at India imposes ADD on epichlorohydrin imports from 3 nations By www.fibre2fashion.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 15:53:02 GMT India recently imposed an anti-dumping duty (ADD) of up to $557 per tonne on epichlorohydrin imports from China, South Korea and Thailand for five years, the department of revenue said in a notification. The chemical is primarily used in the adhesive industry. The duty was imposed as the chemical was exported to India from these countries at prices below normal. Full Article Textiles
at India's WPI inflation rises to 2.36% in October 2024 By www.fibre2fashion.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 15:53:02 GMT India's wholesale price index (WPI) inflation rate rose to 2.36 per cent in October 2024, up from 1.84 per cent in September, largely driven by increased prices in food items, manufacturing, machinery, and motor vehicles. The WPI index rose to 156.1, with manufacturing products increasing to 142.5. Primary articles saw a 2.35 per cent rise, while fuel and power decreased by 0.27 per cent. Full Article Textiles
at China’s new fiscal plans unlikely to immediately boost growth: Fitch By www.fibre2fashion.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 17:03:02 GMT China’s latest fiscal announcements seem aimed at addressing medium-term structural impediments to economic growth from strained local government finances, but are unlikely to immediately boost or offset deflationary risk, Fitch Ratings said. It expects a budget deficit of 7.1 per cent of GDP this year. It believes fiscal stimulus will remain incremental and responsive to downside risks. Full Article Textiles
at Web Industries to showcase nonwoven materials solutions at Hygienix By www.fibre2fashion.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 17:03:02 GMT Web Industries will showcase its nonwoven materials solutions for medical, personal care, and home care markets at Hygienix 2024, held November 18-21 in Nashville. The company will highlight its slitting, spooling, printing, and modular converting capabilities, offering precision converting for flexible packaging, films, and medical-grade materials. Full Article Technical Textiles
at Parallels elevates digital workspaces with Microsoft 365 integration By www.kmworld.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 11:30:58 EST Parallels RAS Now extends the integration and delivery of applications from Azure Virtual Desktop to application delivery on Windows 365 Cloud PCs Full Article
at Where knowledge management meets AI: Solutions, approaches, and considerations By www.kmworld.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 03:05:00 EST KM experts joined KMWorld's latest webinar, Enabling Knowledge-Based AI, to examine key components and best practices for adopting AI-enabled approaches that evolve, extend, and power knowledge systems. Full Article
at Keeping It Personal With Natural Language Processing By www.kmworld.com Published On :: Fri, 06 Sep 2019 12:00:00 EST Look at your organization and consider the unstructured text or audio data you gather and the possible revelations it may hold. That data reflects the voices of those you serve and holds the potential to help you deliver better experiences, improve quality of care and enrich human engagement. There are powerful stories to be told from your unstructured text data. And the best way for you to find them is with natural language processing. Full Article
at Text Analytics and Natural Language Processing: Knowledge Management?s Next Frontier By www.kmworld.com Published On :: Sun, 08 Sep 2019 11:00:00 EST Text analytics and natural language processing are not new concepts. Most knowledge management professionals have been grappling with these technologies for years. From the KM perspective, these technologies share the same fundamental purpose: They help get the right information to employees at the right time. Full Article
at Key Considerations in Maximizing the Value of Cognitive Search By www.kmworld.com Published On :: Fri, 04 Oct 2019 12:00:00 EST I am a firm believer in The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People, by Stephen Covey. If you've not read this book, it is worth the time. I mention this because my focus at BA Insight is around Covey's second habit, which is, "Begin with the end in mind." Seems simple, right? Well it is, but it's also quite rare. When approaching any enterprise search project, at any phase, I always try to come back to this idea. What is success? When are we done? What does finished look like? These are all different ways of saying, "Make sure you have goals!" Full Article
at A Best Practice Approach to Insight Engines: 5 Levels of Insight Engine Maturity By www.kmworld.com Published On :: Fri, 04 Oct 2019 12:00:00 EST Enterprise search projects start with intentions to provide ?Google for our organization' but too often fail to deliver on that promise. In our experience, these projects fail due to a lack of sustained effort and governance. The commercialization of next-generation search technologies allows you to fulfill this promise if you take a systematic approach to implementation. Full Article
at From ?Searching? to ?Finding?: How AI is Unlocking the Power of Unstructured Data By www.kmworld.com Published On :: Fri, 04 Oct 2019 12:00:00 EST Unstructured data, which comprises almost 80% of any enterprise's data, holds untapped value when it comes to addressing challenges and embracing opportunities. Full Article
at Understand. Anticipate. Improve. How Cognitive Computing Is Revolutionizing Knowledge Management By www.kmworld.com Published On :: Fri, 04 Oct 2019 12:00:00 EST For decades, organizations have tried to unlock the collective knowledge contained within their people and systems. And the challenge is getting harder, since every year, massive amounts of additional information are created for people to share. We've reached a point at which individuals are unable consume, understand, or even find half the information that is available to them. Full Article
at Take a Bow for the Next Generation KM By www.kmworld.com Published On :: Wed, 06 Nov 2019 12:00:00 EST There may be several generations that a KM system appeals to in different ways, but there are no generational differences when it comes to expecting high quality customer service and knowledgeable agents. Full Article
at WCRI Webinar to Review Study of Attorney Impact By ww3.workcompcentral.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 00:00:00 -0800 The Workers Compensation Research Institute is holding a webinar on Nov. 21 to discuss findings from a recent study of the impact of attorney representation on claim payments. Bogdan Sayvch The… Full Article
at Governor Appoints Heather Jordan WCA Director By ww3.workcompcentral.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 00:00:00 -0800 New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham appointed Heather Jordan as the new director of the Workers' Compensation Administration, effective immediately. Heather Jordan Jordan succeeds Robert Doucette, who will serve as cabinet… Full Article
at Roofing Worker Gets Enhanced Award for Employer's Safety Violation By ww3.workcompcentral.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 00:00:00 -0800 An Ohio appellate court upheld an enhanced award of benefits to an injured roofing worker for his employer’s violation of a specific safety requirement. Mauricio Rivera worked for Prime Roof Solutions… Full Article
at From burnout to breakthrough: Five key steps to breaking the creative block By www.diyphotography.net Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 15:52:08 +0000 For many of us creative folks, periods of low inspiration and creative block are inevitable. Max Kent also felt disconnected from his craft, but found... The post From burnout to breakthrough: Five key steps to breaking the creative block appeared first on DIY Photography. Full Article Inspiration inspiration
at Bluetti’s new Elite200 V2 wants to power your camera gear on location By www.diyphotography.net Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 18:40:36 +0000 Finding power on location can be tough, especially when those locations are out in the middle of nowhere. It’s been getting a lot easier in... The post Bluetti’s new Elite200 V2 wants to power your camera gear on location appeared first on DIY Photography. Full Article news Bluetti Gear Announcement power
at Web Fonts, Dingbats, Icons, and Unicode By jontangerine.com Published On :: Wed, 18 Aug 2010 07:33:46 PDT Yesterday, Cameron Koczon shared a link to the dingbat font, Pictos, by the talented, Drew Wilson. Cameron predicted that dingbats will soon be everywhere. Symbol fonts, yes, I thought. Dingbats? No, thanks. Jason Santa Maria replied: @FictiveCameron I hope not, dingbat fonts sort of spit in the face of accessibility and semantics at the moment. We need better options. Jason rightly pointed out the accessibility and semantic problems with dingbats. By mapping icons to letters or numbers in the character map, they are represented on the page by that icon. That’s what Pictos does. For example, by typing an ‘a’ on your keyboard, and setting Pictos as the font-face for that letter, the Pictos anchor icon is displayed. Other folks suggested SVG and JS might be better, and other more novel workarounds to hide content from assistive technology like screen readers. All interesting, but either not workable in my view, or just a bit awkward. Ralf Herrmann has an elegant CSS example that works well in Safari. Falling down with CSS text-replacement A CSS solution in an article from Pictos creator, Drew Wilson, relies on the fact that most of his icons are mapped to a character that forms part of the common name for that symbol. The article uses the delete icon as an example which is mapped to ‘d’. Using :before and :after pseudo-elements, Drew suggests you can kind-of wrangle the markup into something sort-of semantic. However, it starts to fall down fast. For example, a check mark (tick) is mapped to ‘3’. There’s nothing semantic about that. Clever replacement techniques just hide the evidence. It’s a hack. There’s nothing wrong with a hack here and there (as box model veterans well know) but the ends have to justify the means. The end of this story is not good as a VoiceOver test by Scott at Filament Group shows. In fairness to Drew Wilson, though, he goes on to say if in doubt, do it the old way, using his font to create a background image and deploy with a negative text-indent. I agreed with Jason, and mentioned a half-formed idea: @jasonsantamaria that’s exactly what I was thinking. Proper unicode mapping if possible, perhaps? The conversation continued, and thanks to Jason, helped me refine the idea into this post. Jon Hicks flagged a common problem for some Windows users where certain Unicode characters are displayed as ‘missing character’ glyphs depending on what character it is. I think most of the problems with dingbats or missing Unicode characters can be solved with web fonts and Unicode. Rising with Unicode and web fonts I’d love to be able to use custom icons via optimised web fonts. I want to do so accessibly and semantically, and have optimised font files. This is how it could be done: Map the icons in the font to the existing Unicode code points for those symbols wherever possible. Unicode code points already exist for many common symbols. Fonts could be tiny, fast, stand-alone symbol fonts. Existing typefaces could also be extended to contain symbols that match the style of individual widths, variants, slopes, and weights. Imagine a set of Clarendon or Gotham symbols for a moment. Wouldn’t that be a joy to behold? There may be a possibility that private code points could be used if a code-point does not exist for a symbol we need. Type designers, iconographers, and foundries might agree a common set of extended symbols. Alternatively, they could be proposed for inclusion in Unicode. Include the font with font-face. This assumes ubiquitous support (as any use of dingbats does) — we’re very nearly there. WOFF is coming to Safari and with a bit more campaigning we may even see WOFF on iPad soon. In HTML, reference the Unicode code points in UTF-8 using numeric character references. Unicode characters have corresponding numerical references. Named entities may not be rendered by XML parsers. Sean Coates reminded me that in many Cocoa apps in OS X the character map is accessible via a simple CMD+ALT+t shortcut. Ralf Herrmann mentioned that unicode characters ‘…have “speaking” descriptions (like Leftwards Arrow) and fall back nicely to system fonts.’ Limitations Accessibility: Limited Unicode / entity support in assistive devices. My friend and colleague, Jon Gibbins’s old tests in JAWS 7 show some of the inconsistencies. It seems some characters are read out, some ignored completely, and some read as a question mark. Not great, but perhaps Jon will post more about this in the future. Elizabeth Pyatt at Penn State university did some dingbat tests in screen readers. For real Unicode symbols, there are pronunciation files that increase the character repertoire of screen readers, like this file for phonetic characters. Symbols would benefit from one. Web fonts: font-face not supported. If font-face is not supported on certain devices like mobile phones, falling back to system fonts is problematic. Unicode symbols may not be present in any system fonts. If they are, for many designers, they will almost certainly be stylistically suboptimal. It is possible to detect font-face using the Paul Irish technique. Perhaps there could be a way to swap Unicode for images if font-face is not present. Now, next, and a caveat I can’t recommend using dingbats like Pictos, but the icons sure are useful as images. Beautifully crafted icon sets as carefully crafted fonts could be very useful for rapidly creating image icons for different resolution devices like the iPhone 4, and iPad. Perhaps we could try and formulate a standard set of commonly used icons using the Unicode symbols range as a starting point. I’ve struggled to find a better visual list of the existing symbols than this Unicode symbol chart from Johannes Knabe. Icons in fonts as Unicode symbols needs further testing in assistive devices and using font-face. Last, but not least, I feel a bit cheeky making these suggestions. A little knowledge is a dangerous thing. Combine it with a bit of imagination, and it can be lethal. I have a limited knowledge about how fonts are created, and about Unicode. The real work would be done by others with deeper knowledge than I. I’d be fascinated to hear from Unicode, accessibility, or font experts to see if this is possible. I hope so. It feels to me like a much more elegant and sustainable solution for scalable icons than dingbat fonts. For more on Unicode, read this long, but excellent, article recommended by my colleague, Andrei, the architect of Unicode and internationalization support in PHP 6: The Absolute Minimum Every Software Developer Absolutely, Positively Must Know About Unicode and Character Sets. Full Article
at Web Design as Narrative Architecture By jontangerine.com Published On :: Wed, 30 Mar 2011 05:48:21 PDT Stories are everywhere. When they don’t exist we make up the narrative — we join the dots. We make cognitive leaps and fill in the bits of a story that are implied or missing. The same goes for websites. We make quick judgements based on a glimpse. Then we delve deeper. The narrative unfolds, or we create one as we browse. Mark Bernstein penned Beyond Usability and Design: The Narrative Web for A List Apart in 2001. He wrote, ‘the reader’s journey through our site is a narrative experience’. I agreed wholeheartedly: Websites are narrative spaces where stories can be enacted, or emerge. Henry Jenkins, Director of Comparative Media Studies, and Professor of Literature at MIT, wrote Game Design as Narrative Architecture. He suggested we think of game designers, ‘less as storytellers than as narrative architects’. I agree, and I think web designers are narrative architects, too. (Along with all the multitude of other roles we assume.) Much of what Henry Jenkins wrote applies to modern web design. In particular, he describes two kinds of narratives in game design that are relevant to us: Enacted narratives are those where: […] the story itself may be structured around the character’s movement through space and the features of the environment may retard or accelerate that plot trajectory. Sites like Amazon, New Adventures, or your portfolio are enacted narrative spaces: Shops or service brochures that want the audience to move through the site towards a specific set of actions like buying something or initiating contact. Emergent narratives are those where: […] spaces are designed to be rich with narrative potential, enabling the story-constructing activity of players. Sites like Flickr, Twitter, or Dribbble are emergent narrative spaces: Web applications that encourage their audience use the tools at their disposal to tell their own story. The audience defines how they want to use the narrative space, often with surprising results. We often build both kinds of narrative spaces. Right now, my friends and I at Analog are working on Mapalong, a new maps-based app that’s just launched into private beta. At its heart Mapalong is about telling our stories. It’s one big map with a set of tools to view the world, add places, share them, and see the places others share. The aim is to help people tell their stories. We want to use three ideas to help you do that: Space (recording places, and annotating them), data (importing stuff we create elsewhere), and time (plotting our journeys, and recording all the places, people, and memories along the way). We know that people will find novel uses for the tools in Mapalong. In fact, we want them to because it will help us refine and build better tools. We work in an agile way because that’s the only way to design an emerging narrative space. Without realising it we’ve become architects of a narrative space, and you probably are, too. Many projects like shops or brochure sites have fixed costs and objectives. They want to guide the audience to a specific set of actions. The site needs to be an enacted narrative space. Ideally, designers would observe behaviour and iterate. Failing that, a healthy dose of empathy can serve. Every site seeks to teach, educate, or inform. So, a bit of knowledge about people’s learning styles can be useful. I once did a course in one to one and small group training with the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development. It introduced me to Peter Honey and Alan Mumford’s model which describes four different learning styles that are useful for us to know. I paraphrase: Activists like learning as they go; getting stuck in and working it out. They enjoy the here and now, and are happy to be dominated by immediate experiences. They are open-minded, not sceptical, and this tends to make them enthusiastic about anything new. Reflectors like being guided with time to take it all in and perhaps return later. They like to stand back to ponder experiences and observe them from many different perspectives. They collect data, both first hand and from others, and prefer to think about it thoroughly before coming to a conclusion. Theorists to understand and make logical sense of things before they leap in. They think problems through in a vertical, step-by-step logical way. They assimilate disparate facts into coherent theories. Pragmatists like practical applications of ideas, experiments, and results. They like trying out ideas, theories and techniques to see if they work in practice. They positively search out new ideas and take the first opportunity to experiment with applications. Usually people share two or more of these qualities. The weight of each can vary depending on the context. So how might learning styles manifest themselves in web browsing behaviour? Activists like to explore, learn as they go, and wander the site working it out. They need good in-context navigation to keep exploring. For example, signposts to related information are optimal for activists. They can just keep going, and going, and exploring until sated. Reflectors are patient and thoughtful. They like to ponder, read, reflect, then decide. Guided tours to orientate them in emergent sites can be a great help. Saving shopping baskets for later, and remembering sessions in enacted sites can also help them. Theorists want logic. Documentation. An understanding of what the site is, and what they might get from it. Clear, detailed information helps a theorist, whatever the space they’re in. Pragmatists get stuck in like activists, but evaluate quickly, and test their assumptions. They are quick, and can be helped by uncluttered concise information, and contextual, logical tools. An understanding of interactive narrative types and a bit of knowledge about learning styles can be useful concepts for us to bear in mind. I also think they warrant inclusion as part of an articulate designer’s language of web design. If Henry Jenkins is right about games designers, I think he could also be right about web designers: we are narrative architects, designing spaces where stories are told. The original version of this article first appeared as ‘Jack A Nory’ alongside other, infinitely more excellent articles, in the New Adventures paper of January 2011. It is reproduced with the kind permission of the irrepressible Simon Collison. For a short time, the paper is still available as a PDF! —∞— Full Article
at Ampersand, the Aftermath By jontangerine.com Published On :: Wed, 22 Jun 2011 12:28:38 PDT The first Ampersand web typography conference took place in Brighton last Friday. Ampersand was ace. I’m going to say that again with emphasis: Ampersand was ace! Like the Ready Brek kid from the 80s TV ads I’m glowing with good vibes. Imagine you’d just met some of the musicians that created the soundtrack to your life. That’s pretty much how I feel. Nerves and all… Photo by Ben Mitchell. For a long, long time I’ve gazed across at the typography community with something akin to awe at the work they do. I’ve lurked quietly on the ATypI mailing list, in the Typophile forum, and behind the glass dividing my eyes from the blogs, portfolios, and galleries. I always had a sneaking suspicion the web and type design communities had much in common: Excellence born from actual client work; techniques and skills refined by practice, not in a lab or classroom; a willingness to share and disseminate, most clearly demonstrated at Typophile and through web designer’s own blogs. The people of both professions have a very diverse set of backgrounds from graphic design all the way through to engineering, to accidentally working in a print shop. We’ve been apprenticed to our work, and Ampersand was a celebration of what we’ve achieved so far and what’s yet to come. Of course, web design is a new profession. Type design has a history that spans hundreds of years. Nevertheless, both professions are self-actualising. Few courses exist of any real merit. There is no qualifications authority. The work from both arenas succeeds or fails based on whether it works or not. Ampersand was the first event of its kind. Folks from both communities came together around the mutal fascination, frustration, challenge and opportunity of web type. Like Brooklyn Beta, the audience was as fantastic as the line up. I met folks like Yves Peters of the FontFeed, Mike Duggan of Microsoft Typography, Jason Smith, Phil Garnham, Fernando Mello, and Emanuela Conidi of Fontsmith, Veronica Burian of TypeTogether, Adam Twardoch of Fontlab and MyFonts, Nick Sherman of of Webtype, Mandy Brown of A Book Apart and Typekit, and many, many others. (Sorry for stopping there, but wow, it would be a huge list.) Rich Rutter Rich Rutter opened the day on behalf of Clearleft and Fontdeck at the Brighton Dome. Rich and I had talked about a web typography conference before. He just went out and did it. Hats off to him, and people like Sophie Barrett at Clearleft who helped make the day run so smoothly. Others have written comprehensive, insightful summaries of the day and the talks. Much better than I could, sitting there on the day, rapt, taking no notes. What follows are a few snippets my memory threw out when prodded. Vincent Connare Who knew the original letterforms for Comic Sans were inspired by a copy of The Watchmen Vincent Connare had in his office? Or that Vincent, who also designed Trebuchet, considers himself an engineer rather than type designer, and is working at the moment on the Ubuntu fonts with colleagues at Dalton Maag. Jason Santa Maria declared himself a type nerd, and gave a supremely detailed talk about selecting, setting, and understanding web type. Wonderful stuff. Jason Santa Maria Jonathan Hoefler talked in rapid, articulate, and precise terms about the work behind upcoming release of pretty-much all of H&FJ’s typefaces as web fonts. (Hooray!) He clearly and wonderfully explained how they took the idea behind their typefaces, and moved them through a design process to produce a final form for a specific purpose. In this case, the web, as a distinct and different environment from print. Jonathan Hoefler Photo by Sean Johnson. I spoke between Jason and Jonathan. Gulp. After staying up until 4am the night before, anxiously working on slides, I was carried along by the privilege and joy of being there, hopefully without too much mumbling or squinting with bleary eyes. After lunch, David Berlow continued the story of web fonts, taking us on a journey through his own trials and tribulations at Font Bureau when re-producing typefaces for the web crude media. His dry, droll, richly-flavoured delivery was a humorous counterpoint to some controversial asides. David Berlow Photo by Jeremy Keith. John Daggett of Mozilla, editor of the CSS3 Fonts Module, talked with great empathy for web designers about the amazing typographic advances we’re about to see in browsers. Tim Brown of Typekit followed. Tim calmly and thoroughly advocated the extension of modular scales to all aspects of a web interface, taking values from the body type and building all elements with those values as the common denominator. Finally, Mark Boulton wrapped up the day brilliantly, describing the designer’s role as the mitigator of entropy, reversing the natural trend for things to move from order to chaos, and a theme he’s exploring at the moment: designing from the content out. Mark Boulton The tone of the day was fun, thoughtful, articulate, and exacting. All the talks were a mix of anecdotal and observational humour, type nerdery, and most of all an overwhelming commitment to excellence in web typography. It was a journey in itself. Decades of experience from plate and press, screen, and web was being distilled into 45-minute presentations. I loved it. As always, one of the most enjoyable bits for me was the hallway track. I talked to heaps of people both in the pre- and after-party, and in between the talks on the day itself. I heard stories, ideas, and opinions from print designers, web designers, type designers, font developers, and writers. We talked late into the night. We talked more the next day. Now the talking has paused for a while, my thoughts are manifold. I can honestly say, I’ve never been so filled with positivity about where we are, and where we’re going. Web typography is here, it works, it’s better all the time, and one day web and type designers everywhere will wonder, perplexed, as they try to imagine what the web was like before. Here’s to another Ampersand next year! I’m now going to see if Rich needs any encouragement to do it again. I’m guessing not, but if he does, I aim to provide it, vigorously. I hope I see you there! Furthermore Rich Rutter back in May on The Ampersand Story Eye Magazine: Web typography comes of age at Brighton’s Ampersand conference Anthony Stonehouse: Ampersand 2011 Laura Kalbag: Notes from Ampersand Dave Bushell: Ampersand Conference! Last but not least, did I mention that Rich Rutter, Mark Boulton, and I are writing a book? We are! More on that another time, but until then, follow @webtypography for intermittent updates. Full Article
at I’ve shot at this location a few times but for some reason... By blog.verneho.com Published On :: Sun, 18 Dec 2016 12:03:12 -0500 I’ve shot at this location a few times but for some reason I’ve never seen it from the other side. Literal proof that shooting with other creatives gives you new perspective. ???? (at Toronto, Ontario) Full Article
at I like the philosophy behind shooting with primes; that a... By blog.verneho.com Published On :: Tue, 20 Dec 2016 08:02:40 -0500 I like the philosophy behind shooting with primes; that a photographer shouldn’t stand still but instead, continuously move closer, further, lower, or higher relative to his/her subject as a means of establishing a deeper connection. ???????? — Save 50% on my custom Lightroom presets with HOLIDAY50. Link in profile. (at Toronto, Ontario) Full Article
at Bricks are better black. ◾️ (at Toronto, Ontario) By blog.verneho.com Published On :: Tue, 20 Dec 2016 17:02:40 -0500 Bricks are better black. ◾️ (at Toronto, Ontario) Full Article
at Missing Berlin’s gorgeous buildings again. ???? (at Berlin,... By blog.verneho.com Published On :: Thu, 22 Dec 2016 08:22:33 -0500 Missing Berlin’s gorgeous buildings again. ???? (at Berlin, Germany) Full Article
at Preset (Everyday) + transform + exposure + graduated filter +... By blog.verneho.com Published On :: Sat, 24 Dec 2016 12:01:10 -0500 Preset (Everyday) + transform + exposure + graduated filter + radial filter. If shots like this take more than 2 minutes to edit, it’s probably not worth editing. ⏱ — Boxing Day will be the last day to get my Lightroom presets discounted, which leaves you only 3 more days! Get on it! ???? (at Toronto, Ontario) Full Article
at I just realized that I can export my entire story all at once... By blog.verneho.com Published On :: Tue, 27 Dec 2016 17:02:17 -0500 I just realized that I can export my entire story all at once now, which means uploading my tutorials to my Facebook page will be a million times easier (it was tedious to stitch all the individual clips together before). ???? . Related: I posted a story this morning deconstructing the edit on yesterday’s shot. . Also related: I uploaded the 3 tutorials from my November feature on @thecreatorclass to my Facebook page this morning too. More to come! (at London, United Kingdom) Full Article
at This might as well be a Herschel ad. ???? (at London, United... By blog.verneho.com Published On :: Wed, 28 Dec 2016 17:05:36 -0500 This might as well be a Herschel ad. ???? (at London, United Kingdom) Full Article
at A lot to look forward to in 2017. How did 2016 treat you: ???? or... By blog.verneho.com Published On :: Sat, 31 Dec 2016 12:24:31 -0500 A lot to look forward to in 2017. How did 2016 treat you: ???? or ????? (at San Francisco, California) Full Article
at Quick survey: on average, what time is it when you check... By blog.verneho.com Published On :: Tue, 03 Jan 2017 08:20:25 -0500 Quick survey: on average, what time is it when you check Instagram for the first time on any given day? (Be sure to include your timezone!) . PS: Thank you for all the incredible support on yesterday’s announcement. ❤️ (at Toronto, Ontario) Full Article
at 20+ Artistic Effect Lightroom Presets for Creative Photographers By webdesignernews.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 12:39:54 +0000 The right photo effect can transform an ordinary image into a work of art. Adjustments to lighting, color balance, and texture help you create the perfect mood for your project. Full Article Resources
at Jesse Chehak, Near Big Water By flakphoto.com Published On :: 2014-10-06T16:00:43+00:00 Jesse Chehak Near Big Water, Utah, 2010 Website - JesseChehak.com Born in Tarzana, California, Jesse Chehak studied photography and Art History at Sarah Lawrence College and is currently pursuing a MFA at the University of Arizona. Chehak has exhibited his large format prints in galleries and project spaces including Bruce Silverstein (New York), Danese (New York) and the Durham Art Guild (Durham, North Carolina.) He is currently seeking funding to publish his first monograph, Fool's Gold, and a gallery to exhibit and distribute the completed print edition. In 2005, Chehak joined M.A.P. and began executing commercial campaigns and editorial features for clients, including The New York Times, Wallpaper*, Newsweek, GQ, Ogilvy & Mather, Saatchi & Saatchi, Digitas, and others. Chehak has received notable attention for his work, including PDN30 in 2005, The Magenta Foundation's Flash Forward in 2007, a Baum Nomination in 2008, and AP25. He lives in Tucson and Los Angeles. Full Article
at Abelardo Morell, Camera Obscura: Early Morning View of the East Side of Midtown Manhattan By flakphoto.com Published On :: 2014-10-08T15:40:15+00:00 Abelardo Morell Camera Obscura: Early Morning View of the East Side of Midtown Manhattan, , 2014 Website - AbelardoMorell.net Abelardo Morell was born in Havana, Cuba in 1948. He immigrated to the United States with his parents in 1962. Morell received his undergraduate degree in 1977 from Bowdoin College and an MFA from The Yale University School of Art in 1981. In 1997 he received an honorary degree from Bowdoin College. His publications include a photographic illustration of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland (1998) by Dutton Children’s Books, A Camera in a Room (1995) by Smithsonian Press, A Book of Books (2002) and Camera Obscura (2004) by Bulfinch Press and Abelardo Morell (2005), published by Phaidon Press. Recent publications include a limited edition book by The Museum of Modern Art in New York of his Cliché Verre images with a text by Oliver Sacks. His work has been collected and shown in many galleries, institutions and museums, including the Museum of Modern Art, The Whitney Museum of American Art, the Metropolitan Art Museum in New York, The Chicago Art Institute, The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, The Houston Museum of Art, The Boston Museum of Fine Art, The Victoria & Albert Museum and over seventy other museums in the United States and abroad. A retrospective of his work organized jointly by the Art Institute of Chicago, The Getty in Los Angeles and The High Museum in Atlanta closed in May 2014 after a year of travel. Abelardo will be having his first show at the Edwynn Houk Gallery in New York opening October 23, 2014 and will run until December 20, 2014 featuring a selection of new pictures. Full Article
at "I always hated that word—marketing—and I hate it now. Because for me, and this may sound simplistic,..." By blog.kylemeyer.com Published On :: Sat, 08 Oct 2011 20:20:00 -0700 ““I always hated that word—marketing—and I hate it now. Because for me, and this may sound simplistic, the key to marketing is to make something people want. When they want it, they buy it. When they buy it, you have sales. So the product has to speak. The product is what markets things.”” - Interview with Tom Ford. Full Article tom ford
at "What is deceptive, especially in the West, is our assumption that repetitive and mindless jobs are..." By blog.kylemeyer.com Published On :: Wed, 12 Oct 2011 12:30:00 -0700 “What is deceptive, especially in the West, is our assumption that repetitive and mindless jobs are dehumanizing. On the other hand, the jobs that require us to use the abilities that are uniquely human, we assume to be humanizing. This is not necessarily true. The determining factor is not so much the nature of our jobs, but for whom they serve. ‘Burnout’ is a result of consuming yourself for something other than yourself. You could be burnt out for an abstract concept, ideal, or even nothing (predicament). You end up burning yourself as fuel for something or someone else. This is what feels dehumanizing. In repetitive physical jobs, you could burn out your body for something other than yourself. In creative jobs, you could burn out your soul. Either way, it would be dehumanizing. Completely mindless jobs and incessantly mindful jobs could both be harmful to us.” - Dsyke Suematsu from his white paper discussed at Why Ad People Burn Out. Full Article Dsyke Suematsu
at Wanted Posters Targeting Jewish Faculty at NY Campus By drudge.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 13:31:31 -0500 Hundreds of "Wanted" posters targeting members of the University of Rochester community were found glued to campus buildings and classrooms, according to the Department of Public Safety. Full Article news
at Arizona Attorney General Won't Drop Trump Fake Electors Case By drudge.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 17:33:01 -0500 Allies of Donald Trump who were charged in Arizona for illegally trying to overturn the 2020 election can still expect to face justice despite his return to the White House, the state's attorney general has said. Full Article news
at Florida Shatters Another Tourism Record over the Summer By drudge.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 21:32:48 -0500 Nearly 34.6 million people traveled to Florida from July through September -- shattering another tourism record for the state. Full Article news
at Trump Picks Matt Gaetz as Attorney General By drudge.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 22:45:29 -0500 President-elect Donald Trump said Wednesday that he will nominate Republican Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida as U.S. attorney general. Gaetz has been the subject of a House Ethics Committee investigation into whether he engaged in sexual misconduct or illicit drug use. Asked by a HuffPost reporter whether Gaetz has the character to be attorney general, Rep. Mike Simpson, R-Idaho, replied, "Are you s--- me?" Full Article news breaking
at Scientists Warn That a Key Atlantic Current Could Collapse By drudge.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 23:30:59 -0500 A new report describes the dire state of Earth's snow and ice, suggesting several major tipping points are likelier than scientists once thought. Full Article news
at Matt Thrower (2007) By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: 2007-07-17 Matt Thrower is a Systems Support Co-ordinator in the Software and Systems Team in UKOLN. Matt facilitated a workshop session on "Thieves in the Night: Hidden Problems in Web site Redesign". Full Article
at Patrick Lauke (2007) By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: 2007-07-16 Patrick Lauke currently works as Web Editor for the University of Salford, where he heads a small central Web team. In 2003 he implemented one of the first Web standards based XHTML/CSS driven UK university sites. He has been engaged in the discourse on accessibility since early 2001, regularly contributing to a variety of Web development and accessibility related mailing lists and forums. He also takes an active role in the running of Accessify.com, moderates the Accessify forum, and is co-lead of the Web Standards Project Accessibility Task Force (WaSP ATF), which he joined in June 2005. An outspoken accessibility and standards advocate, Patrick favours a pragmatic hands-on approach to Web accessibility over purely theoretical, high-level discussions. "I'm an idealist by nature, but a pragmatist by trade. I'd never class myself as an expert and I certainly don't have all the answers...I'm just an opinionated guy eager to find real world solutions 'where the rubber meets the road'." Published works include a chapter in Web Accessibility: Web Standards and Regulatory Compliance, released by Friends of Ed in 2006. In his spare time, Patrick pursues his passion for photography and runs a small Web/design consultancy. Patrick facilitated a workshop session on "Geolinked Institutional Web Content" with Sebastian Rahtz and Nigel Bradley. Full Article
at Soft Launch Of The Call For Speakers And Workshop Facilitators By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: Thu, 21 Feb 2008 09:00:00 GMT The "Call for speakers and workshop facilitators" page has been created. [21 Jan 2008] Full Article
at Call for Speakers and Workshop Facilitators sent to web-support List By www.jiscmail.ac.uk Published On :: Thu, 21 Feb 2008 09:00:00 GMT The "Call for speakers and workshop facilitators" was sent to the web-support JISCMail list. [22 Jan 2008] Full Article
at Call for Speakers and Workshop Facilitators sent to website-info-mgt List By www.jiscmail.ac.uk Published On :: Thu, 21 Feb 2008 09:00:00 GMT The "Call for speakers and workshop facilitators" was sent to the website-info-mgt JISCMail list. [22 Jan 2008] Full Article
at Reminder of the Call for Speakers and Workshop Facilitators sent to web-support List By www.jiscmail.ac.uk Published On :: Thu, 21 Feb 2008 09:00:00 GMT A reminder of the "Call for speakers and workshop facilitators" was sent to the web-support JISCMail list. [21 Feb 2008] Full Article
at Reminder of the Call for Speakers and Workshop Facilitators sent to website-info-mgt List By www.jiscmail.ac.uk Published On :: Thu, 21 Feb 2008 09:00:00 GMT A reminder of the "Call for speakers and workshop facilitators" was sent to the website-info-mgt JISCMail list. [21 Feb 2008] Full Article
at Call for Speakers and Workshop Facilitators sent to lis-link List By www.jiscmail.ac.uk Published On :: Thu, 21 Feb 2008 09:00:00 GMT The "Call for speakers and workshop facilitators" was sent to the lis-link JISCMail list. [21 Feb 2008] Full Article
at IWMW2008 group created on Facebook By www.facebook.com Published On :: Thu, 10 Apr 2008 09:00:00 GMT An IWMW2008 group has been created on Facebook. Join up now!. [10 April 2008] Full Article
at Additional Accommodation Information By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: Thu, 22 May 2008 09:00:00 GMT Information on additional accommodation for Monday 21 July is now available. [22 May 2008] Full Article