seiz whaa?

month

June 2008

great photography!

i love it..

Thierry le Goues

Jun 30, 2008-1 notes
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Super cool trucks

Jun 30, 20082 notes
Jun 30, 2008250 notes
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Jun 30, 2008-1 notes
Play
Jun 30, 20082 notes
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A load of awesome posters

Rambow

Jun 30, 20081 note
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Jun 30, 2008-1 notes
Jun 28, 2008-1 notes
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Jun 25, 2008-1 notes
Play
Jun 25, 2008-1 notes
“We have no obligation to make history. We have no obligation to make art. We have no obligation to make a statement. Our obligation is to make money.” —wait… has he just quoted Don Simpson???
Jun 25, 2008-1 notes
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Jun 24, 2008-1 notes

Taken from a website with photos of consumer reports.

This product shown above is actually advertising a pair of binoculars. You know, binoculars are great cause they maginfy everything that is rather far away and this makes it the perfect tool to….

spy on jews??

Jun 24, 2008-1 notes
Play
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Play
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Jun 23, 20080 notes
“Stefan Magdalinski from MOO spoke at Brickhouse about their new API which lets anyone build apps to produce and deliver bespoke individual business cards, stickers and postcards. So if you want to create a service to create semacode stickers to identify your belongings, or you want to create a Tarot Card builder, or you want to create print-on-demand trading card games, then this is for you.” —MOO’s API is open for me to abuse
Jun 23, 2008-1 notes
Play
Jun 23, 200811 notes
Jun 23, 20080 notes

8 Ways of visualising the news..

(LIFTED SHAMELESSLY FROM 10,000 words!)

When journalists first began using Flash to produce multimedia stories, it changed the way news could be displayed. Hyperlinks and long blocks of text still exist (in a much cleaner form), but they are now supplemented by the new form of storytelling. The following news aggregators are the next step in the visualization of news and how users will interact with content in the future.

1. the photo stream



Instead of displaying the news as a series of headlines and links, the photo stream simply displays news photos aligned in a eye-pleasing grid. Hovering over a photo will display the full headline; clicking on the bubble icon takes users to the comment section where they can discuss the story on the photo stream site; clicking the arrow will direct the user to the story’s original source. Using the site is intuitive and easier on the eyes.


2. Newser



There are multiple ways of digesting the news at Newser, but the centerpiece of the site is its tiled news headlines. Photos dominate each box and when each is moused over, more detailed information about the news story pops up. Newser’s most admirable feature is its toggler which brings up harder or softer news stories, depending on the user’s preference. For example, hard news stories today concerned the Iowa floods and the stock market while soft news stories included narratives about prom and cuddling chimps.


3. Spectra



MSNBC.com has taken its RSS feeds and turned it into Spectra, a visual newsreader that adds a little color to the news. Spectra likely gets its name from the different news categories that line the top of the browser in a rainbow-colored spectrum. Users select their topic or topics of interest from such categories as politics, entertainment or sports. The stories are then pulled into an orbiting collection of squares. The interface is simple, but still takes a minute or so to get used to. Nevertheless, it is a lot more fun than reading the news in a normal RSS reader.


4. NewsWorldMap



NewsWorldMap mashes up a full browser Google map of the world with Google News and GeoNames to create an interactive way of searching for news in a specific country. The latest news headlines for countries around the world are available in seconds by simply clicking on the location. Because the headlines are culled from Google News, there are a variety of news sources represented on the site.


5. Visual Dictionary Online



Unlike the previous sites, Merriam-Webster’s Visual Dictionary Online isn’t a news aggregator, but it is a different way of understanding the concepts behind news stories. For example, someone watching Tuesday night’s NBA finals could get a better understanding of the game by searching for basketball player positions or even an interactive graphic of a basketball player with links to further definitions. The Visual Dictionary isn’t just limited to sports; the site contains interactive graphics for everything from portable sound systems to crustaceans to Stone Age weapons.


6. 10x10



10x10 is an old standby, but remains every bit as impressive since its launch several years ago. The interactive site displays the news in a ten by ten grid of photos. Each photo represents a news subject and clicking will bring up stories about said subject. Dig a little deeper and you can find a visual representation of the news of every hour, every day, and every month of the last four years.


7. Times



If all this talk of newspapers going the way of the dodo bird makes you clutch the printed product even closer, the Times newsreader wants to ease your pain. The virtual newspaper seeks to mimic the feeling of flipping through pages and is highly customizable, according to its vendor. Bad news is it is available for Mac OS X Leopard only, which means it has gone untested by this PC-using journalist.


8. LiveNewsCameras.com



LiveNewsCameras.com has done an amazing job of culling a great number of live web broadcasts from around the world. The site enables visitors to find out the weather in Philly and seconds later watch live news feeds from Sky Italy. It’s additional live features — an ongoing chat in the site’s sidebar and an embeddable live newscast created by site producers — makes LiveNewsCameras a go to stop for any news enthusiast.




Need more news

Jun 23, 2008-1 notes
AWSUM!

this is fooking awesome..

draw a picture on the left hand side box and RetrievR will scour flickr based on your drawing (takes pallette into account too!) (obviously a bit bugged but still really fucking cool!)

Jun 23, 20080 notes
Whalehunt

People go on a trip > take photos > display them in ‘eye candy’ flash > the end

i still like it though..

Jun 23, 20080 notes
Jun 23, 2008-1 notes
oldie but goodie

Jun 23, 20080 notes
Get more out of your laptop...

image

szymon:

Alternative uses of laptops

Jun 22, 2008-1 notes
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James Jean

Jun 20, 2008-1 notes
Jun 19, 2008-1 notes


Absolutely amazing paper engineering for Olafur Eliasson’s Your House book.

“The subject of the book is Eliasson’s home in Hellerup, Denmark. Each page of the book has been laser-cut to reproduce a vertical cross-section of actual physical space of the house on a scale of 85:1 (so that each leaf corresponds to 2.2 centimetres of the actual house). The interior of the volume forms a sort of reverse to the traditional three-dimensional architectural model—a non-dimensional model formed of negative space—as well as an inverse to the traditional pop-up book.” Graphic Arts Princeton

Nothing short of beautiful!

via FFF

Jun 19, 20080 notes
I'm loving lights and colours lately...

Jun 18, 20080 notes
Past couple of weeks at Work Club...

… have been rather odd.

Something in the Coco Pops?

Jun 18, 20080 notes
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