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Alexis C. Madrigal: No, You Don’t Really Look Like That (The Atlantic)
Alexis C. Madrigal: No, You Don’t Really Look Like That (The Atlantic)
Since the 19th century, cameras have been able to capture images at different speeds, wavelengths, and magnifications, which reveal previously hidden worlds. What’s fascinating about the current changes in phone photography is that they are as much about revealing what we want to look like as they are investigations of the world. It’s as if we’ve discovered a probe for finding and sharing versions of our faces—or even ourselves—and it’s this process that now drives the behavior of the most innovative, most profitable companies in the world.
·theatlantic.com·
Alexis C. Madrigal: No, You Don’t Really Look Like That (The Atlantic)
Khoi Vinh: Follow Up to “Built to Not Last” (Subtraction.com)
Khoi Vinh: Follow Up to “Built to Not Last” (Subtraction.com)
It’s true, there’s not necessarily a business case to do this, but that is not the only thing Apple will be judged on in the decades to come. And that’s what I’m talking about here: how will future generations look back at Apple, and by extension its customers? Did we all live our lives by more than just the bottom line? Or were the late twentieth and early twenty-first century the decades in which we irrevocably decided that everything should be disposable (or even recyclable) after just two or three years?
·subtraction.com·
Khoi Vinh: Follow Up to “Built to Not Last” (Subtraction.com)
Usability Post: Competing With an Archetype
Usability Post: Competing With an Archetype
‘The problem is that this is exactly what the competition are doing — they are competing with the iPad rather than solving a problem that hasn’t been solved yet. They’re always one step behind because they’re simply trying to re-create the solution that Apple has created for their vision of a touch tablet device.’
·usabilitypost.com·
Usability Post: Competing With an Archetype
Joe Clark: Denial of expertise
Joe Clark: Denial of expertise
Joe Clark on why those complaining about the closedness of the iPad are complaining about a non-problem. "Open source has nothing to teach literature or indeed any artistic creation, since talent doesn’t scale as you give more and more developers check-in access to the version-control system set up for your novel."
·blog.fawny.org·
Joe Clark: Denial of expertise