Month: February 2012

  • When I arrived I didn’t know what to think. But after I was inside the store, that stopped being important. Everything, actually, except Abercrombie’s pulsing ephemera stopped being important. If you’ve never been to Abercrombie, let me tell you, it definitely kills one’s ability to form coherent, logical thought. No one has ever discussed matters…

  • One of the coolest creative-class careers has cratered with the economy. Where does architecture go from here? (via The architecture meltdown – Art in Crisis – Salon.com)

  • One of the coolest creative-class careers has cratered with the economy. Where does architecture go from here? (via The architecture meltdown – Art in Crisis – Salon.com)

  • nevver: Fez Chart

  • nevver: Fez Chart

  • The content creators with the broadest reach will be the ones who care the least about protecting their copyrights. Felix Salmon, How Sharing Disrupts Media via Wired.com (via stoweboyd)

  • The content creators with the broadest reach will be the ones who care the least about protecting their copyrights. Felix Salmon, How Sharing Disrupts Media via Wired.com (via stoweboyd)

  • curiosity counts: Apple vs. Sony

    curiosity counts: Apple vs. Sony curiositycounts: “[Apple is] going to continue to make the best products in the world that delight our customers and make our employees incredibly proud of what they do.” – Tim Cook in his first email to Apple employees as Apple’s new CEO sent August 25, 2011 “The path [Sony] must…

  • The Italian artist has long been suspected of turning his studio into a giant camera obscura, punching a hole in the ceiling to help project images on to his canvas. But new research claims that Caravaggio also used chemicals to turn his canvases into primitive photographic film, “burning” images he then sketched on to for…

  • The Italian artist has long been suspected of turning his studio into a giant camera obscura, punching a hole in the ceiling to help project images on to his canvas. But new research claims that Caravaggio also used chemicals to turn his canvases into primitive photographic film, “burning” images he then sketched on to for…