Even as an unpaid grad student writing for a school paper, I feel a sense of accountability toward whatever modest readership I might manage to amass. And it seems that some were displeased with what I had to say last week regarding computing! If you missed my point entirely, I can’t help you, but for the rest, I’d like to begin a complementary discussion about modernity and modernism in general. Stanford Daily | previously
2 Comments
good answer! good answer! [clap clap clap.]
The speed of the machine increases the speed of development, and the speed of development becomes so fast the search for meaning becomes an unnecessarily urgent task. Nevertheless, the pressure forces us to use every second of our life to think.
By the way, Minimalist designs by Apple are great and modern in terms of their ingenuity, but I think their arrogant and zealous attitudes have yet to cross the Middle Ages. Every time I discuss Design or User Interface Guidelines on Mac or OS X, I feel I am practicing theology and quoting the Bible, i.e. whatever Steve decided is right, and whatever outlandish is wrong.
Block this user
Are you sure you want to block this user and hide all related comments throughout the site?
Archinect
This is your first comment on Archinect. Your comment will be visible once approved.