Postcards from Portfoliopolis
Nobody likes to move, but I’d pack my bags tomorrow if I could figure out how to become a citizen of Portfoliopolis. It's a place that is, in a word, ideal. It’s urban and walkable, convenient yet sustainable. The inhabitants are content and fit and statistically diverse. The sun always shines, and the grass could not be any greener.
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Shower Head As Moral Crossroad
An unfamiliar object startled me in a hotel-room shower recently. Was it a product of the same thick-headed vision of progress that answers the three-blade razor with the four-blader? Or a production error, an industrial design mutant? No and no. It was, presumably by accident, a moral dilemma waiting to happen.
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A New Kind of Capture
The new Lytro camera promises to make images that are less a slice of visual information than a cube, from which you can choose whichever layer would make the most pleasing two-dimensional image for printing and framing. But what really matters is that the way most people consume photographic images now has nothing to do with printing and framing.
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Questions About 'The New Aesthetic'
Many of us grapple with the impact of screen culture — or digital culture, or whatever you want to call it — on the way we see the world and the things that are in it. One of the more addictive responses I've encountered to this line of interest is James Bridle’s online effort, "The New Aesthetic." So I asked him some questions about what he's up to; here’s our back and forth.
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