Around this time in 2002 I was hanging out in Switzerland for a few months.
aka cafe crack
aka cafe crack
Thank you Janelle
This is what i’ve been waiting for!
sparklingninjaaaa alerted us to Some Dude’s Fry Sauce - according to wikipedia it’s a speciality of Utah, made from ketchup and mayo - similar to a rose marie/cocktail sauce. Proving once again that the world might be a big place, but it’s united by similar condiments.
BKbeanbags
Wedding in the park
CakeMan
Dad (and his new tat)
I could really use about 700 more of these.
happy birthday meg!
happy birthday ouxu!
Yesterday I did a really amazing wordbk photobooth style portrait project for a group of HIV positive African women. I wish I could show them all to you but because of privacy issues I had to do some creative cropping.
(via flwrpt)
I am a huge fan of BkC. I’m sad to say i don’t own any pieces yet though. soon enough.
Around this time in 2002 I was hanging out in Switzerland for a few months.
sometimes i need to look at something familiar with a fresh perspective
From ‘Publishers Should Beware the iPad,’ in which he discusses the common perception among publishers that the iPad will save everything because it will allow them to continue using the only business model they understand: We make things, you pay to look at them, we sell your attention to advertisers:
The first problem with the publishers’ fantasy, which I realized only when I spent some time with my iPad over the past week, is that you don’t need those cute little apps to read newspapers and magazines. On the tiny iPhone screen, apps bring real advantages. The iPad display, by contrast, is big, bright, and beautiful. The Safari browser is a great way to read any publication on the device, as long as you have a good Wi-Fi connection.
Those exorbitantly priced first-gen iPad apps offered by magazines like Vanity Fair and Time are attempts to revive the anachronism of turning pages. They’re claustrophobic walled gardens within Apple’s walled garden, lacking the basic functionality we now expect with electronic journalism: commenting, the integration of social media, or even the most basic links to other sources. Nick Denton, the founder of Gawker Media, brutally describes them as “a step back to the era of CD-ROMs.”