Wordcloud: Tim Pawlenty’s 2010 State Of The State Address
February 20, 2010 · Categories: Conference/Event, Graphics/Imagery, Keyword Research, Language, Minnesota, Political Marketing, Tagging · View Comments
This is a wordcloud of Minnesota Governor Tim Pawlenty’s 2010 State of the State speech, via Bloiswire:
Minnesota Governor Tim Pawlenty's 2010 State of the State Speech Wordcloud
Alternative “No Photo” Facebook Icons
via definitivetouch.com. Posted via web from e-Strategy Blog LinksChart Wars: Data Visualization As A Messaging Vehicle
January 19, 2010 · Categories: Graphics/Imagery, Marketing Trends, Mashups, Online Communication, Online PR, Political Marketing, RSS/XML, Trends, Video · View Comments
Alex Lundy explains the power of data visualization in public discourse. Found at Blip.tv via Holy Kaw!
FujiFilm Real 3D Camera Demonstration
January 13, 2010 · Categories: Augmented Reality, Graphics/Imagery, Marketing Trends, Mobile Marketing, Photo Sharing, Technology, Trends, Video, Video Marketing, Videocasting · View Comments
via engadget.com
via engadget.com engadget gets a demonstration of FujiFilm’s 3D camera. This stuff isn’t ready for prime time but, as with yesterday’s video of the iHologram iPhone app, I can see where it’s going and the implications could be big. Posted via web from e-Strategy [...]
How To Design A Cover For Wired Magazine
September 10, 2009 · Categories: Conference/Event, Graphics/Imagery, Usability, Video · View Comments
Scott Dadich talks about designing Wired Magazine, developing a creative culture in magazine design, with three guiding ideas; that details matter, to design by evolution rather than revolution, and that constraint is freedom. Found at Fora.tv.
Poetry Is The Original Social Media
August 6, 2009 · Categories: Conversational Marketing, Film, Graphics/Imagery, Interviews, Language, Micromarketing, Online Communication, Video, Video Marketing · View Comments
Earlier this year, during a going-away party for two of our interns, I don’t remember how but the Lewis Carroll poem Jabberwocky came up in conversation and it became readily apparent that no one was familiar with the poem.
I, of course, was appalled. So I found it online and started reading only to be confronted [...]
How The Brain Creates Meaning
Information designer Tom Wujec talks through three areas of the brain that help us understand words, images, feelings, connections. Wujec asks: How can we best engage our brains to help us better understand big ideas? Found at TED.Yahoo! Messenger Thinks I’m German!
Yahoo! Messenger Thinks I’m German – 07/08/09, originally uploaded by DavidErickson. This appeared on my Yahoo! Messenger news window today, for no apparent reason. Guess I’ll have to take up German, though I’d planned on my next language being Italian.Microblogging Fragmentation & How Yahoo Can Get Game With A Flickr Of The Switch
May 28, 2009 · Categories: Blog Marketing, Conversational Marketing, Graphics/Imagery, Lifestreaming, Marketing Trends, Micromarketing, Mobile Marketing, Music Marketing, Online Behavior, Photo Sharing, Social Bookmarking, Social Networking, Statistics, Text Messaging, Trends, Video Marketing, Viral Marketing, Web 2.0 · View Comments
Microblogging is clearly here to stay, despite speculation that Twitter has jumped the shark. The function of microblogging has been adopted by LinkedIn, Facebook, MySpace and most recently, FriendFeed.
With Twitter as the clear leader, these are the big five. Here’s a chart of their visits during the past three months. It should be noted [...]
Walker Art Center: Designing Obama Panel
May 21, 2009 · Categories: Conference/Event, Graphics/Imagery, Internet Branding, Minnesota, Political Marketing, Video · View Comments
This is a Walker Art Center Panel entitled “Designing Obama” featuring, Scott Thomas and Sol Sender, the graphic designers who created Barack Obama’s presidential campaign logo and moderated by Minnesota’s own Paul Schmelzer.
Paul is editor of the Minnesota Independent, former editor of the Walker Art Center blogs, and blogger at Eyeteeth, which you should read. [...]




