Monday, October 08, 2007

Telescopes

Everything will be digital – nothing else will exist.  Books will vanish.  Newspapers and magazines will fade away.  Brick and mortar stores will become extinct.  Packaging will be virtual.  Art will be projected, broadcast or streamed.  Concert venues, movie theaters and sports arenas will be a relic of the past.  And, advertising will die out.

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Posted by: David on 10/08 at 09:45 AM
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(16) CommentsPermalink
  1. I agree and wish this happens, so we will be able to save trees. However, I believe the need for the tactile will never, ever be replaced. In the late 90s, companies such as ScenTeck and Digiscents Inc set out to change the interactive experience with scent-enabled content, as the olfactory senses hold the power to recreate compelling emotions such as love and fear. The beauty of technology is that it is coming to us, rather than we having to go to it. It is not so much replacing physical needs as it is bringing us closer to them. GPS satellite technology connects us with physical places, and web-enabled personal devices help us get closer to our relationships or even order that fresh fruit. Taking this further... If only we could have a chip embedded in our wrists which enables us to access data upon a wish, I would be the first to volunteer for that experiment. Thanks for propelling this Monday-morning thinking.

    Posted by Rohini  on  2007-10-08 16:23:10

  2. I don't care what experience-enhancing technology they're working on now, watching a ballgame on TV can never compare to a trip to the ballpark. There's nothing like surrounding yourself with the energy of thousands of fans while eating an artery-clogging hotdog and drinking an expensive cheap beer.

    Posted by dawn  on  2007-10-08 16:33:25

  3. I don’t want to live a world where I can’t sit on the beach with the waves lapping at my toes, while I shake out the sand from between the pages of a great book.

    Posted by Mary  on  2007-10-08 16:49:47

  4. You've certainly caused a stir.

    Posted by Rohini  on  2007-10-08 16:56:24

  5. I'm withthe waves and the books myself -- here is another one -- we have a digital fram at home sitting with all of our other framed pictures. Its really cool -- over 100 photos change and disolve one into the other -- really cool... however -- pick up the frame the plug comes out of teh wall -- hold it the wrong way and teh perspective changes -- hold it another way and the whole thing freezes.... I love it -- I do -- its cool -- really -- but id trade it -- if I had to for the old-fashioned framed picture of my grandson that I can hold and examine and pass around to people who probably dont really want to look at it -- but do it without it chnaging to the picture of myself in the clown costume...

    Posted by david sable  on  2007-10-08 17:32:26

Monday, October 01, 2007

Simply Put

“It’s an eye chart but...” How many presentations have you been in where you have heard that excuse when introducing an idea or a concept?  Or worse, where you have used it yourself!

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Posted by: David on 10/01 at 08:50 AM
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  1. Amen...BTW, you might check out Cliff Atkinson's blog @: http://www.beyondbullets.com/ He wrote the book "Beyond Bullets" and has some good points...just not "bullet points."

    Posted by Scott McCormick  on  2007-10-01 15:30:48

  2. Excelent source!! Everyone should check this out.

    Posted by david sable  on  2007-10-01 15:56:26

  3. There's a whole bunch of "How to present for your audience instead of at them" resources out there, and Beyond Bullet Points is one of my favourites too. Also worth a look, as a presentation done right, is Dick Hardt's "Identity 2.0", helped by the fact that it's actually an interesting concept too - http://identity20.com/media/OSCON2005/

    Posted by Mark Plant  on  2007-10-01 17:35:25

  4. introduction - Hello Powerpoint - bulleted lists oversimplify human thought - ppt weakens > verbal reasoning > spatial reasoning + approx 40 words/slide - clients take home outlines of your thoughts + not your thoughts Resources - Thankfully, Lincoln didnt use it > http://norvig.com/Gettysburg/ - Edward Tufte > information design legend > cites how powerpoint deconstructs > http://www.edwardtufte.com/tufte/powerpoint Wrapping up - Thank you for your time

    Posted by good morning captain  on  2007-10-01 19:39:14

  5. Well said, David. A story well told, is a story easily retold. And how can we persuade an action, if the receiver doesn't understand the sender's message? Onward storytellers!

    Posted by Matt Anthony  on  2007-10-01 20:05:20

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