Perspective

Davids & Goliaths
News Corp. Shuts Down The Daily.
Rock on with your disruptive, subcompact publishing, Marco.
Under the Stars
A beautifully-designed site by TMC for their Summer Under the Stars showcase.
Beautifully laid-out type over large photographs will never get old. Add a sharp use of masks and motion to it and it’s even better. HTML and Javascript are really starting to grow up.
Thanks, Jory.
Faster Horses
Another solid post by Drew Breunig on tablets, faster horses, cars and tablets:
But tablets are more dynamic than cars, whose use case is relatively clear, and their flexiblity allows for much habitual misuse. Some are not sure what the iPad is used for and are engaging it like a netbook. Others create apps to emulate existing tools. It’s as if the Model T was released and people kept adding carriage components.
No surprise I’m a fan of this line of thinking.
New Models of Creativity
Chase Jarvis gave a great talk at the PSFK Conference in SF recently where he talked about career as self-taught photographer (his portfolio), as a photo app creator (his app is Best Camera) and as a live creative education site launcher (his site is CreativeLIVE).
via PSFK
Code Without Code
Scriptkit an iPad app that allows you to create prototype iPad apps by simply dragging and dropping code snippets from a library of code and APIs.
The demo version of the app is free, but I just upgraded to the full version ($11.99) which allows you to save your prototype apps.
Pretty badass.
Scriptkit gets me excited about coding the same way Macromedia Adobe Flash used to get me excited about coding. I would never call myself a programmer, but I got to point with Flash where I was doing things like parsing XML and talking with PHP and databases. Flash empowered me to make websites and widgets without being an advanced programmer.
When you give artists and designers the ability to easily work with code amazing things can happen.
via Co.Design
Differentials
Ever wonder how differentials work in cars? I thought so.
General Motors made an great little film back in the 1930’s on the topic. Surprisingly, most of it is still relevant to cars made today.
via Just A Car Guy
The Order
Nice Wikipedia find by Drew Breunig on the topic of quotation marks in relation to periods and commas:
Before the advent of mechanical type, the order of quotation marks with periods and commas was not given much consideration. The printing press required that the easily damaged smallest pieces of type for the comma and period be protected behind the more robust quotation marks. The typesetter’s rule was standard in early 19th century Britain, and the U.S. style still adheres to this older tradition both in everyday use and in non-technical formal writing.
The older I get, the more interesting and useful I find history.
Silverload
The Silverlight plug-in is required to watch videos on the product page for Surface.
Microsoft is like those Japanese soldiers from World War II who thought the war was on long after it ended.

Glass Half Full
You didn’t get paid, but you had a place to work.
via Woody Allen: A Documentary on Netflix
iOS Request
Dear third party iOS developers,
Please autofocus the TO: field when I select ‘Share Via Email’. I’m looking at you—Reeder, Instapaper, Dropbox, Tweetbot and Instagallery.
Every native iOS application autofocuses. While it’s small detail, it’s still a detail and they add up to being important.
(Giving how consistently absent this is, I’m wondering if developers even have the ability to instantiate a focus action when spawning an email message window within an app.)
Update: via Twitter, Bryan Clark and Arnold Sakhnov confirmed my suspicion third party developers have no way to focus on input fields, but there appears to be a hack.
Be Excellent
Benz
Looks like Mercedes-Benz has a new website up.
Standing out to me are new links in the main navigation for Innovation and Design.

