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Found That Carl Sagan Quote!

Posted on August 12, 2011 by kipbot
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A couple weeks ago, I put out a plea for a Carl Sagan quote for an Ignite NYC talk I was going to do. I had to paraphrase the line as “This is the kind of problem that is fun to think about while walking in the woods on a winter morning.”

My friend Parfait found the quote last week!

“They are books you ponder over as the water is running out of the bathtub or as you walk through the woods in an early winter snowfall.”

Not crazy about the bathtub water image (or image of me), but it still works. It’s still the romantic, “Papa Carl makes the world of science and cosmology so interesting” line I remembered. Except:

The actual line is in reference to three Robert Heinlein novels (Oi!)! Not only that, but Sagan refers to them as “remarkable efforts! (Oi! Oi!). Not only THAT, but one of them has the word Zombies in it! (Oi! Oi! Oi!).

While I’m wondering if maybe he doesn’t use a similar image somewhere else (hard to imagine since I got the book right), it’s now more interesting to me how my initial processing of the quote meshes with my current memory of it and how I matched that memory to science problems and lofty things. I was every bit the snob then as I am today when it comes to Heinlein (not much, but enough to cringe at calling any of them “remarkable efforts”), so I must have been so overwhelmed by the romance of the image of walking in the woods with Saint Carl contemplating something rich and deep on a crisp winter morning that I glossed over it.

Novelist (and fellow alum of my alma mater) Nicholson Baker, went through an interesting exercise in U and I, a memoir of his obsession with John Updike. One of his many exercises in intellectual self-flagellation was to mortify his literary sensibilities by trying to reconstruct, from memory, the passages from Updike that made him want to be a novelist. Then he compared them to real one. He generally was further off in his memories than I was . . . though he didn’t stumble into praising Heinlein’s literary genius.

Categories: reading

The #1 CEO on design

Posted on August 11, 2011 by kipbot
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While Apple’s ascendancy to #1 most valuable company in the world is still fresh in our minds (though no longer true, for the moment), a revisiting of the importance of design in that company’s comeback from bankruptcy. It’s often used, but worth remembering how broadly Jobs define design:

“The thing that all of our competitors are missing is that they think [design]’s about fashion, they think it’s about surface appearance,” Jobs complained to me once. “And they couldn’t be further from the truth. The iMac isn’t about candy-colored computers. The iMac is about making a computer that is really quiet, that doesn’t need a fan, that wakes up in fifteen seconds, that has the best sound system in a consumer computer, a superfine display. It’s about a complete computer that expresses it on the outside as well. And [competitors] just see the outside. They say, ‘We’ll slap some color on this piece of junk computer, and we’ll have one, too.’ And they miss the point.” At a later interview, talking about the first iBook, which had a rubbery satchellike clamshell case, he argued that the very inclusion of a built-in handle had been an exercise in style. “Is that design?” he said of the handle. “I think it is. It’s not just about looking good, it’s about the use of the product. Not having a latch, is that design? Yeah, we think it’s design. The rubber on the product, is that design? Yes. It affects how the product looks and how you feel about the product, but it’s also incredibly functional if you happen to set it down too hard.”

Levy, Steven (2006). The Perfect Thing (pp. 131-132). Simon & Schuster. Kindle Edition.

Categories: design

Remnant of the TV age

Posted on August 11, 2011 by kipbot
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From an SFO exhibit on Television in the Antenna Age, some pages from TV Guide:

Click images for readability.

Categories: Uncategorized

Media Deaths: Premature, Exaggerated, Prolonged, etc.

Posted on August 10, 2011 by kipbot
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I was at a meeting recently where a legend of advertising scoffed at people who were proclaiming the diminishing importance of TV. In the hyper-leveraged rhetoric of the blogosphere, people will rush to say either that it’s DEAD (“dead, it’s dead Tom, nothing you can do to bring it back”) or ALIVE and bigger than ever. We seem incapable of saying the balance is shifting (an interesting irony that even people who don’t like digital seem to prefer strict binary to nuance). Anyway, this advertising person said “I’m so glad to hear someone say TV isn’t dead. Remember when people said radio was dead? Ha! What’s the first thing you do when you get in the car?” To which someone instantly replied, “plug in my iPhone.” Hilarity ensued.

SFO’s Continental Terminal often has interesting and quirky displays in the long walkway to baggage. This month, it’s about the beginning of the TV era. The opening of the exhibit was this nifty little tidbit:

I love the line from the NYT: “TV will never be a serious competitor to radio because people must sit and keep their eyes glued to the screen; the average American family hasn’t time for it.” This would be a premature death – TV will never live up to its World Fair or other hype, radio will live forever, long live radio.

And today, TV will never die because ____________. In fairness to NYT columnist, though, s/he stopped short of the binary life or death account and just talked about competition for attention and engagement.

Still, an amusing look at how people can cling to the present at the expense of the possibility of the future.

Categories: advertising, computing

Another dimension of Digitizing DIY Content Creation

Posted on July 29, 2011 by kipbot
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Via @gadgetboy

Below is a @GigaOM tour of Leo Laporte’s TWiT studio, in progress. All sorts of interesting tidbits for how smart digital allows smaller operations to make high quality content. Simple things he did:

  • put the equipment in the basement and scattered holes in the floor for access to cabling
  • bought 30 cameras for fixed positions to replace the need (and space) for camera operators and dollies
  • with what Leo calls “the poor man’s jib” he can have some camera movement but it is easily stored/tucked away
  • recently film-worthy LED lights reduce costs in power and ventilation
  • using a back room for Hackerspace. Currently intending it for a collaboration with MAKE Magazine, but seems like it could be used for other displays and for set work
  • Moving beyond the laptop, camera and go formulation, this creates a whole new middle space for studio production.

    Categories: design

    Another product as ad moment

    Posted on July 28, 2011 by kipbot
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    But actually as an ad:

    Similar to a recent moment at WWDC where Jobs got rousing applause for saying “it just works.”

    I’m told, but am still running it down, that this actually came from a Steve Jobs WWDC presentation where he was describing the project and laughingly said, “there’s no step 3″.

    Categories: advertising

    Surprising experience of the persistence of advertising amidst noise

    Posted on July 21, 2011 by kipbot
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    Getting circulated in the twittersphere is a 7 minute video displaying front “pages” of the NY Times website across 11 months. There are 12,000 screenshots, generally displayed for a fixed period of time (with some punctuation in the form of quick holds on a screenshot). For the first minute, I thought this was just another data stunt. I stuck with it, though, curious to see if anything popped. There were a handful of images that popped even though they appeared once (Obama’s frowning face the day after the election, Jared Loughner’s disturbing head shot, World Series and big sports game shots). News stories that crossed several days (the Arab Spring, Chilean Miners) created some persistence and lasting impression. The most persistent, and memorable, parts, however, were the advertisements. Brands that bought the masthead banners for extended periods of time, and take-overs just below the masthead (also for extended periods), became visual foundations for the crazy flow of seemingly disconnected stories, nuggets, and factoids racing underneath. As someone who has grown up believing that advertising doesn’t effect me and that it’s the stuff between the stuff we really want, that odd sense of solidity in contrast to the important stuff of the real world was jarring.

    Categories: advertising, culture

    Industrial conveyor cycle installation

    Posted on July 20, 2011 by kipbot
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    Love it. Sleepy conveyor to the beginning of the cycle. Mad careening zig-zag path with randomizations from friction and other factors of physics. Slow to the end. Back to the sleepy conveyor.

    Categories: Uncategorized

    Weak notions of context in advertising

    Posted on June 23, 2011 by kipbot
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    From a friend, who had just clicked that he didn’t like a song, this weak “contextual” and “relevant” ad:

    Categories: Uncategorized

    Best iPad notification yet

    Posted on June 8, 2011 by kipbot
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    I recently downloaded a bunch of digital books highlighted by Peter Meyers at OReilly Radar. Meyers is a terrific thinker about digital books, going deep on usability, design, how text should be created for ebooks, and what the medium can do to enhance reading experiences.

    In his “10 Innovative Digital Books” to check, he included two Bibles. Interactive, dynamic, well-annotated Bibles are of interest to the spiritual-but-not-religious side of me and to my designer side. Few texts could benefit and be enriched by interactive technology and web connections as the Bible. There are so many versions of the Bible, translation topics and controversies, archaic words that need to be understood to engage the text more fully, concordances, cross-references and allusions (or contradictions, if you’re coming from that angle) that interactive can facilitate. While I’m still bummed at how hard it is to find NRSV translations (the ones that left-liberal types like me go for), there are some interesting ones out there (which is a different post).

    This post was just to highlight a great screen shot that caught me early this morning while I was reading Gary Shteyngart’s Russian Debutante’s Handbook. One of the most interesting possibilities of a digital iPad Bible is a reading plan. There are many different versions of daily scripture – to work through the New Testament or the Pentateuch or to follow themes and ideas. There are also plans to help you read the entire Bible across the course of a year. I signed up to do the last (not really, I don’t have time, much as I’d like to). This was what came up while reading about Volodya’s first encounter with Rybakov:

    img_0281.PNG

    Categories: reading, UX
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