Weeknotes #10
Is nonsense the new normal?
Short posts, articles and essays; mostly written for myself, but sometimes written for others, too.
Is nonsense the new normal?
Starting as I mean to go on.
New boss, same as the old boss.
Intead of writing these weeknotes, I could be writing code.
I wasn’t expecting this exercise in weekly updates to endure, but here I am, six weeks later, with another weekly round up.
This week has been a rollercoaster of emotions but ended with me feeling hopeful about my job prospects and position within the industry.
For all their claims of changing the world, it would seem designers have not only failed to address its more pressing problems, but exaggerated many of its existing ones.
Seeking solace in the Court of King Dyer.
Well, that was a shitty week.
Only the second edition of weeknotes, and yet the year is already 5% done. Blimey.
Slack has a new logo, and everyone hates it.
Yup, that’s right, I’m jumping on the weeknotes bandwagon! Consider this an experiment, and we’ll see how long it lasts.
A compelling 120-word critique regarding automated front-end development, as provided by a class
attribute.
Looking back on a well-travelled yet otherwise directionless year.
I assemble a heavenly host of cherubs to sing the virtues of the Eleventy static site generator. By looking at how it compares to the familiar Ruby-based Jekyll, I may have you humming its tune for this season’s holiday projects. But will it put you on cloud eleven?
In thinking about the fabric of the web, I unpick a few threads and tie myself in knots.
If design is the application of ethics, then anyone designing digital products should see their role in a new light after reading this book.
Who is this website for?
A two-week stay in Berlin not only gave me time to explore the city, but also space to question the direction of my career and address a growing sense of disillusionment with my profession.
On German Unity Day, a tour of Tempelhof Airport proved to be a powerful act of remembrance.
Ich bin ein Berliner?
Another identity from the offices of Pentagram that elicits a feeling somewhere between despair and indifference.
As people look to replace Twitter as their social network of choice, Mastadon and Micro.blog have emerged as early contenders.
What does the future hold for small towns like Walsall?