A Famous Person Has Died (Cartoon Parody of TV News)

The first few panels of a 12-panel cartoon. Thanks for the suggestion, Mike. Similar:The Hubble spotted this smiley face in spaceReading each other’s facial expressions …AestheticsIf you win the very first time you play a game, that means you are skilled and brilliant, …AwesomeSorry, Wrong NumberNumerical errors usually occur for one o…EducationA WWII Propaganda Campaign…

Fall, 2009

LA100: Basic CompositionEL200: Media Lab and SetonianEL227: News WritingEL237: Writing about LiteratureEL266: American Literature I (1800-1915) Similar:What my classroom looks like during today's video journalism workshopWithin 3 minutes of being placed into gr…HomeInfinite Scrolling: XKCD's Creative Insight on a Common Interface IndignityAmusingFacebook, really? More people liked the picture in my post than saw the post…

The 2009 Lyttle Lytton Contest

My favorite “winner” in this year’s Lyttle Lytton Contest, which awards writers who can, in one sentence, imitate the infamous “It was a dark and stormy night” novel opening. Alex turned to Gertrude, in much the same way Martin Landau turned to Barbara Bain in the opening of Space: 1999. — Alex Dering Similar:Walking in…

Blender 3d Softbody Demo

I can’t say I understand my creation, but it sure was fun making it. Similar:Oh No, Performers Coming Into AudiencePITTSBURGH—Audience members at the Bened…AmusingDid you share Russian fake news? Facebook, apparently unable to insert items directly in o…Did you share fake news from Russia duri…BusinessAnalysis | President Trump is losing his war with the mediaMy…

Mega Drop-Down Navigation Menus Work Well

Big, two-dimensional drop-down panels group navigation options to eliminate scrolling and use typography, icons, and tooltips to explain the user’s choices. — Jakob Neilsen Similar:The right — and surprisingly wrong — ways to get kids to sit still in class When it came time for me to make sugge…CultureIn December 2000, I was blogging about…

Mind Your BlackBerry or Mind Your Manners

“You’ll have half the participants BlackBerrying each other as a submeeting, with a running commentary on the primary meeting,” Mr. Reines said. “BlackBerrys have become like cartoon thought bubbles.” Some professionals admitted that they occasionally sent mocking commentary about the proceedings, but most insisted that they used smartphones for legitimate reasons: responding to deadline requests,…