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Fools and their time metaphors
Fools and their time metaphors
These metaphors make it hard for us to think of time as something to protect, care for, or cultivate. Time-to-yourself is often the exception rather than the rule. We usually don’t think twice about the design of [calendars] because they’re the invisible “water we swim in.” But their default settings/visualizations are shaping how we treat our time and others’—for the worse. Escaping the Gregorian grid They’re what designers call desire paths or free-will ways: “paths and tracks made over time by the wishes and feet of walkers, especially those paths that run contrary to design or planning. When we question the assumptions that are built into our tools, we can think more clearly about how they’re influencing us and how we can make them better.
·aaronzlewis.com·
Fools and their time metaphors
On padding implications of “y” in ISO-8601
On padding implications of “y” in ISO-8601
“@bjhomer @ericasadun Was gonna say the same. But actually I’d say it *does* matter, even for current dates, because not all calendars are in a year on 4 digits. For example the Japanese start a new era every time the emperor changes, resetting to year 1 in that era; we’re currently in year Heisei 30.”
·mobile.twitter.com·
On padding implications of “y” in ISO-8601
Calendar Mirroring
Calendar Mirroring
“Open sourced a small tool I use to put "Busy" events on my work calendar when I create events on my personal calendar, powered by @IFTTT and Amazon Lambda: https://t.co/22MCaIgbP9 It's run 718 times over the past year and a half with zero maintenance!”
·mobile.twitter.com·
Calendar Mirroring