Friday, September 18, 2009

Did You Know 4.0 (via xplanevisualthinking)

Bearsharktopus FTW.
via The Daily What

Bearsharktopus FTW.

via The Daily What

Monday, September 14, 2009
Dirt Po(or)ster : W O R K  O F  R O L A N D  T I A N G C O
Tuesday, September 8, 2009
The Hierarchy Of Digital Distractions | Information Is Beautiful
Monday, September 7, 2009
Apple approves officially-licensed Commodore 64 emulator for iPhone
Web forms design guidelines: an eyetracking study | cxpartners

Microsoft’s Future Vision 2019 (via dhruvitdesai)

Sunday, September 6, 2009
via www.webecologyproject.org
Sunday, August 30, 2009
Physical Storage vs. Digital Storage | The Mozy Blog
Monday, August 24, 2009
DIGITAL + PHYSICAL = AWESOME
This weekend, Richard and I went to San Francisco to host the second Town Holler. Like New York, this gathering of Foursquare enthusiasts was full of good people and good times. Our fist check-in of the evening was at Zeitgeist in the Mission and proved to be a popular venue - in fact, it is the most popular SF check-in according to our friends at Foursquare. As the night went on, the group sized ebbed and flowed. People turned up to new venues by following our broadcast on Twitter. For those not familiar with Foursquare, you can send your location updates to Twitter, making coordinating the event very easy.
Unlike Town Holler NYC (which came together in about four days), the SF event had plenty of time to generate buzz and excitement. For weeks, we asked for venue suggestions and conversed with passionate users to keep momentum going. When the day finally came, we were overwhelmed by the enthusiasm.

Even after the event, attendees continue to use social media to talk about Town Holler. Be it on blogs, on Facebook or on Twitter, the conversation is driven by passionate Foursquare’ers.

In both New York and San Francisco, the goal of Town Holler was the same: use digital platforms to inspire real-world connections. Mobile devices are helping to make this kind of connection possible, serving as a bridge between our digital and physical lives.

DIGITAL + PHYSICAL = AWESOME

This weekend, Richard and I went to San Francisco to host the second Town Holler. Like New York, this gathering of Foursquare enthusiasts was full of good people and good times. Our fist check-in of the evening was at Zeitgeist in the Mission and proved to be a popular venue - in fact, it is the most popular SF check-in according to our friends at Foursquare. As the night went on, the group sized ebbed and flowed. People turned up to new venues by following our broadcast on Twitter. For those not familiar with Foursquare, you can send your location updates to Twitter, making coordinating the event very easy.

Unlike Town Holler NYC (which came together in about four days), the SF event had plenty of time to generate buzz and excitement. For weeks, we asked for venue suggestions and conversed with passionate users to keep momentum going. When the day finally came, we were overwhelmed by the enthusiasm.

Even after the event, attendees continue to use social media to talk about Town Holler. Be it on blogs, on Facebook or on Twitter, the conversation is driven by passionate Foursquare’ers.

In both New York and San Francisco, the goal of Town Holler was the same: use digital platforms to inspire real-world connections. Mobile devices are helping to make this kind of connection possible, serving as a bridge between our digital and physical lives.

Microsoft Labs Vision 2019

xkcd - A Webcomic - Tech Support Cheat Sheet
Houston Street, NYC

Houston Street, NYC

Saw this at AMC Theatres today. Great way (forgetting low penetration) to deliver a trailer for an upcoming film.

Saw this at AMC Theatres today. Great way (forgetting low penetration) to deliver a trailer for an upcoming film.

Coolest LEGO video I have ever seen!