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BOBULATE - EVERYTHING ABOUT LIZ Liz is part designer, part educator, and full-time dog owner. Liz is Vice President of Design for NPR, overseeing and guiding both the visual and user experience across NPR-branded digital platforms and content. She is chair and co-founder of the MFA in Interaction Design program at the School of Visual Arts. She is advisor toBOBULATE
Danzico is part information architect, part usability analyst, and part editor. As an independent information architecture consultant, she traces the roots of her craft back to her parents.BOBULATE - WRITING
Danzico is part information architect, part usability analyst, and part editor. As an independent information architecture consultant, she traces the roots of her craft back to her parents. BOBULATE - FOR INTENTIONAL ORGANIZATION If you work for a company, force yourself to take the maximum allotted days. If you work for yourself, take at least five days for every year you’ve been working, within reason. Keep 10-20% of your day, every day, free. Don’t schedule 10-20% of your time at all. Leave yourself open for the unexpected.BOBULATE - WORDS
Gastrotypographicalassemblage . Steven Heller lets us in on the history of a wall of 1,450 letters:. The Gastrotypographicalassemblage was the 11-meter-wide, handmade, wooden typographic wall that hung in the CBS cafeteria in New York designed by Lou Dorfsman. The custom type created by Herb Lubalin and Tom Carnase and containing almost 1500 individual characters. BOBULATE - INTERACTIVITY Douglas Adams (in 1999 no less): he reason we suddenly need such a word is that during this century we have for the first time been dominated by non-interactive forms of entertainment: cinema, radio, recorded music and television. Before they came along all entertainment was interactive: theatre, music, sport—the performers and audience wereBOBULATE - A LESSON
I like things. Full disclosure: a lot of things. More things, perhaps, than can be reasonably liked by one person. To me, rose-colored glasses have always seemed a curious concept as the world seems shiny enough without them. So I steer clear of conditions that might increase the likelihood of increasing the world’s sparklehood.Choice
BOBULATE - ANATOMY OF A SALUTATION Just as you wouldn't ignore body language that indicates whether someone is intending to shake your hand or high-five you, nor should you ignore email-greeting intentions — no matter how well you knowsomeone.
BOBULATE - “GOLD, MYRRH, AND FRANK SENT THIS” "Gold, myrrh, and frank sent this" A short list of nursery school thoughts from a recent favorite, Preschool Gems: “Plants are more important than games.” “I love all cakes, except some cakes I don’t like.” “But I’m going somewhere even excitinger.” “I don’t think anything.” “Wizards are true.” “The good forceis like the main
BOBULATE - FOR INTENTIONAL ORGANIZATIONWRITINGWORDSSHELFABOUTCONTACTWITH ALL OF YOUR LIGHT Here, lessons from Pépite and Jolyn. Jun 13, 2017. A sober list of the essentials of success and other affirmations from the journal of Octavia Butler. Read them as the necessary juxtapositions they are: “ specific goals ” and “ adaptability ,” “ cooperation ”paired with “
BOBULATE - EVERYTHING ABOUT LIZ Liz is part designer, part educator, and full-time dog owner. Liz is Vice President of Design for NPR, overseeing and guiding both the visual and user experience across NPR-branded digital platforms and content. She is chair and co-founder of the MFA in Interaction Design program at the School of Visual Arts. She is advisor toBOBULATE
Danzico is part information architect, part usability analyst, and part editor. As an independent information architecture consultant, she traces the roots of her craft back to her parents.BOBULATE - WRITING
Danzico is part information architect, part usability analyst, and part editor. As an independent information architecture consultant, she traces the roots of her craft back to her parents. BOBULATE - FOR INTENTIONAL ORGANIZATION If you work for a company, force yourself to take the maximum allotted days. If you work for yourself, take at least five days for every year you’ve been working, within reason. Keep 10-20% of your day, every day, free. Don’t schedule 10-20% of your time at all. Leave yourself open for the unexpected.BOBULATE - WORDS
Gastrotypographicalassemblage . Steven Heller lets us in on the history of a wall of 1,450 letters:. The Gastrotypographicalassemblage was the 11-meter-wide, handmade, wooden typographic wall that hung in the CBS cafeteria in New York designed by Lou Dorfsman. The custom type created by Herb Lubalin and Tom Carnase and containing almost 1500 individual characters. BOBULATE - INTERACTIVITY Douglas Adams (in 1999 no less): he reason we suddenly need such a word is that during this century we have for the first time been dominated by non-interactive forms of entertainment: cinema, radio, recorded music and television. Before they came along all entertainment was interactive: theatre, music, sport—the performers and audience wereBOBULATE - A LESSON
I like things. Full disclosure: a lot of things. More things, perhaps, than can be reasonably liked by one person. To me, rose-colored glasses have always seemed a curious concept as the world seems shiny enough without them. So I steer clear of conditions that might increase the likelihood of increasing the world’s sparklehood.Choice
BOBULATE - ANATOMY OF A SALUTATION Just as you wouldn't ignore body language that indicates whether someone is intending to shake your hand or high-five you, nor should you ignore email-greeting intentions — no matter how well you knowsomeone.
BOBULATE - “GOLD, MYRRH, AND FRANK SENT THIS” "Gold, myrrh, and frank sent this" A short list of nursery school thoughts from a recent favorite, Preschool Gems: “Plants are more important than games.” “I love all cakes, except some cakes I don’t like.” “But I’m going somewhere even excitinger.” “I don’t think anything.” “Wizards are true.” “The good forceis like the main
BOBULATE - A LESSON
I like things. Full disclosure: a lot of things. More things, perhaps, than can be reasonably liked by one person. To me, rose-colored glasses have always seemed a curious concept as the world seems shiny enough without them. So I steer clear of conditions that might increase the likelihood of increasing the world’s sparklehood.Choice
BOBULATE - WITH ALL OF YOUR LIGHT Always go for a run even if it’s raining. Enjoy the journey never forget to play and feel the joy of life. Jump for joy when you’re happy. Surround yourself with the people you love. Live in the moment, have boundless energy. Listen more than you talk. But when you do talk, speak from the BOBULATE - GRACE NOTES I grew up with a mom and dad who played music every chance they got. Most nights after dinner, one parent would turn up the classical music coming from the local station on the kitchen radio, the other retired to a room to read, while the kids each went off to practice their respective instruments. BOBULATE - TRY TO BE ANYTHING ELSE Try to be anything else I keep thinking about Jessica’s one thing: The work you do while you procrastinate is probably the work you should be doing for the rest of your life. And this from Lorrie Moore on how to become a writer: First, try to be something, anything, else. A movie star/astronaut. A BOBULATE - BANKING TIME At age eight, I start saving my star money. I strode down to the Third National Bank of Scranton, and with the help of my father, opened my first savings account, bankbook and all. And this, the opening of my first anything with my own name on it, I did with all the pride a BOBULATE - FOR INTENTIONAL ORGANIZATION Jody Rosen on seeing knots:. Once knots come into focus, though, you can’t stop seeing them. Rifle history’s back pages and you’ll find them everywhere. . There are, of course, metaphorical knots: the knot in our stomachs when we’re nervous, the “certain knot of peace” that ensnares us when we sleep, as the Elizabethan poet Philip Sidney wrote. BOBULATE - FOR INTENTIONAL ORGANIZATION for Intentional Organization. Watching The Daily Show as part of the studio audience is like being part of a highly efficient—and undeniably enjoyable—product development team. Mondays through Thursdays, the show begins with an extensive “warm up” where Jon Stewart (the show’s host) and the “warm-up guy” get to know the audience, and vice versa. BOBULATE - AN ACTIVE SILENCE “White space is to be regarded as an active element, not a passive background,” wrote Jan Tschichold in 1930. And just as you cannot ignore white space, you cannot ignore silence, as it’s the white space of conversations. We get anxious about silence. It connotes issues. Stress. Awkwardness. Yet, like Tschichold’s white space,silence is
BOBULATE - SECOND CHANCE FOR A LAST IMPRESSION Forget what you’ve heard about first impressions; it’s the last impressions that count. Last impressions — whether they’re with customer service, an online shopping experience, or a blind date — are the ones we remember. BOBULATE - ON “THANK YOU,” OR WHY SOCRATES WAS WRONG As she drove us home in the blue Fiat that first week of fourth grade, my mother began by announcing that it was time for me to begin writing thank you notes. “When you’ve received a present (referring to my new tennis racket), you must follow up by saying thanks with a card ora
BOBULATE - FOR INTENTIONAL ORGANIZATIONWRITINGWORDSSHELFABOUTCONTACTWITH ALL OF YOUR LIGHT Here, lessons from Pépite and Jolyn. Jun 13, 2017. A sober list of the essentials of success and other affirmations from the journal of Octavia Butler. Read them as the necessary juxtapositions they are: “ specific goals ” and “ adaptability ,” “ cooperation ”paired with “
BOBULATE - EVERYTHING ABOUT LIZ Liz is part designer, part educator, and full-time dog owner. Liz is Vice President of Design for NPR, overseeing and guiding both the visual and user experience across NPR-branded digital platforms and content. She is chair and co-founder of the MFA in Interaction Design program at the School of Visual Arts. She is advisor toBOBULATE
Danzico is part information architect, part usability analyst, and part editor. As an independent information architecture consultant, she traces the roots of her craft back to her parents.BOBULATE - WRITING
Danzico is part information architect, part usability analyst, and part editor. As an independent information architecture consultant, she traces the roots of her craft back to her parents. BOBULATE - FOR INTENTIONAL ORGANIZATION If you work for a company, force yourself to take the maximum allotted days. If you work for yourself, take at least five days for every year you’ve been working, within reason. Keep 10-20% of your day, every day, free. Don’t schedule 10-20% of your time at all. Leave yourself open for the unexpected.BOBULATE - WORDS
Gastrotypographicalassemblage . Steven Heller lets us in on the history of a wall of 1,450 letters:. The Gastrotypographicalassemblage was the 11-meter-wide, handmade, wooden typographic wall that hung in the CBS cafeteria in New York designed by Lou Dorfsman. The custom type created by Herb Lubalin and Tom Carnase and containing almost 1500 individual characters. BOBULATE - INTERACTIVITY Douglas Adams (in 1999 no less): he reason we suddenly need such a word is that during this century we have for the first time been dominated by non-interactive forms of entertainment: cinema, radio, recorded music and television. Before they came along all entertainment was interactive: theatre, music, sport—the performers and audience wereBOBULATE - A LESSON
I like things. Full disclosure: a lot of things. More things, perhaps, than can be reasonably liked by one person. To me, rose-colored glasses have always seemed a curious concept as the world seems shiny enough without them. So I steer clear of conditions that might increase the likelihood of increasing the world’s sparklehood.Choice
BOBULATE - ANATOMY OF A SALUTATION Just as you wouldn't ignore body language that indicates whether someone is intending to shake your hand or high-five you, nor should you ignore email-greeting intentions — no matter how well you knowsomeone.
BOBULATE - “GOLD, MYRRH, AND FRANK SENT THIS” "Gold, myrrh, and frank sent this" A short list of nursery school thoughts from a recent favorite, Preschool Gems: “Plants are more important than games.” “I love all cakes, except some cakes I don’t like.” “But I’m going somewhere even excitinger.” “I don’t think anything.” “Wizards are true.” “The good forceis like the main
BOBULATE - FOR INTENTIONAL ORGANIZATIONWRITINGWORDSSHELFABOUTCONTACTWITH ALL OF YOUR LIGHT Here, lessons from Pépite and Jolyn. Jun 13, 2017. A sober list of the essentials of success and other affirmations from the journal of Octavia Butler. Read them as the necessary juxtapositions they are: “ specific goals ” and “ adaptability ,” “ cooperation ”paired with “
BOBULATE - EVERYTHING ABOUT LIZ Liz is part designer, part educator, and full-time dog owner. Liz is Vice President of Design for NPR, overseeing and guiding both the visual and user experience across NPR-branded digital platforms and content. She is chair and co-founder of the MFA in Interaction Design program at the School of Visual Arts. She is advisor toBOBULATE
Danzico is part information architect, part usability analyst, and part editor. As an independent information architecture consultant, she traces the roots of her craft back to her parents.BOBULATE - WRITING
Danzico is part information architect, part usability analyst, and part editor. As an independent information architecture consultant, she traces the roots of her craft back to her parents. BOBULATE - FOR INTENTIONAL ORGANIZATION If you work for a company, force yourself to take the maximum allotted days. If you work for yourself, take at least five days for every year you’ve been working, within reason. Keep 10-20% of your day, every day, free. Don’t schedule 10-20% of your time at all. Leave yourself open for the unexpected.BOBULATE - WORDS
Gastrotypographicalassemblage . Steven Heller lets us in on the history of a wall of 1,450 letters:. The Gastrotypographicalassemblage was the 11-meter-wide, handmade, wooden typographic wall that hung in the CBS cafeteria in New York designed by Lou Dorfsman. The custom type created by Herb Lubalin and Tom Carnase and containing almost 1500 individual characters. BOBULATE - INTERACTIVITY Douglas Adams (in 1999 no less): he reason we suddenly need such a word is that during this century we have for the first time been dominated by non-interactive forms of entertainment: cinema, radio, recorded music and television. Before they came along all entertainment was interactive: theatre, music, sport—the performers and audience wereBOBULATE - A LESSON
I like things. Full disclosure: a lot of things. More things, perhaps, than can be reasonably liked by one person. To me, rose-colored glasses have always seemed a curious concept as the world seems shiny enough without them. So I steer clear of conditions that might increase the likelihood of increasing the world’s sparklehood.Choice
BOBULATE - ANATOMY OF A SALUTATION Just as you wouldn't ignore body language that indicates whether someone is intending to shake your hand or high-five you, nor should you ignore email-greeting intentions — no matter how well you knowsomeone.
BOBULATE - “GOLD, MYRRH, AND FRANK SENT THIS” "Gold, myrrh, and frank sent this" A short list of nursery school thoughts from a recent favorite, Preschool Gems: “Plants are more important than games.” “I love all cakes, except some cakes I don’t like.” “But I’m going somewhere even excitinger.” “I don’t think anything.” “Wizards are true.” “The good forceis like the main
BOBULATE - A LESSON
I like things. Full disclosure: a lot of things. More things, perhaps, than can be reasonably liked by one person. To me, rose-colored glasses have always seemed a curious concept as the world seems shiny enough without them. So I steer clear of conditions that might increase the likelihood of increasing the world’s sparklehood.Choice
BOBULATE - WITH ALL OF YOUR LIGHT Always go for a run even if it’s raining. Enjoy the journey never forget to play and feel the joy of life. Jump for joy when you’re happy. Surround yourself with the people you love. Live in the moment, have boundless energy. Listen more than you talk. But when you do talk, speak from the BOBULATE - GRACE NOTES I grew up with a mom and dad who played music every chance they got. Most nights after dinner, one parent would turn up the classical music coming from the local station on the kitchen radio, the other retired to a room to read, while the kids each went off to practice their respective instruments. BOBULATE - TRY TO BE ANYTHING ELSE Try to be anything else I keep thinking about Jessica’s one thing: The work you do while you procrastinate is probably the work you should be doing for the rest of your life. And this from Lorrie Moore on how to become a writer: First, try to be something, anything, else. A movie star/astronaut. A BOBULATE - BANKING TIME At age eight, I start saving my star money. I strode down to the Third National Bank of Scranton, and with the help of my father, opened my first savings account, bankbook and all. And this, the opening of my first anything with my own name on it, I did with all the pride a BOBULATE - FOR INTENTIONAL ORGANIZATION Jody Rosen on seeing knots:. Once knots come into focus, though, you can’t stop seeing them. Rifle history’s back pages and you’ll find them everywhere. . There are, of course, metaphorical knots: the knot in our stomachs when we’re nervous, the “certain knot of peace” that ensnares us when we sleep, as the Elizabethan poet Philip Sidney wrote. BOBULATE - FOR INTENTIONAL ORGANIZATION for Intentional Organization. Watching The Daily Show as part of the studio audience is like being part of a highly efficient—and undeniably enjoyable—product development team. Mondays through Thursdays, the show begins with an extensive “warm up” where Jon Stewart (the show’s host) and the “warm-up guy” get to know the audience, and vice versa. BOBULATE - AN ACTIVE SILENCE “White space is to be regarded as an active element, not a passive background,” wrote Jan Tschichold in 1930. And just as you cannot ignore white space, you cannot ignore silence, as it’s the white space of conversations. We get anxious about silence. It connotes issues. Stress. Awkwardness. Yet, like Tschichold’s white space,silence is
BOBULATE - SECOND CHANCE FOR A LAST IMPRESSION Forget what you’ve heard about first impressions; it’s the last impressions that count. Last impressions — whether they’re with customer service, an online shopping experience, or a blind date — are the ones we remember. BOBULATE - ON “THANK YOU,” OR WHY SOCRATES WAS WRONG As she drove us home in the blue Fiat that first week of fourth grade, my mother began by announcing that it was time for me to begin writing thank you notes. “When you’ve received a present (referring to my new tennis racket), you must follow up by saying thanks with a card ora
BOBULATE - FOR INTENTIONAL ORGANIZATIONWRITINGWORDSSHELFABOUTCONTACTWITH ALL OF YOUR LIGHT Here, lessons from Pépite and Jolyn. Jun 13, 2017. A sober list of the essentials of success and other affirmations from the journal of Octavia Butler. Read them as the necessary juxtapositions they are: “ specific goals ” and “ adaptability ,” “ cooperation ”paired with “
BOBULATE - EVERYTHING ABOUT LIZ Liz is part designer, part educator, and full-time dog owner. Liz is Vice President of Design for NPR, overseeing and guiding both the visual and user experience across NPR-branded digital platforms and content. She is chair and co-founder of the MFA in Interaction Design program at the School of Visual Arts. She is advisor toBOBULATE
Danzico is part information architect, part usability analyst, and part editor. As an independent information architecture consultant, she traces the roots of her craft back to her parents.BOBULATE - WRITING
Danzico is part information architect, part usability analyst, and part editor. As an independent information architecture consultant, she traces the roots of her craft back to her parents. BOBULATE - FOR INTENTIONAL ORGANIZATION If you work for a company, force yourself to take the maximum allotted days. If you work for yourself, take at least five days for every year you’ve been working, within reason. Keep 10-20% of your day, every day, free. Don’t schedule 10-20% of your time at all. Leave yourself open for the unexpected.BOBULATE - WORDS
Gastrotypographicalassemblage . Steven Heller lets us in on the history of a wall of 1,450 letters:. The Gastrotypographicalassemblage was the 11-meter-wide, handmade, wooden typographic wall that hung in the CBS cafeteria in New York designed by Lou Dorfsman. The custom type created by Herb Lubalin and Tom Carnase and containing almost 1500 individual characters. BOBULATE - INTERACTIVITY Douglas Adams (in 1999 no less): he reason we suddenly need such a word is that during this century we have for the first time been dominated by non-interactive forms of entertainment: cinema, radio, recorded music and television. Before they came along all entertainment was interactive: theatre, music, sport—the performers and audience were BOBULATE - ANATOMY OF A SALUTATION Just as you wouldn't ignore body language that indicates whether someone is intending to shake your hand or high-five you, nor should you ignore email-greeting intentions — no matter how well you knowsomeone.
BOBULATE - THE ATOMIC SENTENCE Each day, an atomic unit in a living network. Over the years, my atomic sentences have included: “Make sure you believe in what you start as there are only two ways it can end: you will finish it or it will finish you.”. “When you step in the stream, the water doesn’t pass you by (although the risk of drowning doesincrease).”.
BOBULATE - ON STARTING If there is one thing I’m absolutely expert at, it’s not finishing projects. I am a serial starter, an absolutely fantastic middle-of-the-project doer, and an expert project quitter. I know when to quit. And I do. I’ve quit gardening. I’ve quit German, the language, entirely. I’ve quit living in BOBULATE - FOR INTENTIONAL ORGANIZATIONWRITINGWORDSSHELFABOUTCONTACTWITH ALL OF YOUR LIGHT Here, lessons from Pépite and Jolyn. Jun 13, 2017. A sober list of the essentials of success and other affirmations from the journal of Octavia Butler. Read them as the necessary juxtapositions they are: “ specific goals ” and “ adaptability ,” “ cooperation ”paired with “
BOBULATE - EVERYTHING ABOUT LIZ Liz is part designer, part educator, and full-time dog owner. Liz is Vice President of Design for NPR, overseeing and guiding both the visual and user experience across NPR-branded digital platforms and content. She is chair and co-founder of the MFA in Interaction Design program at the School of Visual Arts. She is advisor toBOBULATE
Danzico is part information architect, part usability analyst, and part editor. As an independent information architecture consultant, she traces the roots of her craft back to her parents.BOBULATE - WRITING
Danzico is part information architect, part usability analyst, and part editor. As an independent information architecture consultant, she traces the roots of her craft back to her parents. BOBULATE - FOR INTENTIONAL ORGANIZATION If you work for a company, force yourself to take the maximum allotted days. If you work for yourself, take at least five days for every year you’ve been working, within reason. Keep 10-20% of your day, every day, free. Don’t schedule 10-20% of your time at all. Leave yourself open for the unexpected.BOBULATE - WORDS
Gastrotypographicalassemblage . Steven Heller lets us in on the history of a wall of 1,450 letters:. The Gastrotypographicalassemblage was the 11-meter-wide, handmade, wooden typographic wall that hung in the CBS cafeteria in New York designed by Lou Dorfsman. The custom type created by Herb Lubalin and Tom Carnase and containing almost 1500 individual characters. BOBULATE - INTERACTIVITY Douglas Adams (in 1999 no less): he reason we suddenly need such a word is that during this century we have for the first time been dominated by non-interactive forms of entertainment: cinema, radio, recorded music and television. Before they came along all entertainment was interactive: theatre, music, sport—the performers and audience were BOBULATE - ANATOMY OF A SALUTATION Just as you wouldn't ignore body language that indicates whether someone is intending to shake your hand or high-five you, nor should you ignore email-greeting intentions — no matter how well you knowsomeone.
BOBULATE - THE ATOMIC SENTENCE Each day, an atomic unit in a living network. Over the years, my atomic sentences have included: “Make sure you believe in what you start as there are only two ways it can end: you will finish it or it will finish you.”. “When you step in the stream, the water doesn’t pass you by (although the risk of drowning doesincrease).”.
BOBULATE - ON STARTING If there is one thing I’m absolutely expert at, it’s not finishing projects. I am a serial starter, an absolutely fantastic middle-of-the-project doer, and an expert project quitter. I know when to quit. And I do. I’ve quit gardening. I’ve quit German, the language, entirely. I’ve quit living inBOBULATE - WRITING
Danzico is part information architect, part usability analyst, and part editor. As an independent information architecture consultant, she traces the roots of her craft back to her parents.BOBULATE - WORDS
Gastrotypographicalassemblage . Steven Heller lets us in on the history of a wall of 1,450 letters:. The Gastrotypographicalassemblage was the 11-meter-wide, handmade, wooden typographic wall that hung in the CBS cafeteria in New York designed by Lou Dorfsman. The custom type created by Herb Lubalin and Tom Carnase and containing almost 1500 individual characters. BOBULATE - GRACE NOTES I grew up with a mom and dad who played music every chance they got. Most nights after dinner, one parent would turn up the classical music coming from the local station on the kitchen radio, the other retired to a room to read, while the kids each went off to practice their respective instruments. BOBULATE - WITH SAYING “It goes without saying,” they say. Without expressing simple joy anxiety gratitude flusteredness love anger! or thanks. It just goes without saying, most of the time and we go looking watching waiting not noticing the oak or the ash. The marks in the leaves are the same. Right? Anyway, no one is saying anyway. But BOBULATE - PARKING GARAGE STORIES Parking garage stories The history of the parking garage is one of necessity: An early engineering solution for multistory garages was car elevators These early garages were staffed with professional parking attendants. Drivers weren’t allowed to park their own cars. Some places also offered whole levels just for women so they couldfeel safe
BOBULATE - THE NOT YET PRINCIPLE We were a healthy family. My mom would bring home groceries in paper bags loaded with newly purchased food, mostly plants. But also, more exotically: Oreos, Pretzels, Diet Rite, Golden Grahams, Little Debbie Swiss Rolls, Fritos — a weekly goldmine of snacks into the otherwise snack-less househould. And when one of the four kids rushed BOBULATE - THE STORIES OF THE MATH WINNEBAGO The Math Winnebago. A secret, mandatory club that no ten-year-old wanted to belong to, this mathmobile parked itself, part time, outside the private school. And we, the un-matheletes — while others played and explored, while they ran or laughed — we long divided. Like a required LibraryMobile, we were required to study there, once perweek,
BOBULATE - EVENING EDITION Long before the advent of a 24-hour workweek, before we were looking to multi-task (then to single-task), long before “getting things done” was a thing to get done, we got things done. On summer nights, the fireflies appeared and “dinner’s ready” was a common call. On schooldays, the bell tolled. On television, the screen tuned BOBULATE - AN ACTIVE SILENCE “White space is to be regarded as an active element, not a passive background,” wrote Jan Tschichold in 1930. And just as you cannot ignore white space, you cannot ignore silence, as it’s the white space of conversations. We get anxious about silence. It connotes issues. Stress. Awkwardness. Yet, like Tschichold’s white space,silence is
BOBULATE - SECOND CHANCE FOR A LAST IMPRESSION Forget what you’ve heard about first impressions; it’s the last impressions that count. Last impressions — whether they’re with customer service, an online shopping experience, or a blind date — are the ones we remember. BOBULATE - FOR INTENTIONAL ORGANIZATIONWRITINGWORDSSHELFABOUTCONTACTLIGHT OR DARK MODE TOGGLE Here, lessons from Pépite and Jolyn. Jun 13, 2017. A sober list of the essentials of success and other affirmations from the journal of Octavia Butler. Read them as the necessary juxtapositions they are: “ specific goals ” and “ adaptability ,” “ cooperation ”paired with “
BOBULATE - EVERYTHING ABOUT LIZ Liz is part designer, part educator, and full-time dog owner. Liz is Vice President of Design for NPR, overseeing and guiding both the visual and user experience across NPR-branded digital platforms and content. She is chair and co-founder of the MFA in Interaction Design program at the School of Visual Arts. She is advisor toBOBULATE
Danzico is part information architect, part usability analyst, and part editor. As an independent information architecture consultant, she traces the roots of her craft back to her parents.BOBULATE - WRITING
Danzico is part information architect, part usability analyst, and part editor. As an independent information architecture consultant, she traces the roots of her craft back to her parents. BOBULATE - FOR INTENTIONAL ORGANIZATION If you work for a company, force yourself to take the maximum allotted days. If you work for yourself, take at least five days for every year you’ve been working, within reason. Keep 10-20% of your day, every day, free. Don’t schedule 10-20% of your time at all. Leave yourself open for the unexpected.BOBULATE - WORDS
Gastrotypographicalassemblage . Steven Heller lets us in on the history of a wall of 1,450 letters:. The Gastrotypographicalassemblage was the 11-meter-wide, handmade, wooden typographic wall that hung in the CBS cafeteria in New York designed by Lou Dorfsman. The custom type created by Herb Lubalin and Tom Carnase and containing almost 1500 individual characters. BOBULATE - INTERACTIVITY Douglas Adams (in 1999 no less): he reason we suddenly need such a word is that during this century we have for the first time been dominated by non-interactive forms of entertainment: cinema, radio, recorded music and television. Before they came along all entertainment was interactive: theatre, music, sport—the performers and audience were BOBULATE - ANATOMY OF A SALUTATION Just as you wouldn't ignore body language that indicates whether someone is intending to shake your hand or high-five you, nor should you ignore email-greeting intentions — no matter how well you knowsomeone.
BOBULATE - THE ATOMIC SENTENCE Each day, an atomic unit in a living network. Over the years, my atomic sentences have included: “Make sure you believe in what you start as there are only two ways it can end: you will finish it or it will finish you.”. “When you step in the stream, the water doesn’t pass you by (although the risk of drowning doesincrease).”.
BOBULATE - ON STARTING If there is one thing I’m absolutely expert at, it’s not finishing projects. I am a serial starter, an absolutely fantastic middle-of-the-project doer, and an expert project quitter. I know when to quit. And I do. I’ve quit gardening. I’ve quit German, the language, entirely. I’ve quit living in BOBULATE - FOR INTENTIONAL ORGANIZATIONWRITINGWORDSSHELFABOUTCONTACTLIGHT OR DARK MODE TOGGLE Here, lessons from Pépite and Jolyn. Jun 13, 2017. A sober list of the essentials of success and other affirmations from the journal of Octavia Butler. Read them as the necessary juxtapositions they are: “ specific goals ” and “ adaptability ,” “ cooperation ”paired with “
BOBULATE - EVERYTHING ABOUT LIZ Liz is part designer, part educator, and full-time dog owner. Liz is Vice President of Design for NPR, overseeing and guiding both the visual and user experience across NPR-branded digital platforms and content. She is chair and co-founder of the MFA in Interaction Design program at the School of Visual Arts. She is advisor toBOBULATE
Danzico is part information architect, part usability analyst, and part editor. As an independent information architecture consultant, she traces the roots of her craft back to her parents.BOBULATE - WRITING
Danzico is part information architect, part usability analyst, and part editor. As an independent information architecture consultant, she traces the roots of her craft back to her parents. BOBULATE - FOR INTENTIONAL ORGANIZATION If you work for a company, force yourself to take the maximum allotted days. If you work for yourself, take at least five days for every year you’ve been working, within reason. Keep 10-20% of your day, every day, free. Don’t schedule 10-20% of your time at all. Leave yourself open for the unexpected.BOBULATE - WORDS
Gastrotypographicalassemblage . Steven Heller lets us in on the history of a wall of 1,450 letters:. The Gastrotypographicalassemblage was the 11-meter-wide, handmade, wooden typographic wall that hung in the CBS cafeteria in New York designed by Lou Dorfsman. The custom type created by Herb Lubalin and Tom Carnase and containing almost 1500 individual characters. BOBULATE - INTERACTIVITY Douglas Adams (in 1999 no less): he reason we suddenly need such a word is that during this century we have for the first time been dominated by non-interactive forms of entertainment: cinema, radio, recorded music and television. Before they came along all entertainment was interactive: theatre, music, sport—the performers and audience were BOBULATE - ANATOMY OF A SALUTATION Just as you wouldn't ignore body language that indicates whether someone is intending to shake your hand or high-five you, nor should you ignore email-greeting intentions — no matter how well you knowsomeone.
BOBULATE - THE ATOMIC SENTENCE Each day, an atomic unit in a living network. Over the years, my atomic sentences have included: “Make sure you believe in what you start as there are only two ways it can end: you will finish it or it will finish you.”. “When you step in the stream, the water doesn’t pass you by (although the risk of drowning doesincrease).”.
BOBULATE - ON STARTING If there is one thing I’m absolutely expert at, it’s not finishing projects. I am a serial starter, an absolutely fantastic middle-of-the-project doer, and an expert project quitter. I know when to quit. And I do. I’ve quit gardening. I’ve quit German, the language, entirely. I’ve quit living inBOBULATE - WRITING
Danzico is part information architect, part usability analyst, and part editor. As an independent information architecture consultant, she traces the roots of her craft back to her parents.BOBULATE - WORDS
Gastrotypographicalassemblage . Steven Heller lets us in on the history of a wall of 1,450 letters:. The Gastrotypographicalassemblage was the 11-meter-wide, handmade, wooden typographic wall that hung in the CBS cafeteria in New York designed by Lou Dorfsman. The custom type created by Herb Lubalin and Tom Carnase and containing almost 1500 individual characters. BOBULATE - GRACE NOTES I grew up with a mom and dad who played music every chance they got. Most nights after dinner, one parent would turn up the classical music coming from the local station on the kitchen radio, the other retired to a room to read, while the kids each went off to practice their respective instruments. BOBULATE - WITH SAYING “It goes without saying,” they say. Without expressing simple joy anxiety gratitude flusteredness love anger! or thanks. It just goes without saying, most of the time and we go looking watching waiting not noticing the oak or the ash. The marks in the leaves are the same. Right? Anyway, no one is saying anyway. But BOBULATE - PARKING GARAGE STORIES Parking garage stories The history of the parking garage is one of necessity: An early engineering solution for multistory garages was car elevators These early garages were staffed with professional parking attendants. Drivers weren’t allowed to park their own cars. Some places also offered whole levels just for women so they couldfeel safe
BOBULATE - THE NOT YET PRINCIPLE We were a healthy family. My mom would bring home groceries in paper bags loaded with newly purchased food, mostly plants. But also, more exotically: Oreos, Pretzels, Diet Rite, Golden Grahams, Little Debbie Swiss Rolls, Fritos — a weekly goldmine of snacks into the otherwise snack-less househould. And when one of the four kids rushed BOBULATE - THE STORIES OF THE MATH WINNEBAGO The Math Winnebago. A secret, mandatory club that no ten-year-old wanted to belong to, this mathmobile parked itself, part time, outside the private school. And we, the un-matheletes — while others played and explored, while they ran or laughed — we long divided. Like a required LibraryMobile, we were required to study there, once perweek,
BOBULATE - EVENING EDITION Long before the advent of a 24-hour workweek, before we were looking to multi-task (then to single-task), long before “getting things done” was a thing to get done, we got things done. On summer nights, the fireflies appeared and “dinner’s ready” was a common call. On schooldays, the bell tolled. On television, the screen tuned BOBULATE - AN ACTIVE SILENCE “White space is to be regarded as an active element, not a passive background,” wrote Jan Tschichold in 1930. And just as you cannot ignore white space, you cannot ignore silence, as it’s the white space of conversations. We get anxious about silence. It connotes issues. Stress. Awkwardness. Yet, like Tschichold’s white space,silence is
BOBULATE - SECOND CHANCE FOR A LAST IMPRESSION Forget what you’ve heard about first impressions; it’s the last impressions that count. Last impressions — whether they’re with customer service, an online shopping experience, or a blind date — are the ones we remember.Skip to content
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Feb 7, 2018
> If you think about what you’re here to do in life, the answer is > probably not ‘get really good at time management’. > That’s Jocelyn K. Glei after interviewing Oliver Burkeman on this > unmissable podcast episode, “Against Time Management > .” She adds, “Maybe > getting overly obsessed about time management is really just a > sleight of hand. One which we spend all our energy focusing on a > difficult task that we will inevitably never succeed at – in this > case, controlling time — as a distraction from the more difficult > task of confronting what we’re really here on earth to do.” Take > your time getting there, but do hurry to listen to the episode in> its entirety.
ODE TO WEATHER
Jan 3, 2018
Cold weather is always a giant surprise. “_I can’t believe how much it snowed!_” or “_Can you believe how cold it is_!” This utter disbelief extends to all seasons: “_I can’t get over how hot it is_.” And so on. When it comes to weather, we have a beginner’s mind. We approach each season as a blank slate, a wholesale dropping of our expectations, opening ourselves to be astonished by something as simple as temperature or precipitation. Could we apply the same open expectations to our work? To our relationships? Perhaps then, we can be as surprised by everyday interactions as we are with the daily forecast.Dec 28, 2017
> I have decided that the digital watch is the perfect symbol of an > imbalance in outlook in our day. It tells us only what time it is > now, at this instant, as if that were all anyone would wish or need > to know. …. is also a clock with two hands and an > old-fashioned face, the kind that shows what time it is now … what > time it used to be … and what time it will become. > I often find myself explaining why I wear a small, non-digital watch > and this, from David McCullough, sums it up perfectly. WITH ALL OF YOUR LIGHTNov 22, 2017
> Always go for a run even if it’s raining.>
> Enjoy the journey>
> never forget to play>
> and feel the joy of life.>
> Jump for joy when you’re happy.>
> Surround yourself with the people you love.>
> Live in the moment,>
> have boundless energy.>
> Listen more than you talk.>
> But when you do talk, speak from the heart.>
> It’s never too late to learn.>
> Look for the best in everyone>
> and be loyal.
>
> Love unconditionally>
> and with all of your light, all of the time. When things feel complex, murky, convoluted, dark, lonely, we have the unrequited companionship of our dog friends to lead us. Here, lessons from Pépite and Jolyn .Jun 13, 2017
A sober list of the essentials of success and other affirmations from the journal of Octavia Butler.
Read them as the necessary juxtapositions they are: “_specific goals_” and “_adaptability_,” “_cooperation_” paired with “_self-reliance_.” Hurry off for more on the life, work, and influence of science fiction writer Octavia Butler over at Radio Imagination.
CONFIDENCE TO DIVERGEMar 9, 2017
> If you spend your life sitting in a cubicle and passing papers, one > day is bound to blend unmemorably into the next — and disappear. > That’s why it’s important to change routines regularly, and take > vacations to exotic locales, and have as many new experiences as > possible that can serve to anchor our memories. Creating new > memories stretches out psychological time, and lengthens our > perception of our lives. That’s Jonathan Foer in _Moonwalking with Einstein_ . As someone who deeply trusts routine, I admit to using it. It’s not routine I love actually, but what it begets. Routine gives way to novelty. To variation. Without homogeneity, there would be no variation. It is the mechanics of sameness in some areas of our life that allows us wild diversity in others. Foer goes on to say, “_Monotony collapses time; novelty unfolds it._” Without the foundation of monotony, we would not have the confidence to diverge. THE THING ABOUT LONG-TERM RELATIONSHIPSJan 14, 2017
As we age together, New York and I hold one another up when we fall down; we finish one another’s sentences. When we have successes together, we celebrate in the wild forests of the park, along the carousel under the bridge, in the urban ocean, next to the little red lighthouse near the north point.> _See also_:
> This is New York>
We celebrate together, the city and me, as we protect and trust our relationship like no other. I arrived, looking to the city for answers, solitude, assignment, reward, punctuation to a sentence not yet written. The city, in turn, returned untempered possibilities. The thing about long-term relationships is: you have to hold on. THE ENTIRETY OF A LIFEDec 27, 2016
_“You only get to keep what you refuse to let go of.”_ That’s Jonathan Safran Foer, in his new novel, _Here I Am_.
Memories — more than any other capacity — inspire us, ground us, teach us, and revisited years later, provide us guidance home.> _See also_:
> Margins
We keep coming home to memories to try to look again. What memory represents, not clearly, but in full gray tones, is hope. Hope that life moves on, that forward motion is inevitable, that we learn, thatwe will be.
One can only hope that one’s senses, intuitions, become sharpened over time such that they benefit the entirety of a life. Sometimes people overlap only briefly and don’t get the benefit of that acuity. But the wisdom those people impart can leave residue that brings light to an entire life. Memories are a starting point for hope. Where they lead is up to us. THE TRIUMPH OF THE SMALLDec 18, 2016
Sometime around 1995, we changed. We changed because the Internet seemed to move from the unknown and unreachable to the possible. A prosumer activity to a consumer activity. It was open. It was available. And most who weren’t already there, wanted to be therefor its promise.
In 1995, amid my excitement over what could be digital, I was still reading two different newspapers over breakfast each morning and listening to two different public radio stations in two different parts of the house. While not efficient, the gaps and differences between the reporting taught me about opinion. About choice. About editorial decision-making. And about truth. Sometime around 2007, we changed again. In 2007, the digital possible moved from our desktops to our hands. Everything was indeed possible, just as they said in 1995. While still thrilling to receive a handwritten letter or a telephone call, perhaps even more enchanting was an email. A ping straight into our everyday that did not obey the rhythms or etiquette of the postman, the workday, or dinnertime. Meantime, sometime between then and now, people returned to craft. Amid some uncertainty out in the world, people returned to making. Retreating into handmade objects, slow processes, face-to-face friendships and pleasures, people demonstrated that while we can’t change the world through artisanal coffee, we can reinforce the human values that seemed unrequited through rectangular glass. Sometime around 2016, we changed again. Or rather, we began a media evolution that would continue for years to come. Public blurred with private. Truth blurred with fiction. Celebrity blurred with identity. Purpose blurred with perception. And sometime around 2017, we will change again. The new year will bring a different kind of retreat. Rather than retreating into making or craft, we will retreat into smaller and more nuanced connections. Into quality over quantity. Into the single story over collections of stories. Into the subtle over the general. Into the singular datapoint over big data. Into attention over distraction. 2017 will ring triumphs for the small and true, the richness of a single moment, and a celebration of what is, rather than what is not. _First written for Nieman Lab,
Predictions for Journalism 2017._
THE NOT YET PRINCIPLEAug 9, 2016
We were a healthy family. My mom would bring home groceries in paper bags loaded with newly purchased food, mostly plants. But also, more exotically: Oreos, Pretzels, Diet Rite, Golden Grahams, Little Debbie Swiss Rolls, Fritos — a weekly goldmine of snacks into the otherwise snack-less househould. And when one of the four kids rushed to tear open a package, we heard the same sound. “_Not yet_.” The not yet sound effect happened not only with groceries, but with anything new. New clothes still with tags hung in every closet. Letters sat unopened. Paitence truly was a virtue, delayed gratification embodied. New snacks, and all new things, were for thefuture, not now.
This wasn’t the experience I saw around me. Most memorably, at 16,my best friend
received a
new red convertible because she passed her drivers’ test. Later, after perhaps borrowing my parents’ stationwagons one too many times, I received a trusty (old) hatchback with four speeds and an AM/FM radio. If I had received a new car at that age, my parents reasoned, what would I have to look forward to? They wanted me to feel what it was like to do it myself. The time for a new car was not yet. They were right (of course). Some years later, as is the case with many childhood things, I got it. Practicing waiting is a lifelong practice since, as it turns out, impatience has a particular gravitational pull. But after all that waiting, finding or opening or having that once-future thing feels very much present. And that is worth waiting for.GRACE NOTES
Jul 7, 2016
I grew up with a mom and dad who played music every chance they got. Most nights after dinner, one parent would turn up the classical music coming from the local station on the kitchen radio, the other retired to a room to read, while the kids each went off to practice their respective instruments. One child on the upstairs piano, one on the downstairs piano, another in the TV room practicing a wind instrument. They took the kids to piano lessons, French Horn lessons, saxaphone lessons, flute, clarinet, whichever instrument struck our fancy. For some period of years, all kids were required to take two instruments, so mathmatically, our practice sessions took most of the weeknight evening not already taken up by homework. But the house was, interminablely, filled with “music.” My mother was a whistler and when not actually playing the violin, she was whistling her way around the house, making certain no room was unfilled with sound. Every morning about 5AM my father would rise first and start tea or coffee, making the most of what little solitude one could find in the house. (For years, I also woke at 5AM to “keep my father company,” thinking he was lonely. Not until I had kids in my own house did I realize those early solo hours were not lonely, but intentional — a needed respite from the clamor of everyday life.) Learning to play music is an long exercise learning to to be kind to yourself. As your fingers stumble to keep up with your eyes and ears, your brain will say unkind things to the rest of you. And when this tangle of body and mind finally makes sense of a measure or a melody, there is peace. Or, more accurately, harmony. And like the parents who so energetically both fill a house with music and seek its quietude, both are needed to make things work. As with music, it takes a lifetime of practice to be kind to yourself. Make space for that practice, and the harmony will emerge.THAT MORNING
Apr 11, 2016
Whose life is this anyway? What is directing the birds’ flight and the clouds’ path? What made the mornings?That morning,
the one I heard from where I was lying,situated still,
deep in duvet,
listening to hear whether it was sunny or raining, constructing a scene outside from the sounds— a tree in white bloom, a neighbor walking a poorly behaving dog,a zagging car,
a flamboyant bird—I wondered,
whose life is this anyway?Yet now,
I know exactly whose life it is,and I join them,
in all their bloom and occasional misbehavior,in all their being,
feeling gratitude for having a choice, feeling silence and idleness, being present for morning, being present for the good ones, for coffee, for truth, for cereal, for everything that comes now.POSTS NAVIGATION
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ABOUT LIZ DANZICO
Danzico is part information architect, part usability analyst, and part editor. As an independent information architecture consultant, she traces the roots of her craft back to her parents. According to Liz, “Growing up at least a little information architect in Northeastern Pennsylvania gave me an organizational advantage over myfriends.” More
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