— unpredictable thoughts

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Tag "design"

working on the new heavybubble gallery

Work­ing on get­ting the new adven­ture in shape. Still lots of boxes. Still no inter­net. Still tired. This post is just a short note so you know I’ve survived.

Lots of work too do to get set­tled. Excited about the pos­si­bil­i­ties of the new space. We need to paint here too. White is needed. This is a look at some sticky bub­bles that David and Erica picked up for us. I think they’ll be ter­rific on the door. When we open the door to the street you’ll see our bubbles.

Brand­ing for two spaces is going to be challenging.

I’ve got some ideas though.

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Do you usu­ally pay to be a beta tester? Not me. I usu­ally get some­thing free for debug­ging somone’s product.

Well today Ama­zon released the big­ger dog of their reader and will charge you about $500 bucks for a device that looks like a card­board pro­to­type of a tech­nol­ogy prod­uct from the 80’s.

Expec­ta­tions for elec­tronic devices are con­sid­er­ably more sophis­ti­cated than what the Kin­dle offers. Now of course Ama­zon is just warm­ing up the mar­ket for a smart inno­v­a­tive com­pany like Apple or a smart startup to take over much like Apple did with the iPod. I actu­ally think that Ama­zon doesn’t care. Ama­zon is all about the dis­tri­b­u­tion chain. They want to sell you the con­tent not the device. They just cre­ated the device to cre­ate more inter­est in read­ing. Cer­tainly the pub­lish­ing indus­try doesn’t under­stand how to do that. But will this actu­ally rein­vig­o­rate the read­ing mar­ket? That remains to be seen.

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Stella Untalan Gassaway | memory landscapes

I know that you prob­a­bly don’t believe it but my heavy­bub­ble web­site is finally launched. I just couldn’t stand it any­more when peo­ple asked me about my site. It was no longer amusing.

The site is actu­ally very small right now. I need to get some work pho­tographed. More will come.

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An old card in a new place.

My sis­ter always sends us ter­rific cut­tout or popup cards. You can’t get rid of them they become a dec­o­ra­tion for the next year. Actu­ally until the paper just gives up. This is a favorite because it can sit in some unex­pected place. It has a small foot­print with very pleas­ant geometry.

I enjoy watch­ing Santa near the rooftops while I make my morn­ing cof­fee and look for the snowflakes that sig­nal that it really is winter.

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Timbuk2 Bags — Hacker Day­pack — Hemp/PET Fabric

Ok, I just had to post this onto my wish list. I need a pack that serves all my needs now that I’m walk­ing to work. The other bags that I have server spe­cific needs. I need a new architecture.

I’m look­ing for a bag that starts off light when it’s empty. I’m not sure if this fits the bill. Why don’t sites tell you how much the bags weighs empty?

Any­one have any sug­ges­tions for a slim back­pack with plenty of pen stor­age space too? I carry lots of writ­ing imple­ments with me all the time.

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I want a trans­for­ma­tive movement!

What all trans­for­ma­tive move­ments have in com­mon is the qual­ity of speak­ing up to an aspi­ra­tional pub­lic, to our best pos­si­ble selves. Trans­for­ma­tive move­ments act like the world is bet­ter than it is, and—when they work—they inspire the world to live up to this par­tial pro­jec­tion. The Obama cam­paign, has, in moments, embod­ied pre­cisely that qual­ity: Obama con­jures a bet­ter Amer­ica and that bet­ter Amer­ica shows up for him. But polit­i­cal moments do more than speak to our best selves; they har­ness that quasi-mystical power to make rad­i­cal demands to trans­form the real world. The Obama cam­paign has not done this, not on any issue at the core of our cur­rent cri­sis. Not on global warm­ing, the war in Iraq, the hous­ing cri­sis, health care, under­em­ploy­ment, or the assaults on civil lib­er­ties. Not a sin­gle Obama pol­icy is unequiv­o­cal in its clar­ity and moral­ity, which is the essen­tial qual­ity of a trans­for­ma­tive movement.

The campaign’s most rad­i­cal demand, even if unstated, is the idea of elect­ing Obama him­self. It is Obama—and not his plans for the presidency—that is the ulti­mate expres­sion of the “move­ment.” If the process ends there, the Obama cam­paign becomes less like the civil rights move­ment and more like the lifestyle brands in the late ‘90s—the Nikes, Microsofts, and Star­bucks that expertly cap­tured the tran­scen­dent qual­ity of past lib­er­a­tion move­ments, and our desire for mean­ing in our lives, to build their brands.

Of course the real fault is not Obama’s, but ours. We have for­got­ten the kind of risk and work it takes to build trans­for­ma­tive mass move­ments, and so set­tle for iconog­ra­phy instead. That said, he’d bet­ter win.

by Naomi Klein

I read this at The Nation. I think it gets to the crux of what both­ers me about Obama and his cam­paign. I haven’t been able to find the words by Naomi Klein has. This isn’t a trans­for­ma­tive move­ment. All this is is an orches­trated polit­i­cal cam­paign as lifestyle brand. And I espe­cially don’t like the cam­paign. His “logo” and “yes we can” make my skin crawl.

His buffed up graph­ics, his gath­er­ing of phone num­bers and emails for his VP announce­ment by instant mes­sage, his plan to make his accep­tance speech in a foot­ball sta­dium… it is a com­mer­cial­iza­tion that upsets me to the core.

Today I found an email in my spam fil­ter that rein­forced my discomfort.

Design­ing Obama’s brand
Sol Sender, Prin­ci­pal, Sender LLC

Sol Sender and his team at Sender LLC have turned the let­ter “O” in Barack Obama’s name into an iconic logo like the swoosh from the Nike. The inno­v­a­tive approach toward brand­ing the Obama cam­paign has helped set it apart from what has come before. Obama’s brand has sparked many con­ver­sa­tions about the impor­tance of design in polit­i­cal cam­paigns. When Michael Bierut from Pen­ta­gram was asked where Obama’s brand stands against the best com­mer­cial brand design, he answered “I think it’s just as good or bet­ter.” Sol Sender will share his insight and his expe­ri­ence of work­ing on one of the most rec­og­nized polit­i­cal brands. Reg­is­ter for this event ahead of time since it’ll fill up fast.

I’ve lived through a time where there were so many inspi­ra­tional fig­ures. In hind­sight they each had their flaws but they inspired a nation and the world. They had authen­tic­ity that inspired you to the bone, they didn’t need a design firm to man­u­fac­ture one by cre­at­ing a “lifestyle brand”.

Are we as a nation so bereft of ideas and inspi­ra­tion that Obama is enough?

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The first time that the peo­ple that made the Bernoulli Box became iomega with remov­able dri­ves that were all about YOUR STUFF I thought their was some very savvy think­ing about the desires or con­sumers. Then the CD burner came into being and smashed their suc­cess in the portable stor­age mar­ket­space. Well, It looks like Iomega is return­ing to its old smart self cre­at­ing a very desir­able, very sexy new ego 320 GB hard drive. The reviews I’ve read are very good and the drive is excep­tion­ally good looking.

It reminds me of a flask with some­thing warm inside for when the cold winds blow. Or maybe a cigarette/cigar case — some­thing very per­sonal. The kind of gift you give to some­one you are very fond of, some­thing to inscribe.

This is a prod­uct with a very inter­est­ing emo­tional connection.

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Image:Myst-library and ship.jpg

A screen­shot from Myst.

Myst is the first game I actu­ally pur­chased. I had played many games as early as the line com­mand games and Adven­ture. But Myst was some­thing dif­fer­ent an immer­sion, in a quiet space, an adven­ture with dan­gers that didn’t run towards you and ask you to kill something.

I look for­ward to vis­it­ing an old friend.

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I was mean­der­ing around the net and I found a lit­tle gem. An inter­view with Denise Scott Brown and Robert Ven­turi. It’s always good to see an inter­view when Char­lie actu­ally shuts up and lets his guests answer his questions.

We should hear more from these two archi­tects before all we have left is their work. Let’s hear their voices. Thank you to both of them for all the fine think­ing and work they have done so far. BTW this is an old interview.

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Found out about the Cal­i­for­nia quake watch­ing my twit­terific wid­get.

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