art painting painter america still_life life death representation fruit bone object light anatomy apple bruce_kurland
✖ Via Smithsonian American Art Museum: “Bone, Cup and Crab Apple” by Bruce Kurland, oil on fiberboard, 8 1/8 x 10 in 1972.
Bruce Kurland painted this still life while he was living in the town of Curriers in Wyoming County, New York. He felt that the city offered dismal prospects for a representational painter and moved to the countryside, where he painted images that focused on simple objects “being revealed by light.” Here, the dried bone, shriveled crab apple, and rusty cup emphasize the transformation of both natural and manmade materials over time. The dark, empty background highlights the delicacy and transitory nature of these strange objects. (more over at the Lucie Foundation Center for American Art)

About Bruce Kurland:

Bruce Kurland began painting in the late 1950s and studied at the Art Students League and the National Academy School of Fine Arts in New York. He spent almost twenty years living a “nineteenth-century life” in Wyoming County, New York, where he was inspired by the dramatic open vistas of the countryside. His small paintings show still lifes in miniature and often include unconventional items, from wilting flowers to old bones and dead mice. (more)

First spotted via On the Sunny Side of the Sunny Side up



• Sep 26, 2010 link notes  [via] tagged: art  painting  painter  America  still life  life  death  representation  fruit  bone  object  light  anatomy  apple  Bruce Kurland 
art design poster machine computer retro vintage apple store consumption capitalism economy electronic information shopping disaffection psychiatry
✖ Via Retrofuturs: “iTunes store / Sociology of objects”

Previously on Skandalon : Stéphane Massa-Bidal. Follow him on Tumblr.

The quote he’s using in this illustration is attributed to Tammy Faye Bakker. She’s also purportedly said “I wake up every morning and I wish I were dead, and so does Jim”. Cheaper and maybe less effective, I would say. I’ll come back to it.



• Jul 30, 2010 link notes tagged: art  design  poster  machine  computer  retro  vintage  Apple  store  consumption  capitalism  economy  electronic  information  shopping  disaffection  psychiatry 

Apple are trying desperately to force the growth of a new ecosystem — one that rivals the 26-year-old Macintosh environment — to maturity in five years flat. That’s the time scale in which they expect the cloud computing revolution to flatten the existing PC industry. Unless they can turn themselves into an entirely different kind of corporation by 2015 Apple is doomed to the same irrelevance as the rest of the PC industry — interchangable suppliers of commodity equipment assembled on a shoestring budget with negligable profit.
✖ Via Charlie’s Diary: “The real reason why Steve Jobs hates Flash” by Charlie Stross, April 30, 2010

Interesting thoughts about the future of the computer ecosystem.

Charlie Ross

“writes fiction full-time, has sold around 16 novels, has won one Hugo award and been nominated nearly a dozen times, and has been translated into about a dozen languages.” (much more)


• May 11, 2010 link notes tagged: technology  communication  ecology  ecosystem  future  Internet  computer  machine  interface  Apple 

The iPad and iPhone are closed compared to personal computers, yes. But they are remarkably open compared to so many kinds of computing devices.
✖ Via Daring Fireball: “The Kids Are All Right” by John Gruber, April 2sd, 2010

It goes on like this:

Here’s an email I received today from Sam Kaplan:
I am 13 years old and a big fan of your site. I just made an app called iChalkboard. This is my second app, but my first iPad app. It allows you to simply sketch things out. Check it out: http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/ichalkboard/id322491414?mt=8. If you need any more info or a promo code, feel free to ask.

I hope you like it as much as I do.

He’s 13 years old and he has created and is selling an iPad app in the same store where companies like EA, Google, and even Apple itself distribute iPad apps. His app is ready to go on the first day the product is available. Not a fake app. Not a junior app. A real honest-to-god iPad app. Imagine a 13-year-old in 1978 who could produce and sell his own Atari 2600 cartridges.
(read more)


• Apr 02, 2010 link notes tagged: technology  computer  iPad  Apple  hack  DIY  hardware  software  consumer  producer  prosumer 

Mac OS X is like living in a farmhouse in the country with no locks, and Windows is living in a house with bars on the windows in the bad part of town.
✖ Via H-Online: “Mac OS X: ‘safer, but less secure’”, March 18, 2010

The quote is from Charlie Miller, a computer security researcher (he has a Ph.D. in mathematics). Learn more about him on Wikipedia and read this recent interview with him.



• Mar 22, 2010 link notes tagged: technlogy  computer  security  hack  Apple 

My mother-in-law walked in the door the day of the keynote and the first thing out of her mouth was “Did you see that new Apple iPad? That looks like it would work for me. Would that work for me?” I was utterly flabbergasted. She NEVER talks about computers or technology. She tolerates them at best. Her attitude is typical of most baby boomers I’ve talked to regarding computers. She wants to benefit from them but is frustrated by the wall she must climb in order to do so. She’s learned how to use email and a couple of other things on the Internet and that’s about it. Her bringing up the iPad was amazing for two reasons. First, someone in her office (she works with other ‘boomers) found out about it within hours of the keynote and shared it with her. That Apple news warranted attention from baby boomers at all is significant. That she then held her interest long enough to tell me at the end of the day is equally significant. After learning a little more information about it, she has decided that she wants an iPad. It actually borders on technolust.
✖ Via northtemple: “On iPads, Grandmas and Game-changing” by Rob Foster, Feb. 2, 2010

First discovered via The Daring Fireball.



• Feb 03, 2010 link notes  [via] tagged: technology  user  computer  interface  touch  iPad  Apple 
technology communication experience ipad apple innovation sense interaction interface intelligence community epistemology extension meida kids  reblog
✖ Via I’m Not Actually a Geek : “Apple iPad and the Radical Innovation of Meaning” by Hutch Carpenter, Feb. 2, 2010
“OK, if iPad is innovating meaning even more than it is technology, what meaning might that be? Here’s my best guess:

iPad is tapping into an emerging dynamic of a more interactive, tactile experience with digital technology and information. These interactions make technology less of an interface, and more of an extension of ourselves and our environment.

The tweets above are a couple that show the natural way children engage with technology. Given the iPhone experience, they turn around and want to apply it to other devices. Buttons on devices, our traditional form of interaction, are divorced from the screen. They provide a measure of distance from the digital experience.

Touch, however, represents a new level of intimacy in the digital experience. In technology terms, it’s just an alternative form of interface. Touch, mouse, tab, whatever. But touch is a vital human sense, and a core part of experience. It’s how we interact with others, how we shop, experience textures and so much more.”

About Hutch Carpenter:

“I am the VP of Product for Spigit. Spigit helps companies manage innovation, providing idea management and prediction market software for enterprises. The goal is enable easy capture of ideas by employees, customers and partners, and convert the most promising to innovative initiatives. Spigit recently received a $10 million equity investment from Warburg Pincus.” (more)


• Feb 02, 2010 link notes reblogged from infoneer-pulse  [via] tagged: technology  communication  experience  iPad  Apple  innovation  sense  interaction  interface  intelligence  community  epistemology  extension  meida  kids 
✖ Via MadTV: MadTv’s iPod Parody - iPad (2006)
“All of us use laptops and smartphones now. The question has arisen lately: is there room for a third category of device in the middle?

The new device will have to be far better than the laptop and smartphone at doing important things: browsing the Web, doing e-mail, enjoying and sharing photographs, watching videos, enjoying your music collection, playing games, reading e-books. Otherwise, “it has no reason for being.”

Apple’s answer: the iPad.”

“Live Blogging the Apple Product Announcement” by Brad Stone, The New York Times, Jan. 27th, 2010.



• Jan 27, 2010 link notes tagged: technology  communication  Apple  innovation  computer  machine  marketing  news 
communication technology mac apple computer humor machine  reblog
✖ Via Subtle Refinements: “I checked; the concept of the ouroboros is definitely Snow Leopard-ready.”

A whole tumble log dedicated to “Living and Working with the World’s Most Advanced Operating System”. For all Mac users out there. Found via Tao of Mac.



• Sep 08, 2009 link notes reblogged from subtlerefinements  [via] tagged: communication  technology  Mac  Apple  computer  humor  machine 
technology communication computer machine knowledge science intelligence ai book future evolution vintage ad apple
✖ Via Knowledge Navigator (Wikipedia).

Description: “Knowledge Navigator 1987 mock-up. The device opened like a book, with the “spine” lifting the face to an easy reading angle, and acting as a carrying handle when closed. The dark circle at the top is a video camera similar to a modern webcam, the slot in the upper right holds a memory card, and the grills on either side of the screen are speakers. In one featurette, the screen is also shown acting as a scanner.”



• Aug 14, 2009 link notes tagged: technology  communication  computer  machine  knowledge  science  intelligence  AI  book  future  evolution  vintage  ad  Apple 
✖ Via Apple’s Knowledge Navigator Concept Video (1987)

“This concept video shows Apple’s Knowledge Navigator concept video (made in 1987) by Allan Kay and team. This work builds on Kay’s original Dynabook concept developed at Xerox PARC in the early 1970s.” (The Next Web)

“The Knowledge Navigator is a concept described by former Apple Computer CEO John Sculley in his 1987 book, Odyssey. It describes a device that can access a large networked database of hypertext information, and use software agents to assist searching for information. Apple produced several concept videos showcasing the idea. All of them featured a tablet style computer with numerous advanced capabilities, including an excellent text-to-speech system with no hint of “computerese”, a gesture based interface resembling the multitouch interface later used on the iPhone and an equally powerful speech understanding system, allowing the user to converse with the system via an animated “butler” as the software agent.” (Wikipedia).



• Aug 13, 2009 link notes reblogged from infoneer-pulse [via] tagged: technology  communication  science  knowledge  book  computer  machine  interaction  ad  Apple 

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