As a creative, it’s easy for your craft to become anything but creative.
It becomes, monotonous, sterile, mechanical – rinse and repeat.
You edit the video. Capture the sound. Stroke the brush. Write the post.
You become a machine.
The #1 Resource for Church Technology Creativity & New Thinking
by Eric Dye
As a creative, it’s easy for your craft to become anything but creative.
It becomes, monotonous, sterile, mechanical – rinse and repeat.
You edit the video. Capture the sound. Stroke the brush. Write the post.
You become a machine.
by Eric Dye
So, which country spends the most time online?
Is it the United States?
Nope. We’re about 8 hours per month from spending the most time online.
Here are the top 11 countries:
[Read more…] about Which Country Spends the Most Time Online?
by Eric Dye
When I was young … wait … when I was really young, I had an Intellivision.
The controller was bad. Really bad.
I remember the first time I wrapped my hands around a Nintendo controller. I played for two days straight, eating nothing but mushrooms. My friend and I bragged about how sore our hands were from holding that rectangular piece of 8-bit magic.
Controllers have come a long way.
[Read more…] about The Evolution of Video Game Controllers [Infographic]
by Eric Dye
In the past 5 years, the number of communication channels has increased exponentially.
Despite the increase of communication channels, the duration of time we have committed to communication is relatively the same. New forms of communicative mediums have led to an increase of efficiency and enables greater throughput.
More channels. Faster communication. Greater exchange.
Here are some communication mediums off the top of my head:
by Eric Dye
A number of people I know have left Facebook.
Reason: 20% of divorces are caused by Facebook.
Apparently, couples are finding more than just an old friend from High School, they’re finding old flames.
by Eric Dye
We posted a viral video this week, showing a guy hacking the video screens of NYC’s Times Square.
In fact, of the more than 1 million YouTube views, over 95% believed the video was true.
It was not.