Wednesday, September 19, 2007
What's on your bookshelf says a lot about you
On that note: Brian Dettmer creates book autopsies
Experientia looks at the French and their mobile phone use
This is a fabulous look at the history of type in the Toronto subway
Here are two really cool Kuler screensaver mash-ups for you
Is the Wall St. Journal next line to lose on-line subscription fees?
The NY Times looks at new ways to advertise on MySpace
Google is turning widgets into ads
Mixko make some really interesting furniture
Mango is a free online service where you can learn a foreign language
If you're trying to send Flash via email, you might want to read this article
45% of Germany's on-line population are on a social network
Say hello to Virgin 1
Brand Avenue has a great article on corporate HQ's and the rise of the "boomburbs"
It's about time! Threadless are opening a T-Shirt retail store in Chicago
This is a pop-up lamp in a pop-up book
Tetsuya Nakamura makes crazy psychedelic bathroom furniture
Labels: books, Boomburbs, Brand Avenue, France, Germany, Kuler, mash-up, mobile telephony, MySpace, NY Times, social networking, Tetsuya Nakamura, Threadless, Toronto, type, Virgin 1
posted by olli @ 08:31Thursday, August 30, 2007
Fasten your seatbelts - Yahoo! gets shaken up with a re-org
NBC Universal & NewsCorp launch a YouTube clone - Hulu.com
Picnic sounds like a brilliant tech conference happening in Amsterdam from Sept. 25-29
The Washington Post takes a look Japan's internet future
More from Asia - South Korea looking to build "Robot Land"
Say hello to the Nestle chocolate museum
The iPhone now has its first seminar - Sept. 20th in Los Angeles
Say hello to the £3 Million book
Charli is Heineken's new beer targeted at female drinkers
Ten industrial design trends you can't ignore
Is blogging trapped in a metaphor?
How the algorithim killed Ask Jeeves
Ferratum is a Dutch site that allows consumers to get personal loans by SMS
This is a website that offers advice to squatters
This is a London Evening Standard headline generator
Labels: beer, blogging, books, Charli, Hulu, industrial design, iPhone, London Evening Standard, Newscorp, South Korea, squatting, yahoo, YouTube
posted by olli @ 07:21Wednesday, August 15, 2007
How to make people buy books
Why are most magazines Table Of Contents completely illegible?
Icon magazine offers design manifestos from the cream of the crop
WebUrbanist is a blog that looks at urban culture and alternative art
Adweek say that Old Media still resonates with consumers
How to be a successful web designer
Netflix rolls out social networking features
Tim O'Reilly takes a look at the virtues of print in the Web 2.0 world
Are RSS subscribers the same thing as a "hit" on your website?
This is a list of mobile and telephony API's and mash-ups
HeardonTV allows you to find music you heard on a TV show
Foodloops help keep your food organized
This is a great report from the NSBA that looks at the surfing habits of teens (.pdf)
Have you seen Wired's how-to wiki?
The Royal Liverpool Philharmonic will be broadcasting a concert in Second Life
Labels: API, books, Foodloops, HeardonTV, mash-up, NSBA, Old Media, RSS, Second Life, telephony, traffic, WebUrbanist, Wired
posted by olli @ 08:09Friday, August 10, 2007
Say hello to Nokia's new MOSH (MObilize And Share) community
Also please say hello to iTunes widgets
Universal Music to sell music without DRM (but not on iTunes)
Gamasutra looks at writing for video games
Jamiroquai redux: Say hello to the Omnidirectional Treadmill
The Guardian interviews Jakob Nielsen
"Dear Architects, I am sick of your shit"
Google and Yahoo! lead online brand rankings
Say hello to Arkitip's new Intelligence site
Each Day says "Please make the bubble speech logo die!"
Is time travel really possible via a donut shaped vacuum?
Have you met the Lantern Fish yet?
Germany to issue mobile TV licenses by September
Why is Web 2.0 leaving the porn industry behind?
ReadWriteWeb offers interesting solutions on how you can be an internet radio DJ
Say hello to "The Dangerous Book For Boys"
Are you a video games physics geek? If so - Rings Of Rods is for you
For the rest of your physics needs, why not try The Jason Bourne Stunt Simulator?
Labels: Apple, books, DRM, Gamasutra, Germany, Google, Guardian, itunes, Jakob Nielsen, mobile TV, MOSH, Nokia, omnidirectional, Rings Of Rods, Universal, video game physics
posted by olli @ 08:08Navigation
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