Right On
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And other things I learned from Lou Silverstein, by Roger Black:
The Times editorial page before and after Lou. It’s hard to believe the before example (1958) is not much more than 50 years old. It looks like the 19th century. Yet, the the after (1978) could have been printed yesterday.
These are the palaces of legend. In Mexican novels, and in movies, the houses of the illicitly rich and infamous are louche, luxurious affairs, with toilets made of gold, mounds of cocaine or cash lying around and furniture of thronelike proportions. In the public imagination, what might be called “narquitecture” or “narco style” is all gaudy excess — part “Real Housewives,” part “Scarface,” part conquistador.
The idea behind The Most Expensive Picture is straightforward – anyone can pay to have their image featured on the site’s homepage, and it remains there until someone pays one dollar more to replace it. So far 56 pictures have been uploaded and once the archive reaches 300 there will be a catalogue documenting the project. It’s the brainchild of Swiss trio photographer Sebastian Stadler, graphic designer Stefan Jandl and UX designer Carlo Jörges
Mogees is a novel way for transforming any surface into a musical instrument.
By putting a (very cheap) contact microphone over a surface, the software can recognise different types of touch and associate them with different synthesizers.
Trey Ratcliff, photographer:
1) Theft of bits are like the Tic Tacs that get stolen from the 7-11. It’s the cost of doing business on the Internet.
5) Last, and most important, as soon as I opened everything up, our business has grown and grown. Our team now of about 10 people are happy and everything is profitable. It is strange to see a chart over time that shows an increase in revenues and an increase in piracy. Now, piracy is not the reason that revenues are increasing, but they are not hurting revenues.
love the way it’s being used and love the whole concept of the website. marvellous work.
-Mitja Miklavcic, designer of FF Tisa, via Twitter
I was surfing the web and arrived (in a roundabout way) at your site, even more surprisingly I found a shot of mine being used for your July 21st issue. I just wanted to drop you a quick line and say I think your site looks great and I love the content. I’m happy that you were able to include my work somehow and keep up the good work.
The New Minimum is a magazine about unique perspectives. We realized that the web has lots of good ideas but has a hard time with presenting them in a compelling manner. Our priority is to match good content with great art direction.
Libraries are not just repositories of books, but cornerstones of democracy. True democracy — based upon the informed consent of the governed — cannot exist without full, free, and public access to knowledge
If you need some room to breathe, slide the Table of Contents out of the way. You can also go back to the top quickly from the same place. It's also where you can choose your subscription options. All these options are in the upper left, no matter where you are.
You can use the In This Issue section to get around. A bit about the sections: The current featured story will always be at the top, followed by the most recent stories. The New Music section is recent tracks worth hearing, and you can listen to them right from the main page. There is also a music cateogry for more in-depth articles about music. The Reading List section is clippings of things worth reading. Around the Web is a selection of interesting things making the rounds on the internet, though they’re not a perfect fit for the content we want to focus on. Towards the bottom, you’ll find the second half of this month’s featured stories, as well as some random posts from our archives. Beyond that — well, you know — that's where you are now.
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the new minimum is best viewed in a modern browser. We recommend Safari on a Mac. It’s powered by WordPress. The headlines are set in League Gothic, and the text is FF Tisa. Both are served by Typekit. Some of the software that enabled this labor of love include Adobe’s Creative Suite and Panic’s Coda. the new minimum was lovingly designed with, coded on, and inspired by Apple products.
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