If there ever was a time to learn more about napping, it’s the weekend.
You’ll learn more about napping from this infographic than you ever wanted to know, and maybe even more.
Take a look and then take a nap!
The #1 Resource for Church Technology Creativity & New Thinking
by Eric Dye
If there ever was a time to learn more about napping, it’s the weekend.
You’ll learn more about napping from this infographic than you ever wanted to know, and maybe even more.
Take a look and then take a nap!
by Eric Dye
Do you have something new you’d like to share?
Would you like some feedback on a current project you’re working on?
by Jeremy Smith
Here are three infographics of what, who, where, when, why, and how people consume media.
For marketers, this is an amazing resource to understand where to advertise next.
[Read more…] about 3 Infographics of Digital Consumptions [Infographic]
by Eric Dye
As a web and graphic designer, author or any other Creative, where do you draw the line with copyright and when do you pull those strings to control the content?
Here are two examples:
by Eric Dye
Apple cares for the design outside of their machines as much as they do the inside.
They are certainly pieces of art.
[Read more…] about 5 Awesome Mac Clocks & Don’t Forget Daylight Savings!
by Eric Dye
Here’s the premise:
Åkestam Holst and Society 46 created “The Sound of Football” to give visually impaired people a better football experience and maybe, in the future, create new aides that enable you to “see” with sound.
First, they arranged a football match between a team of visually impaired players and a team of former professionals, to see how they would perform under equal conditions by having a match where no one could see.
We used tracking technology, the same used at the latest FIFA World Cup. Through the system we can get the position of each player in real time on the football pitch. This information is then fed into an iPhone located on each player’s head and converted into binaural 3D sound. We created sounds for things important on the pitch like the nearest players, the ball and the goals. Through headphones each player can hear what is happening and get a sense of distance between things. And the sensors in the iPhone allow players to locate where the sounds come from when they move their head.
Take a look: