Win health insurance, promote individual rights, use Eames-approved paper. All, and more, in this edition of Quipsologies.
Security author and critic Bruce Schneier is promoting a symbol of individual rights. [Via boing boing]
Noted:
Tax dollars at work; tuition at work.
A very, very, very long article, with comments.
Something about yoga, heaven and the sun shining where the sun don’t shine. (mild nudity)
Dudlley Do-wrongs.
Amy, a Speak Up reader, writes “It is a sad day in the lives of artists/designers when we’re using our creative skills to compete for a basic human right: health insurance.” In a contest sponsored by Tylenol, Tokion is asking people to submit a zine. First prize winner gets one year of health insurance. And their zine reproduced.
ASU professor’s design is finalist for September 11 Memorial.
Loreet verit lore mincin henibh estio er illuptatem alit lorero conulla commy num incillut amet velit alis aliquat. Ut num vulla facilla dionulputpat velit vel utat luptatin velesto duisi erciduisi erat, cortin esto consed.
On Apr.25.2005 at 10:50 AMThe next time you're flowing in some fake text...
A brass plate on the door of the Playboy Mansion reads:
Si Non Oscillas, Noli Tintinnare
Which loosely translates as:
If You Don't Swing, Don't Ring
On Apr.25.2005 at 12:50 PMThere's a new design poll at gdc.net about Vancouver 2010: Do you think Ilanaaq is an appropriate symbol for the 2010 games?
www.gdc.net/community/design_polls.php
On Apr.25.2005 at 01:13 PMI'm not sure a lower-case "i" makes a very good symbol for anything, other than "info"(in the tourist-desk,helpful sense of the word), at this point. I look at that "i" and can only think of it as that, until I read the text next to it.
On Apr.26.2005 at 10:55 AMa new design poll at gdc.net about Vancouver 2010
I think the Vancouver ID is nice. I can see some decent graphic language evolving from the mark. It should lead to some nice individual sport icons as well. The outstretched arms initially reminded me of Barcelona's logo, but it's really not that similar. I definitely appreciate that it has nothing to do with snowflakes and maple leafs.
What is it about big identity projects, that they always seem to get panned? Is it just sour grapes? Even when we know the difficulties involved, we still think, "I could have done better" ? I'm as guilty of it as the next, and it's bothering me. Anyone else?
On Apr.26.2005 at 12:17 PMwe still think, "I could have done better" ?
The bigger the project the more likely it was design by committee and more likely the final product is, indeed, something we all could have done better. ;o)
On Apr.26.2005 at 01:59 PM