One of the hardest part of a designers job is presenting their work, selling their designs to clients or stakeholders and gathering feedback. The design review cycle. I know it used to be something I dreaded.
From the start, the World Wide Web has been a vessel of quasi-religious longing...On the Internet, we're all bodiless, symbols speaking to symbols in symbols...but the net turned out to be more about commerce than consciousness...Web 2.0 doesn't care whet
From the start, the World Wide Web has been a vessel of quasi-religious longing...On the Internet, we're all bodiless, symbols speaking to symbols in symbols...but the net turned out to be more about commerce than consciousness...Web 2.0 doesn't care whet
"Web 2.0 marks the dictatorship of the presentation layer, a trimph of appearance over architecture...the "snakeoil" of "Ajaxified" interfaces and "apparently open APIs" threatens to distract developers and engineers from the real work of creating "distri
"Web 2.0 marks the dictatorship of the presentation layer, a trimph of appearance over architecture...the "snakeoil" of "Ajaxified" interfaces and "apparently open APIs" threatens to distract developers and engineers from the real work of creating "distri
Interesting view of self-centered Pentecostalism from a veteran Emergent: "As the mass choir (three churches) sang, I felt a stirring in my spirit, but not the same stirring of the spirit these people were singing about or any type of “stirring of the S
From Christianity.ca Review by Denyse O'Leary: "Editor Bobby Maddex, working under the Fellowship of St. James, which also produces the ecumenical thinkrag Touchstone, has tossed out the usual dull faith-and-science stuff. He has produced a magazine o
Y. Jin, W. Cai, L. Chen, N. Htun, and K. Verbert. Proceedings of the 28th ACM International Conference on Information and Knowledge Management, page 951-960. ACM, (November 2019)