Susan Kare was an early Apple artist who designed many of the fonts, icons and images for Apple, Microsoft, NeXT and IBM (1980s). Check out her work below 🔻
Writing code is the act of weaving a series CPU instructions. Every row of pixels is a weft of a byte groups retrieved from computer memory.
ISO/IEC 10646
Had a wonderful visit with folks at the Navajo Technical University, in Crownpoint, as they helped us install my artpiece about reeds tangled in the San Antonio Oxbow.
Installing art youtu.be/v6rx_b3E2QI?si… via @YouTube
@NNgroup Beautiful ambiguity-
I see two layers devastated
By the slash. Are they broken
Into pieces,
Deleted,
Or just wiped clean?
Uncertain, I hesitate to tap.
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@MrPrudence Thanks so much for passing along the word about this. I love the scientific study of the shapes. My own take on Hokusai's views: tinyurl.com/5ybnk338
'In the late 1920s, the Japanese physicist Masanao Abe built an observatory with a view of Mount Fuji. From it, over the course of fifteen years, he recorded the clouds that surrounded the mountain'
via dpr-barcelona
dprbcn.wordpress.com/2018/08/02/clo…
60,000 new maps, views, texts, titles, diagrams, globes, timelines and more have been added to search for Text on Maps - doubling to 120,000 items from the original 60,000 we started with a year ago. Over 175 million words indexed! Try searching for Cairo davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/s…
@dgrigar It's wonderful that there still is a conference devoted to hypertext. Back when Bill Atkinson was developing HyperCard, we had trouble defining this weird new approach to content, structure, movement through the imagined architecture, in the earliest online help systems.
Such a joy to see these three literary hypertext pioneers together today at the ACM Hypertext 2024 Conference: Cathy Marshall, Rob Swigart, and Richard Smyth.
@NNgroup Looking forward to the NNG analysis. My own take, in my book Icons:Poems, was aesthetic and historical, recalling the way we created the icons for the Mac, back when Bruce Tognazzini declared himself "the user interface czar."
"The Speed of the Earth" installation at Burning Man 2024 by Kevin Kelly and David Rumsey. A nearly mile long line of 30 solar powered LED strobes pulsing at the rotational speed of the earth, 784 mph. Lights use GPS to determine when to flash. Drone video at 400 ft elevation.