Archive
January 2010’s Posts.
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iPad interactions
Some of the interaction gestures availble on the iPad
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A century of crayons
Visualizing all the colours of the Crayola crayons
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Radio Canada
A beautiful concept radio for listening to Canada's public broadcaster
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Touching the future
Thirteen years ago, the future imagined by Apple was a tablet computer called the Knowledge Navigator. Today, this vision became real with the iPad. And while the iPad lacks many of the features Apple first imagined, it represents an experience literally inconceivable in 1987.
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Let your presentation tweet
Script allows a Keynote presentation send updates to Twitter
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Foursquare and Metro
Geo-location game partners with news chain to offer news about a persons current locale
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NYTimes.com e-reader division
Special business division formed to managed things like content on Kindle and the Apple tablet
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Ignoring mobile
Some good points about the effects of neglecting the mobile web
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Feltron's 2009 Annual Report
More beautiful data visualizations focusing on everyday life
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Search the world’s government data
Currently only four countries, but it's a unified interface
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Cessation of government
A year ago, the country I live in swore in a leader who promised hope to a population that reveres the government’s executive office.
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36 bills Harper killed
Dozens of potential laws have been indefinitely delayed
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Typekit supports WOFF
The Web Open Font Format will be used to deliver fonts to Firefox 3.6
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Brands of the decade
An overview of the most notable brand/identity work of the '00s
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Magapps make money
Magazines-as-apps might be a profitable future, if GQ's singular example can be spun into a trend
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Liquor store API
Find our what booze is available at the LCBO in JSON
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Cdn. magazines face funding cut
Reallocation of money could kill arts mags, while halving bigger books' budgets
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Citytv succumbs
One of North America's pioneering TV stations sad decline at hands of corporate media
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NYTimes.com readies the paywall
New York Magazine suggest the plan could be announced in weeks
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Editor & Publisher back
The newspaper trade publication resumes publication
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JQuery 1.4
The greatest JavaScript library has a new release
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Blind instinct
The following is a jumble of sentences. And for most of you, the next time you read this, those sentences will be even further jumbled. After five false starts, the narrative I was trying to form around the idea of of tunnel vision in creative pursuits would come to be. So, I broke each sentence into its own line, and let randomness happen.
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The Kids in Hall come back
The new "series opens, reportedly, with Death arriving on a Greyhound bus" -- brilliance
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Open-source Flash
Gordon is runtime using JavaScript and SVG to render Flash movies
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Newsvine earnings for Haiti
If you've used Newsvine, you may have earned money that can be donated to Haiti's disaster relief
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Stock photos and news
TinEye makes stock photos usage in news stories easier to identify, so be sure to identify the source properly
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Conan says no with class
The Tonight Show's current host issues a statement, and in doing so, demonstrates why he shouldn't be bumped
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Mathew Ingram joins GigaOM
Well-deserved congratulations to my former colleague who leads the way when it comes to the journalistic use social media
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The Economist slams Harper
The conservative magazine calls the Canadian prime minister's move to again prorogue Parliament a dangerous abuse of power
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Interviewing a nation's leader
Good insight about what its like behind-the-scenes when interviewing Canada's PM, Stephen Harper
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Two years on
This week, I began my third year in Seattle. Since I’ve written so little about my time I thought I’d use the anniversary as an excuse to fix that situation. Unfortunately, I’ve come to realize I’m no travel writer.
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Don Watt, brander of No Name
One of my earliest memories of design involves wandering aisles filled with uniformly yellow packaging of different shapes and sizes. Each item was labelled with the same, tightly kerned, black typeface and was always set in lowercase.
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