Every now and then something comes up which is really worth noticing. This is a very interesting mix of design and philosophy (or philosophical terms) which is not only inspiring but demonstrate the power of the symbolic representation of pictures:
Serious claims belong in a serious scientific paper (guardian.co.uk)
When I read this article http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/oct/21/bad-science-publishing-claims I couldn’t agree more and it is not the first claim from the Baroness which gets the media machinery buzzing with wild claims completely unfounded… The blanket statement is not at all useful
Revealed – the capitalist network (newscientist.com)
Where visualisation confirms reality… most interestingly, why of the top 50 nobody is actually producing stuff? Maybe I’m the wrong business, but I can’t fail to get annoyed knowing who’s playing with people’s money! When even governments seem to be
Kobo launches Vox, ‘the first … (thenextweb.com)
Kobo launches Vox, ‘the first social eBook reader’, with Facebook integration http://thenextweb.com/gadgets/2011/10/19/kobo-launches-vox-the-first-social-ebook-reader-with-facebook-integration/?awesm=tnw.to_1BRwj When I came across this news I couldn’t resist to grin. In the last F8 Mark Zuckeberg seemed like a child learning to put verbs into his
Marco Tempest: The magic of truth and lies (and iPods) | Video on TED.com
Honestly, this is quite useless, but I found it a very original and interesting form of entertainment pushing the boundaries of what is possible with some tech and some handling skills. What I liked the most is that suspension