Sean Rose
I still bought many books, but more and more I read in them, rather than being whisked away by them. At some time impossible to pinpoint, I had begun to read more to be informed than to be immersed, much less to be transported.
from Reader, Come Home by Maryanne Wolf
Stewart and the board had decided on our pricing plan early on: $9 per user per month, later amended to $8 (“because it felt better”). “Less than the cost of a catered lunch for your team, once a month,” Stewart would say to prospective customers.
from Preparing for launch by getmatter.com
- I believe that in nearly every instance where science fiction has successfully ‘predicted’ a turn of events, it’s more true to say that it has inspired that turn of events.
from Cultivating Hyperstitions
One of the things that surprised me the most was to see that for any piece of work being shared, designers would put together a keynote deck for it. It could be the smallest thing, like a quick look at the latest work progression, or big presentations, of course. At Apple, designers use the power of storytelling to influence others, instead of just
... See morefrom What I Learned as a Product Designer at Apple by Andrea Pacheco
- Somebody once said that a good science-fiction story should be able to predict not the automobile but the traffic jam.
from ‘The Three-Body Problem’ Is Brilliant. ‘3 Body Problem’ Is Better. by Zach Kram
Anyway, you never know what worse luck your bad luck has saved you from.
from No Country for Old Men by Cormac McCarthy
- We often assume that the world of today would stun a visitor from fifty years ago. In truth, for every miraculous iPad there are countless partly broken realities: WiFi passwords, connectivity, battery life, privacy and compatibility amongst others. The real skill of creating a compelling and engaging view of the future lies not in designing the gl... See more
from The Future Mundane - Core77 by Nick Foster
Human beings set out to encounter other worlds, other civilizations, without having fully gotten to know their own hidden recesses, their blind alleys, well shafts, dark barricaded doors.
from Solaris by Stanislaw Lem
This, then, is the key sleight-of-hand at the heart of our psychosocial problems: We pretend we’re in charge, both to others and even to ourselves, but we’re less in charge than we think. We pose as privileged insiders, when in fact we’re often making the same kind of educated guesses that any informed outsider could make. We claim to know our own
... See morefrom The Elephant in the Brain: Hidden Motives in Everyday Life by Robin Hanson