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It is often said, dear reader, that comments are the lifeblood of weblogs, bringing the pithy links, quotes and anecdotes of an otherwise humdrum personal site to unparalleled levels of vibrancy.
Thus, in recent months I brought comments to this Web site, in the simple-for-me-easy-for-you form of Quicktopic links, which cost nothing, work well, and encourage return visits, as they remember one’s login data efficiently, eschew pop-up windows, and avoid extensive programming by the affable fellow who does the back-end coding for this site for me. Obviously, these pages should and could be as vibrant as possible, and who am I to stand in the way of intellectual discourse?
Except, dear reader, that for some inexplicable reason, save for the news of my engagement and barring the inevitable conclusion that these compound sentences are in most cases a codeine on the synapses, you never say a thing.
Thus, no more comment links for the time being. No dummy, this one.
Post of the Year on Textism.
The New York Times Magazine’s “Design, Everywhere” issue is stuffed with fascinating articles about design in current society. I’ve been reading for two days and I’m still poring through it. Among the best pieces:
A New Poland, No Joke. “In the case of Poland, rebranding is different because the idea came from the government. After years of Communist rule, Poland, rushing to emulate what it sees as modern Western ways, has put itself in the hands of DDB Corporate Profiles, an ad agency whose greatest local success to date has been a beer campaign.”
Not Fade Away. “Sun Choe, a Levi’s designer from San Francisco, comes by the company’s Selvedge store on Mulberry Street, where Troy works. Choe likes the look of the grimy life contained in Troy’s jeans so much that she wants to make a copy of them, distressed in exactly the same way that his jeans are — with identical 3-D ‘whisker’ folds below the front pockets, fades along the thighs and that shredded back pocket.”
The $19,450 Phone. “If you look at watches, pens and eyewear, those are technological products that are essential personal items. I thought that a communications device was ready to mature into something exquisite.”
Driven to Distraction. “We had just spent 45 minutes in a cul-de-sac going over the car’s features, and I still did not know enough to operate the radio by myself. Such is the state of the modern dashboard: in order to fit in every last comfort drivers could possibly want, car manufacturers have made the mere task of getting from one place to the next an ever more complicated feat.”
Irrational Exuberance. “Piecing together its aesthetic lexicon from morsels of Bauhaus rigor and midcentury formalism, with a dash of 60’s Op Art and 70’s shag-pile thrown in for fun, Wallpaper created a hermetically sealed, self-referential world that spun endlessly, glossily around on itself.”
“My name is S. Claus, and I’m a switcher.” Great new Apple Switch spots featuring Will Ferrell.
The Ideapad celebrated its fourth anniversary on November 1.
On the ‘pad’s second birthday I wrote this, which is still fairly accurate and worth a read by the curious.
I occasionally wonder how long I’ll keep this going, but the site inevitably metamorphoses in style and keeps up with my whims. Here’s to another four years.
Whenever something affects me negatively, no matter what it is, I am going to blame it on music piracy.
Danny Sullivan: Death of the “keyword” metatag.
A few weeks back this space discussed Jesse James Garrett’s aggravation at not knowing who the forces are behind Amazon’s powerhouse site. Ask and ye shall receive: Mark Hurst interviews Amazon VP of site development Maryam Mohit on Good Experience.
Dive Into Mark: Recommended reading for folks who enjoy this site (or any site for that matter).
Hot news this week is Economist.com’s “subscriber sponsorship” plan, where advertisers pay for users’ access to Economist.com in exchange for a more targeted, and appreciative, viewer audience. Sleuth Holovaty spotted links to the discussions below on E&P, I Want Media, and Poynter.org.
Here are actual articles discussing the plan:
~ View an Ad, Get Something Free at Some Web Sites, Reuters
~ Start of a New Trend? Paidcontent.org
The redesign of Economist.com in Digital Web Magazine, an excerpt from “Usability: The Site Speaks for Itself.”