This is just three snippets of the 50 minutes we spent together. Scroll back and you will see the slides. Thanks, Jennifer!
Part 2 (which at the moment doesn’t seem to be publicly viewable)
Part 3
Five Things, or Late to the Party But Hey There’s Still Beer « Ninmah Meets World
Beer? Did someone say beer? In the spirit of appeasing my twitter friends, here are five more, for Rachel. It was learning she loved to weld that made me give in. I am not sure I am going to tag anyone else. How about a variation. If you want to be tagged, leave a comment and consider yourself tagged.
1. My first job in Seattle was in a cookie factory, alternately stacking cookies for packaging or decorating holiday cookies. I lasted a week. My problems? 1. I was too tall for the assembly line and it was killing my body. 2. I worked too fast and the rest of the crew was getting pretty ticked with me.
2. I once had a role in a musical where I was on stage for most of the show but said nor sang anything. Any guesses? (hint: it was a male role. I also played a ghost for one scene. I’m a sucker for character roles.)
3. I don’t like black licorice.
4. I had my first bliss of nature in a stand of deciduous trees, loosing there autumnal beauty upon my head. I danced.
5. I have no tattoos. But I’ve thought about it!
Oh, I want to watch this!
David Sibbet: TED2008: The Big Questions
This from David:
We’ll be doing this using the latest Wacom Cintiq tablets and beta versions of Autodesk’s Alias Sketchbook Pro. Our drawings, some 5-15 for each speaker, will be saved and accessible on a huge portfolio wall with multi-touch capability. If you’ve seen the movie Minority Report,or used an i-phone, it allows that kind of manipulation of imagery. You can pinch-reduce pictures, rotate them, sort them, move them around — all by touch.
I don’t know what we will produce, but it will be integrated into a book about this year’s TED, focusing on the theme The Big Questions. We’re calling ourselves “visual cartographers,” and I’m focusing on making not only the big questions, but the patterns that connect these ideas visible.