FROONT seems to be worth playing with.
Category: Video
Again, thanks to AllThingsD.com.
Thanks to AllThingsD.com.
I’ve seen this short movie by Ransom Riggs before and as I stubled on it again in Beautiful Abandoned Places and Ghost Towns I thought I will post it as it withstood the test of time.
Shortly after his “Stop Drawing Dead Fish” video Bret Victor is inspiring us all again.
Inspirational.
Brad Frost from CreativeMornings/PGH.
In reaction to this I would say: In an age, where 90% of everything is crap and therefore attention is expensive, focused and well targeted Less is more.
Via @signalizer
I love this animated part from Deathly Hallows.
If you are in the business of building anything for users, you must watch this. For those of you who know her “Creating the passionate users” talk, this is an updated version of the theme.
Via @paveldolezal & @davegreiner
You may try the webapp and read how they made it.
Via @keff85
This 5 minute video by @claychristensen is the most influential thing I’ve watched in 2012: youtube.com/watch?v=VmbSpT…
— Jason Fried (@jasonfried) December 14, 2012
Good people at Online MBA have sent me a link to this video.
From the Stanford University’s Entrepreneurship Corner:
Adam Lashinsky, Fortune senior editor-at-large, shares an insider look at Apple, one of the world’s most iconic and secretive companies. Based on his research into the technology giant’s internal processes and approaches to leadership and building products, Lashinsky offers insights and surprises from his book, Inside Apple: How America’s Most Admired–and Secretive–Company Really Works.
Via @robertvlach
Granted, it is a preview and the real version should ship early 2013, but if it looks anything like this then Microsoft is crazy.
One comment from the guy doing the video made me laugh:
Obviously, you can see it’s not entirely optimized for a touch experience… but it is there.
Let me paraphrase that: Obviously, you will feel like throwing the thing against the wall in 5 seconds, but for some perverted reason it is there.
That’s what a disrupted company does.
Via @satai