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alphabets by Jessica Hische alphabets by Jessica Hische

alphabets by Jessica Hische

Printed on 300g offset paper
Designed in Finland
theminimalist.com.au

Printed on 300g offset paper

Designed in Finland

theminimalist.com.au

Getting ready for a wild, beautiful trip on Wander. Request an invitation at http://onwander.com

Field Study: Case Study: What I Want Out of Facebook

fieldstudy:

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Note: This experiment is in no way affiliated with Facebook, Apple, Wes Anderson, or the Tenenbaum Family.

Another Note: This experiment is not about user interface, or touch gestures, or mobile apps. It’s about an experience and a product. It’s about relationships to people. The…

Enjoyed this read by keenan cummings, taking the core value proposition of facebook and envisioning what it could be…

"Whenever we see gesture enabled interface demos they tend to be computer science guys moving and zooming stock photos, waving frantically at a large screen. This isn’t a great look for the future of the interface. There’s a term for the physical effects that long term exposure to gestural input can have on a person — Gorilla Arm. Tom Cruise apparently suffered terribly from this while filming Minority Report. The argument against most gesture-enabled computing is that it looks exhausting. Great for blasting zombies but complete overkill for updating a spreadsheet."

After graduating from art and design school earlier this year, Swede Erik Olovsson launched his own design office in a unique space: a self-propelled mobile studio. Erik’s Design Bus began its journey in Stockholm in March, and has since been traveling across Sweden, seeking commissions along the way. The studio is equipped with a photo and print shop where Olovsson can take on small commissions for local companies, like printing menus, animation, business cards, brochures, logos and signs. “I want to explore my role as a designer and be my own producer, in the same time challenge the norms in the business,’ Olovsson says. Instead of sitting in behind a computer in an office all day, he can ‘find inspiration in real life’ and experience face-to-face contact with clients.”Olovsson decides with customers what his time and services are worth, and exchanges this for other services as opposed to money. After graduating from art and design school earlier this year, Swede Erik Olovsson launched his own design office in a unique space: a self-propelled mobile studio. Erik’s Design Bus began its journey in Stockholm in March, and has since been traveling across Sweden, seeking commissions along the way. The studio is equipped with a photo and print shop where Olovsson can take on small commissions for local companies, like printing menus, animation, business cards, brochures, logos and signs. “I want to explore my role as a designer and be my own producer, in the same time challenge the norms in the business,’ Olovsson says. Instead of sitting in behind a computer in an office all day, he can ‘find inspiration in real life’ and experience face-to-face contact with clients.”Olovsson decides with customers what his time and services are worth, and exchanges this for other services as opposed to money. After graduating from art and design school earlier this year, Swede Erik Olovsson launched his own design office in a unique space: a self-propelled mobile studio. Erik’s Design Bus began its journey in Stockholm in March, and has since been traveling across Sweden, seeking commissions along the way. The studio is equipped with a photo and print shop where Olovsson can take on small commissions for local companies, like printing menus, animation, business cards, brochures, logos and signs. “I want to explore my role as a designer and be my own producer, in the same time challenge the norms in the business,’ Olovsson says. Instead of sitting in behind a computer in an office all day, he can ‘find inspiration in real life’ and experience face-to-face contact with clients.”Olovsson decides with customers what his time and services are worth, and exchanges this for other services as opposed to money.

After graduating from art and design school earlier this year, Swede Erik Olovsson launched his own design office in a unique space: a self-propelled mobile studio. 

Erik’s Design Bus began its journey in Stockholm in March, and has since been traveling across Sweden, seeking commissions along the way. The studio is equipped with a photo and print shop where Olovsson can take on small commissions for local companies, like printing menus, animation, business cards, brochures, logos and signs. 

“I want to explore my role as a designer and be my own producer, in the same time challenge the norms in the business,’ Olovsson says. Instead of sitting in behind a computer in an office all day, he can ‘find inspiration in real life’ and experience face-to-face contact with clients.”

Olovsson decides with customers what his time and services are worth, and exchanges this for other services as opposed to money.

milkstudios:

The Knife - Shaking The Habitual
You can stream The Knife’s newest album for free on theknife.net
So good!!
Personal recommendation: Raging Lung

milkstudios:

The Knife - Shaking The Habitual

You can stream The Knife’s newest album for free on theknife.net

So good!!

Personal recommendation: Raging Lung