Ur Mom: Correcting The Grammar Of Graffitti

That should be “Your mom.” A brilliant ad campaign for a London tutoring company takes to the streets to show people the correct way to write mean things about other people’s mothers on walls.

To participate in the global culture of cool, learning English is a must. But the process of learning English itself isn’t very cool.

An English tutoring company is trying to rebrand English grammar with a provocative campaign featuring pictures of London graffiti, marked up for grammatical correctness. Online tutoring site The Tutor Crowd has a Tumblr dedicated to the imagery: someone’s scrawl of “SO HOT RITE NOW” has the ‘E’ excised and a ‘GH’ added in. An apostrophe is added to help express something unprintable about “Sams” / “Sam’s” dad. You get the idea.

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via Fast Company http://www.fastcoexist.com/1681661/ur-mom-correcting-the-grammar-of-graffitti?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+fastcompany%2Fheadlines+%28Fast+Company%29

Look Closely At These Chinese Landscapes, Which Are Really Photos Of Landfills

The artist Lao Yu disguises pictures of China’s environmental problems in the tropes of traditional Chinese art.

Landscape paintings have a rich history in China, but for many westerners who aren’t fluent in the tradition (read: many of us), there’s maybe a tendency to look them with a certain myopia–to see them as tropes or emblems of exotica, or simply to fail to give them the attention they deserve. But the work of contemporary Chinese artist Yao Lu demands that we look closely, lest we miss what’s actually there.

From the right vantage point, the images in Yao’s “New Landscapes” series bear a striking similarity to classic Chinese landscapes, from their wispy clouds floating between mountain peaks, right down to the presence of traditional red “appreciation seals,” small stamps that historically functioned as signatures for artists and studios. But those bucolic settings are in fact digitally altered composite photographs of mounds of garbage that the artist has covered with green mesh. That pastoral hillside? It’s more like a landfill. That babbling brook? A littered roadside.

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via Fast Company http://www.fastcoexist.com/1681554/look-closely-at-these-chinese-landscapes-which-are-really-photos-of-landfills?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+fastcompany%2Fheadlines+%28Fast+Company%29

Chinese Celebrities Accused Of Apple-Smearing Campaign

Strange how a bunch of Chinese celebrities all decided to dislike Apple at 8:20 p.m.

There appears to be something rotten in the state of Weibo (China’s 140-character social network rip-off of Twitter), and according to a short list of Chinese celebrities that rotten something is Apple. According to Taiwanese film star Peter Ho, for example, Apple has “so many tricks in its after-sales services. As an Apple fan, I’m hurt.” The complaints surfaced after an exposé was broadcast on the official CCTV channel that said Apple was abusing Chinese consumers by not replacing broken iPhones, and instead just fixing them.

But Ho’s tweet had a strange ending: “Post at 8:20″…as if he’d copied and pasted text from an email, perhaps, and accidentally included the instruction to post at that time. Which, coincidentally, was the same time that other celebrities posted anti-Apple comments. Perhaps there’s something rotten in an anti-Apple campaign too.

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via Fast Company http://www.fastcompany.com/3007113/fast-feed/chinese-celebrities-accused-apple-smearing-campaign?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+fastcompany%2Fheadlines+%28Fast+Company%29

Facebook Overhauling News Feeds To Be Content-Specific: Report

Photos, music, and more meant to be easier to find.

Facebook appears poised to overhaul its messy news feed, making it easier for users to filter. The filters will emphasize parts of the feed, like photos from Facebook or Instagram or a music feed. Photos will also be bigger on both the website and mobile site.

Facebook’s filtered music feed could be the most prominent change, as it would bring tighter integration with Spotify or Rdio and Facebook’s social systems, with current track info being shared to friends. There’s also said to be concert data and album releases. This may be a not-so-indirect assault on the newly revamped MySpace, leveraging Facebook’s bigger social networking muscles and enormous user base. It’s also a play to make more money as TechCrunch has said that ad images will be “more vivid,” and, thus, more clickable.

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via Fast Company http://www.fastcompany.com/3006661/tech-forecast/facebook-overhauling-news-feeds-foreground-instagram-spotify-rdio-more-report

Carrie Fisher Will Play Princess Leia–Again–In The New Star Wars Movie

The iconic actress and author is getting back into the bucket of bolts again.

Carrie Fisher is to appear in the new movie in the Star Wars franchise. The actor, who played Princess Leia in the first three George Lucas films, confirmed the news with a simple “Yes,” in a Q&A with Palm Beach Illustrated.

Asked to describe how George Lucas’ sole female part with any lines–bar two–would probably be today, Fisher, no stranger to wit, said this.

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via Fast Company http://www.fastcompany.com/3006660/fast-feed/carrie-fisher-will-play-princess-leia-again-new-star-wars-movie?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+fastcompany%2Fheadlines+%28Fast+Company%29

Chasing Xbox Spying Allegations, Australian Police Raid Potential Hacker’s Home

Microsoft, Sony, Epic Games, Blizzard, and Valve are the big computing and gaming names allegedly involved in the hacker hunt down under.

It’s Xbox meets The X-Files.

TheTechGame.com reports that the home of a West Australian man was raided by eight local police officers and a member of the FBI, apparently connected to allegations of corporate espionage on the next-generation Xbox. The team was armed with a search warrant and a battering ram, which went unused as Dan Henry, a.k.a. online personality and alleged hacker SuperDaE, was at home. The warrant allowed search of all computer materials, and Gizmodo.au says the police took about 10 servers, a decade of hard drives, laptops, and cell phones. Henry is under investigation for corporate espionage relating to the unreleased future Xbox, codenamed Durango.

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via Fast Company http://www.fastcompany.com/3006118/fast-feed/chasing-xbox-spying-allegations-australian-police-raid-potential-hackers-home?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+fastcompany%2Fheadlines+%28Fast+Company%29

An Emoji Translation Of “Moby Dick” Is Now Part Of The Library Of Congress Catalog

An emoji-tastic version of the classic novel has garnered itself a spot in the Library of Congress.

The Library of Congress Tuesday inducted a new version of the classic tome Moby Dick into its archives. The twist? This version is written entirely in emoji, or Japanese emoticons.

Emoji Dick began in 2009 as a Kickstarter project by creator Fred Benenson (a Kickstarter employee himself). Benenson took to Amazon‘s Mechanical Turk to crowdsource a translation of the Herman Melville epic, which is upwards of 212,000 words.

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via Fast Company http://www.fastcompany.com/3006093/fast-feed/emoji-translation-moby-dick-now-part-library-congress-catalog?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+fastcompany%2Fheadlines+%28Fast+Company%29

From Phones To Tablets: 26 Apple Designs That Never Came To Be

In Design Forward, frog design’s founder, Hartmut Esslinger, recounts the inspirations and process behind the computers that revolutionized consumer electronics.

Editors’ note: The following is an excerpt from Design Forward: Creative Strategies for Sustainable Change (Arnoldsche Art Publishers), edited by Hermut Esslinger.

In 1982, Apple was in its sixth year of existence, and Steve Jobs, Apple’s cofounder and Chairman, was twenty-eight years old. Steve, intuitive and fanatical about great design, realized that the company was in crisis. With the exception of the aging Apple IIe, the company’s products were failing against IBM’s PCs. And they all were ugly, especially the Apple III and soon-to-be-released Apple Lisa. The company’s previous CEO, Michael Scott, had created different “business divisions” for each product line, including accessories such as monitors and memory drives. Each division had its own head of design and developed its product line any way it wanted to. As a result, Apple’s products shared little in the way of a common design language or overall synthesis. In essence, bad design was both the symptom and a contributing cause of Apple’s corporate disease. Steve’s desire to end this disjointed approach gave birth to a strategic design project that would revolutionize Apple’s brand and product lines, change the trajectory of the company’s future, and eventually redefine the way the world thinks about and uses consumer electronics and communication technologies.

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via Fast Company http://www.fastcodesign.com/1671718/from-phones-to-tablets-26-apple-designs-that-never-came-to-be?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+fastcompany%2Fheadlines+%28Fast+Company%29

Smartphone Users’ Privacy Betrayed By Their Gadget Sensors, Says Study

Can your accelerometer betray your PIN code?

Research into smartphone security has revealed that your phone’s sensors could help criminals unlock your stolen gadget. And, given that these elements all come as standard on most smartphone models, and are not subject to the same controls as other phone functions, they are a bigger security risk. The study was carried out by a visiting professor at Swarthmore College, who analyzed data captured from a smartphone’s accelerometer–that’s the gadget that analyzes the direction your phone is tilting or moving and turns the screen accordingly, and used for games like Doodle Jump–and found it could be used to work out where someone tapped the screen.

Dr Adam J. Aviv and his team, from the University of Pennsylvania, developed software to analyze the results and, the more guesses it was allowed, the more accurate it became, spotting a user PIN with around 43% of success, and user PIN patterns around 73% of the time. One way of foxing the software, however, was by tapping in the digits while on the move. The added movement, acted as “noise” and went some way to blocking out the patterns.

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via Fast Company http://www.fastcompany.com/3005177/smartphone-users-privacy-betrayed-their-gadget-sensors-says-study?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+fastcompany%2Fheadlines+%28Fast+Company%29

Short Story Shorter: The Most Creative Uses Of Vine (So Far)

Can you tell a story in 6 seconds? A look at the tiny creations of the individual and brand users of Vine so far suggests… maybe.

Ernest Hemingway famously wrote a story that was 6 words long–“For sale: baby shoes, never worn”–and, as legend has it, called it his best work. Now, those prone to Instagramming and Tweeting and GIFing can see how much story they can pack into 6 seconds of video.

Twitter caused a mini sensation last week with the unveiling of its (iOS only, ugh) video-sharing app, Vine. The app allows users to create and share 6-second, looping videos. Users aren’t limited to making straight-up 6-second clips, though; they can also create stop-motion and other effects by capturing and editing a string of shorter snippets.

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via Fast Company http://www.fastcocreate.com/1682294/short-story-shorter-the-most-creative-uses-of-vine-so-far?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+fastcompany%2Fheadlines+%28Fast+Company%29