collective culture and many of our lives. It made computing ever more personal, ever more beautiful, and ever more mainstream. Not everyone may believe their work required a book, or if it did that Apple had to make that book themselves. Fine. Whatever. Enjoy your cynicism. Even if only Jony Ive wanted Designed by Apple in California he's more than earned not the indulgence but the respect to make it so. And if he and Apple wanted to do it themselves rather than outsource it — to treat it with the seriousness they treat every product and push the boundaries of print and binding the way they have metal and plastic — they've certainly earned that right as well. And what they've created with Designed by Apple in California is one of the most finely crafted books I've ever owned, filled with some of the most popular and pivotal products ever designed. It deserves to exist and I'm glad it does. The design world is better for it. Like the other tomes in my studio, I'll likely only refer back to it a few times a year. But when I do it will be with a smile up to my eyes. If you know it's not for you, that's great, enjoy something else. If it's already on your shelf or at your workbench, I'd love to hear your impressions of it. If you're still on the back-painted fence, though, then check out one of the Apple locations where it's on display and let me know what you think. We may earn a commission for purchases using our links. Learn more. Apple TV+ nabs eight Imagen Award nominations across five Apple Originals. Apple TV+ is in the running for as many as eight different Imagen Awards across five different Apple Originals, with Ghostwriter, Little Voice, and Ted Lasso among the nominees. Review: Carry your iPhone and more in Incase's flexible Hipsack w/BIONIC® Carry your iPhone and other valuables in this bag that can be worn either across the body or around the waist. Speaking of waist (waste), the bag is made from recycled plastic waste that's been fished out of the sea. New York Times is pulling its crosswords from third-party apps for reasons. has announced that it will stop making its crosswords available as .puz files from August 10, forcing everyone to use its own app if they want to continue solving the puzzles. Best accessories to protect, secure your Apple AirPods. Do you need accessories for your accessories? Absolutely! Accessorize your AirPods with the best options on the market. Designed by Apple in California. Designed by Apple in California is a photo-book written by Jonathan Ive with photos taken by Andrew Zuckerman, and published by Apple Inc. in 2016. The book is intended to showcase the company's history, containing 450 pictures of Apple products released from 1998 to 2015. Contents. Synopsis Release Reception References. Designed by Apple in California received praise for its showcase of late Apple co-founder Steve Jobs' work and the book's physical design, while it took criticism for being considered a "vanity project" and the fact that many of its pictures were already publicized. Synopsis. The book contains 450 photographs of new and old Apple products taken by Andrew Zuckerman, showcased on stark white backgrounds. They cover 20 years of the company's product design, from the iMac G3 released in 1998 to the Apple Pencil released in 2015, although not all products during that timeframe are included. [1] In addition to its photographs, the book also discusses the materials used in Apple products and techniques used by the company's design team. [2] The book was dedicated to Apple co-founder Steve Jobs [2] and contains an introduction written by Apple chief design officer Jonathan Ive. [3] Ive described the book as an "archive". [4] Apple stated that the book is printed on "specially milled, custom-dyed paper with gilded matte silver edges, using eight color separations and low-ghost ink", and that it was linen-bound, hardcover, and developed "over an eight-year period". [5] Release. The book was announced by Apple Inc. on November 15, 2016. [4] It was published in two sizes, a "small" version measuring 10.2 inches by 12.75 inches (260x324mm) for $199 (£169), and a "large" version measuring 13 inches by 16.25 inches (330x413mm) for $299 (£249), sold by Apple online and in some of its retail locations. [2] The book was discontinued by Apple in August 2019, selling out worldwide by September of the same year. Reception. Rene Ritchie of iMore gave a positive review, noting that the book "collects and catalogs the products willed into the world by Steve Jobs, Jony Ive, and the team they assembled in Cupertino" and that it "is one of the most finely crafted books [he has] ever owned". [6] Brian Fagioli of BetaNews commented that the book's high price "sets the value and desirability at a high level" and that it is "intended to be a collectible piece of art". [5] Kif Leswing of Business Insider gave a negative review, describing the book as "Ive's vanity project" and stating that many of its photos have been released by Apple before. Leswing felt the book itself was large in size and "not that special" for its price, compared to art books, and that he could spend the book's price "on way more fun things — like Snapchat's Spectacles, or a discounted Apple Watch". [1] James Vincent of The Verge said that the book's release "show[s] a certain amount of self-interest, navel-gazing, and even arrogance from Apple" and that he would "be interested to see if the company can justify releasing another such book 20 years from now". [7] Related Research Articles. Apple Inc. is an American multinational technology company that specializes in consumer electronics, computer software, and online services. Apple is the world's largest technology company by revenue and, since January 2021, the world's most valuable company. As of 2021, Apple is the world's fourth-largest PC vendor by unit sales, and fourth-largest manufacturer. It is one of the Big Five American information technology companies, along with Amazon, Google, Microsoft, and Facebook. The Cube is a small form factor from Apple Computer, Inc., sold between 2000 and 2001. Designed by Jonathan Ive, the Cube was borne from CEO Steve Jobs' interest in a powerful, miniaturized . Apple's designers developed new technologies and production techniques to create the product, a 7.7 inches (20 cm) cubic computer housed in a clear acrylic glass casing. Apple aimed the Cube at customers in between the consumer iMac G3 and the professional Power Mac G4. Apple announced the machine at the Expo on July 19, 2000. Apple Worldwide Developers Conference ( WWDC ) is an information technology conference held annually by Apple Inc. The conference is usually held in the San Jose Convention Center in California. Due to the COVID-19 safety restrictions, WWDC 2021 was presented online. The event is usually used to showcase new software and technologies in the macOS, iOS, iPadOS, watchOS, and tvOS families as well as other Apple software. Attendees can participate in hands-on labs with Apple engineers and attend in-depth sessions covering a wide variety of topics. The Twentieth Anniversary Macintosh is a limited-edition personal computer released in 1997 to mark Apple's 20th birthday. The machine was a technological showcase of the day, boasting a number of features beyond simple computing, and with a price tag aimed at the "executive" market. Sir Jonathan Paul Ive is a British-American industrial, product and architectural designer. Ive was Chief Design Officer (CDO) of Apple Inc., and serves as Chancellor of the . He joined Apple in September 1992, where he remained until his departure in July 2019. Following several years of designing the interface aspects of Apple products he was promoted to Senior Vice President of Industrial Design in the late 1990s after the return of co- founder Steve Jobs to the company, and CDO in 2015. Working closely with Jobs during their tenure together at Apple, Ive played a vital role in the designs of the iMac, , iPod, iPhone, iPad, MacBook, and parts of the of Apple's mobile iOS, among other products. He also helped design Apple's major architectural projects, such as and Apple Stores. Apple Store is a chain of retail stores owned and operated by Apple Inc. The stores sell various Apple products, including Mac personal computers, iPhone , iPad tablet computers, Apple Watch smartwatches, Apple TV digital media players, software, and both Apple-branded and selected third-party accessories. The PowerBook G4 is a series of notebook computers manufactured, marketed, and sold by Apple Computer, Inc. between 2001 and 2006 as part of its PowerBook line of notebooks. The PowerBook G4 runs on the RISC-based PowerPC G4 processor, designed by the AIM (Apple/IBM/Motorola) development alliance and initially produced by Motorola. It was built later by Freescale, after Motorola spun off its semiconductor business under that name in 2004. The PowerBook G4 has two different designs: one enclosed in a titanium body with a translucent black keyboard and a 15-inch screen; and another in an aluminum body with an aluminum-colored keyboard, in 12-inch, 15-inch, and 17-inch sizes. Apple Inc., formerly Apple Computer, Inc., is a multinational corporation that creates consumer electronics, personal computers, servers, and computer software, and is a digital distributor of media content. The company also has a chain of retail stores known as Apple Stores. Apple's core product lines are the iPhone smartphone, iPad tablet computer, and Macintosh computer line. Founders Steve Jobs and created Apple Computer on April 1, 1976, and incorporated the company on January 3, 1977, in Cupertino, California. The Apple Industrial Design Group ( IDg ) is the industrial design arm of Apple Inc. responsible for crafting the appearance of all Apple products. The MacBook is a brand of Macintosh computers designed and marketed by Apple Inc. that use Apple's macOS operating system since 2006. It replaced the PowerBook and iBook brands during the Mac transition to Intel processors, announced in 2005. The current lineup consists of the MacBook Air (2008–present) and the MacBook Pro (2006–present). Two different lines simply named "MacBook" existed from 2006 to 2012 and 2015 to 2019. iMac is a family of all-in-one Macintosh desktop computers designed and built by Apple Inc. It has been the primary part of Apple's consumer desktop offerings since its debut in August 1998, and has evolved through seven distinct forms. iPad is a line of tablet computers designed, developed and marketed by Apple Inc., which run the iOS and iPadOS mobile operating systems. The first iPad was released on April 3, 2010; the most recent iPad models are the eighth- generation iPad, released on September 18, 2020; the fifth-generation iPad mini, released on March 18, 2019; the fourth-generation iPad Air, released on October 23, 2020; and the third-generation 11-inch (280 mm) and fifth- generation 12.9-inch (330 mm) iPad Pro, released on May 21, 2021. Apple Inc. products has had various design motifs since its inception. Recent motifs were mainly developed under the collaboration of Steve Jobs and Sir Jonathan Ive beginning in 1997, radically altering the previous Apple computer designs. Steve Jobs is the authorized self-titled biography of Steve Jobs. The book was written at the request of Jobs by Walter Isaacson, a former executive at CNN and TIME who has written best-selling biographies of Benjamin Franklin and Albert Einstein. Apple Park is the corporate headquarters of Apple Inc., located at One Apple Park Way in Cupertino, California, United States. It was opened to employees in April 2017, while construction was still underway, and superseded the original headquarters at 1 Infinite Loop, which opened in 1993. Timothy Donald Cook is an American business executive who has been the chief executive officer of Apple Inc. since 2011. Cook previously served as the company's chief operating officer under its co-founder Steve Jobs. iPad Pro is a premium widescreen edition and a sub-serie of the iPad tablet computers developed by Apple. It initially ran iOS, but was later switched to a derivation of the same equivalent that is optimized for the iPad, iPadOS. The first iPad Pro was introduced on September 9, 2015, running iOS 9. Apple Inc. has produced and sold numerous and multimedia speakers, available for standalone purchase and bundled with Macintosh products. SoundSticks are multimedia speakers sold by , originally co-developed with Apple Inc. They were released in July 2000. They are a 2.1 system with a pair of satellite speakers and a subwoofer called the iSub , which was originally available first in October 1999 as a standalone product. They were designed by Jony Ive and have received numerous accolades for their industrial design. Harman Kardon released updated versions in 2004, 2009, 2012 and 2020. Apple removes ‘Designed by Apple in California’ book from US online store. Back in November of 2016, Apple released the ‘Designed By Apple In California’ book, which highlights its storied design history. Sometime recently, however, Apple has removed the book from its online store in the United States. Apple still has a page on its website dedicated to ‘Designed By Apple In California,’ but the link to purchase the book now leads you to an error page. The text on that webpage invites users to buy the book, even though it’s seemingly no longer available. [ Update : The link has now been completely removed from that webpage.] The removal of the listing comes following an extended period of unavailability for the ‘Designed By Apple In California’ book in the United States. Now that the listing has been completely removed, however, we can infer that Apple doesn’t have any plans on replenishing that stock. It’s possible that Apple printed a certain number of the books and has since run out of stock. In certain countries, the book is still available via Apple’s online store, though availability varies wildly. In the U.K., though, it’s still available and in stock for shipping. The book was released in 2016 in two sizes at $199 and $299. The goal of the hardbound book was to highlight historic designs throughout Apple’s past. It was dedicated to Steve Jobs. Designed by Apple in California chronicles 20 years of Apple design through 450 photographs of our products and the processes used to make them. A visual history spanning iMac to Apple Pencil, this hardcover volume is both a testament and a tribute to the meticulous processes of design, engineering, and manufacturing that are singularly Apple. Did you purchase the ‘Designed by Apple’ book? What do you think of it? Let us know down in the comments. Hands-on with the $199/$299 ‘Designed by Apple in California’ book [Video] Earlier this week, Apple somewhat surprisingly announced a new book focused on the design history of the company. The book, which features 450 photographs of new and old Apple products, is available now from Apple for $199/$299 depending on the size you choose. Popular YouTuber-er DetroitBorg got his hands on a copy of the book and has shared a video of the experience, showing an in-depth look at what the book has to offer… DetroitBorg purchased both the small and large sizes of the ‘Designed by Apple in California’ book, noting that the price is high but not unreasonable in the grand scheme of design books from architecture firms and the like. He also points out that there’s a considerable amount of attention to detail with the book, such as how the pages going all the way to the edge, the detail of the images, and the quality of the cover. The book covers the last 20 years of Apple design, starting at about the time Jony Ive and Steve Jobs started working together. The book itself is incredibly simplistic. There are several blank pages before you get to the first actual words, which are simply ‘Designed by Apple in California’ in small and out-of-the-way text. The next page is the book’s dedication to Steve Jobs, while the page after that is an intro written by Jony Ive. In terms of product images, the first product featured is the first-gem iMac and its bright vivid color options. From there, we continue with the iBook, the Cinema Display, the G4 Cube, the Power Mac G4, and then the PowerBook G4. The book then delves into the original iPod and the production that went into it. From there, the book continues to focus on the various different Macs introduced during the early 2000s. One product that gets a notable amount of attention in the book is the iPod Hi-Fi. The speaker system gets multiple pages in the book, which seems interesting considering it never really took off in terms of popularity. The book continues by delving into the MacBook, the continued evolution of the iPod line, the iPhone, and eventually the Apple Watch and Apple Pencil. The Apple Watch is shown in great detail, with the book offering a glimpse at some internal parts as well as all of that effort that went into the design in the first place. At the very back of the book is a removable glossary that you can use as a guide as you move through the book, in case you’re not able to recognize all of the products on your own. You can watch DetroitBorg’s full video below. If you’ve picked up a copy of the ‘Designed by Apple in California’ book, let us know what you think of it in the comments… Designed by Apple in California – Book. One of my guiltiest pleasures is collecting architectural albums. I love these moments of come and quiet, with a heavy book on the table and beautiful and inspiring photos in front of my eyes. I’m also a huge fan of Apple’s “” way of making things. Whether is good or whether is bad, Apple is surely the company that makes people talking. A few years ago Apple release it’s very own photo album called “Designed by Apple in California”. I personally do not own this one, but I always wanted to check it out. And now it is a perfect opportunity to do so. The first is because of the current “Lockdown” situation. The second is because Apple Explained Youtube’s channel just released 48 minutes full read through. Great video with page by page presentation and original apple commentary to every product. Enough Talk! Let’s dive into. People at work. Please welcome Vizpeople network. PicFreak – Our public domain photo stock. About. Welcome on VizPeople Blog! Our blog is young but with huge aspirations! We are covering all interesting aspects of 3d visualizations, Vray and Corona rendering engines.