Legit read about how sketching is important to the interface design process. Can’t manage it?—using computer wireframes that look like sketches still help to manage expectations and keep the process fluid.
Legit read about how sketching is important to the interface design process. Can’t manage it?—using computer wireframes that look like sketches still help to manage expectations and keep the process fluid.

Mark Coleran designs the (ridiculously advanced) computer interfaces you see in them there action movies. Not a bad job at all.
via metafilter
Akron/Family - “Don’t Be Afraid, You’re Already Dead”
Chicago turned loose, the apocryphal winds turned eager thermals, rising even to your third-floor office window. They push papers from your desk & titter. They direct your cheek towards the peripheral sunset. Red shift. Doppler.
She is landing in a dusk one hour advanced & this distance too speaks to you. It suggests you will become a better person.
- One pair of silver or gold cuff-links, simple and modest
- A set of collar stays of varying size
- One pair black lace up dress shoes, one pair brown
- Decent black loafers — dress up or down
- Shoe shine kit
- A solid dopp kit. A good one can be passed down.
- One black suit, one dark blue or grey
- Canvas summer shoes, white or otherwise
- A well-earned pair of jeans: straight leg, slight bootcut. Invisible.
- A tent & two sleeping bags: Mens and Womens
1. A cozy chair, thickly upholstered if possible and at least as tall as one’s reach.
2. Object that rolls. Balls of yarn are a classic, but a plastic bottlecap will do in a pinch.
3. Sunbeam.
4. A cardboard box or similar enclosed space.
5. Two mice—one alive, one dead.
6. A vessel filled with water. Ones that don’t belong to you are best.
7. At least one human. Having multiple allows you to play them off each other.
8. A large window and windowsill.
9. Fish (you can never have too many).
via videosift.com
Dead Pixel in Google Earth. Helmut Smits, 2008.
The project is a physical landscaping alteration that burns an 82 cm x 82 cm size square in a field of grass, which measures the equivalent of one pixel of data at an altitude of 1 km when seen with Google Earth.
Brilliant.