coffee time
Here’s how my time is clocked by my coffee cup.

among other places
I really love this idea of mapping the digital landscape that I read about in an article on A List Apart.
Websites are such abstract constructs, that unless you have a “key” or “legend” you wouldn’t know how it should be used. But, this legend has yet to be set. We are still learning how to best represent our abstract, digital concepts in a user-centered design framework. As the web matures, patterns begin to rise and designers (or information architects) find better solutions to map the web in a more comprehensive manner. In essence, websites are maps to a “real” (digital) landscape. It’s a great perspective to think about web design as creating a tool, a map, for others to use in order to gain access to the information they want.
The article also discusses mapping memory by using the resources of the user to help define and construct the collective memory, as depicted by each particular site. This is obviously the shift the web has taken, as more people want to contribute to media (social, blog, etc). I think it’s interesting to think of these sites as a collective memory….even if that memory is severely short term. Maybe it’s time someone began documenting this memory.
*Check out WebArchive.org to see what your favorite website looked like 10 years ago!

I came across this amazing collection of hanging plants on ApartmentTherepy.com today. It makes me think about a network of man-made webs around and between plants. A visual connection between plants, much like the network of roots that tangle beneath the surface. I think there is something beautiful about creating a physical network to symbolize the reliance plants have on one another. Each man-made web would cradle and support a nearby plant. And if the plant were removed from the hanging string all the other plants would be thrown off balance. It could be a really beautiful installation.
…and the work of Charles Clary (featured in the Feb 2010 issue of Wired). These micro-organism inspired peaks and valleys remind me colorful cell cross sections. And makes me wonder about all the beautiful things that I can not see with the naked eye. Maybe it’s time to invest in a magnifying glass!


I love when paper and technology meet, like they do at One Bit Wonder. Leon Hong & Camile Orillaneda combine forces to create the most adorable animated, paper creatures and interactive web/game experiences. I also appreciate their creative use of javascript on their site. Well done!
