Design Marshall

Introducing Typekit

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"As a Typekit user, you’ll have access to our library of high-quality fonts. Just add a line of JavaScript to your markup, tell us what fonts you want to use, and then craft your pages the way you always have. Except now you’ll be able to use real fonts. This really is going to change web design."

1,000 True Fans

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I'm certainly not the first to comment, and definitely won't be the last, but I had to post something about one of Kevin Kelly's best articles to date. If you're not familiar, Kevin Kelly is a badass. He helped launched Wired magazine back in '93, is now an editor-at-large, and maintains their 'Cool Tools' site. You can read more about him here.

In general the 1,000 true fans is a simple goal, which presents very real challenges to small & large groups. For the small, it's a solid foundation for building your audience; whereas for the large, is a great way of finding your voice.

From the horses mouth:
"A creator, such as an artist, musician, photographer, craftsperson, performer, animator, designer, videomaker, or author - in other words, anyone producing works of art - needs to acquire only 1,000 True Fans to make a living. 

To raise your sales out of the flatline of the long tail you need to connect with your True Fans directly.  Another way to state this is, you need to convert a thousand Lesser Fans into a thousand True Fans.

Assume conservatively that your True Fans will each spend one day's wages per year in support of what you do. That "one-day-wage" is an average, because of course your truest fans will spend a lot more than that.  Let's peg that per diem each True Fan spends at $100 per year. If you have 1,000 fans that sums up to $100,000 per year, which minus some modest expenses, is a living for most folks.

One thousand is a feasible number. You could count to 1,000. If you added one fan a day, it would take only three years. True Fanship is doable. Pleasing a True Fan is pleasurable, and invigorating. It rewards the artist to remain true, to focus on the unique aspects of their work, the qualities that True Fans appreciate..."

Read the rest of 1,000 True Fans at Kevin Kelly's website


Of course they did

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Darren Marshall Wired Frank LLoyd Wright Legos

Leave it to Lego. Fucking badass.

The most awesomest ad network ever

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Some of you may not know this, but I had the honor of interning with Coudal over 8 glorious months in 2007. While I was there,  I mostly packed up orders for Jewelboxing and The CP Swap Meat. There were a few occassions, however, when I broke free from the slightly mundane, to study some of CP's black book ideas. The one I loved the most was the Deck Network. Imagine an advertising network so cool, you'd want to look at all of the ads at once. I'm always excited to see how long some ads run for, and how often others switch out, who's new to the game and sometimes just what in the world the deck is up to next. This time around, lookin' forward to the reader survey; a tribute and parody to finding out who the hell is reading this stuff. I mean where else could you find such awesomeness in 120x90 pixels + 80 characters?

Technorama Facade

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In 2002, Ned Kahn worked with the staff of Technorama, the major science center in Switzerland, and their architects, Durig and Rami, to create a facade for the building which is composed of thousands of aluminum panels that move in the air currents and reveal the complex patterns of turbulence in the wind.

via swiss-miss

Signs

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via http://jennyacosta.tumblr.com