David Lidsky's Blog, page 4883

February 11, 2010

Infographic: The Ten Most Expensive Pieces of Art Ever Sold

The cheapest comes in at $72.8 million. Zoinks.

 Transparency


Last week, a mysterious rich man paid $104.3 million for a six-foot tall sculpture by Alberto Giacometti, making it the most expensive piece of art ever sold. Following that news, GOOD and graphic-design firm Karlssonwilker created an infographic of the ten most expensive pieces of art of all time. (Full-size here.) (The title, Not-So-Starving Artists, is deceiving because it's hard to starve if you're all dead. The real lucre goes to...

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on February 11, 2010 10:11

Watch Your Back, Brad Grey--Chinese Cinema Ready to Take on the World

Banquet


More and more Chinese industry is starting to look like America in the early part of the 20th century. First their car business began booming-- sales in January were up an astounding 124% over the same period a year earlier. Now, that other distinctly American industry is taking robust hold in China: film.


In some ways, of course, the Chinese fascination with and skill in creating memorable films is nothing new--this is the country, after all, that gave the world martial arts flicks and the...

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on February 11, 2010 10:09

The View From 2020: A Datasnap From the Near Future

Graham Button


I'm voice-writing this in a rented media pod on the beach in Zanzibar.


Yup, I'm back in school--Microsoft U, the old alma mater, doing a Master's, my second--this time in NGO Studies. Don't get me wrong, I loved the marine development work, but all that hover-jetting to the North Atlantic wave farms was just too much ass-time for me.


I decided to do it down here for the kiting--the thermals from these new wind patterns are insane. I'd always wanted to see the Maldives but I was too...

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on February 11, 2010 10:05

Boston's Walking Innovation Tour, Complete With Zuckerburgers!

MIT


Last week, we reported on why you should start a company in Boston, citing the city's large supply of smart, creative people. Now Boston.com has created an innovation tour modeled after the Freedom Trail. As you might expect, most of he tour stops are in Cambridge, home to Harvard and MIT. Noteworthy stops include Akamai's command center (#4), without which, there would basically be no Internet, MIT's Media Lab (#5), the center that spawned One Laptop for Child and E-Ink, and drug-maker...

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on February 11, 2010 10:00

Facebook's Ad Plans: Tackling Google Head-On

facebook ads


There's news that Facebook is releasing a new version of its Ad Conversion tool for advertisers to see how well their placements are going. Interesting stuff, if you're an advertiser. But the back story is huge: Facebook is tackling Google.


Basically Facebook is enabling its advertising partners to get the detailed low-down on the return on investment they're getting from ad placements on Facebook--the tool allows you to "track activity that happens on your Web site as a result of someone...

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on February 11, 2010 09:57

iPad Rumor Mill: Hulu, $1 TV Shows, and Still No Camera

ipad


We may know of its official existence now, but the the rumors surrounding the iPad haven't died down since its announcement. If anything, they've got more intense. In the latest crop: $1 TV shows, Hulu, definitely no camera, and the FCC.


$1 TV Shows in iTunes


This one's coming from the Financial Times, which has sometimes been near the target with Apple rumors, and it centers on pricing of TV shows on iTunes. According to the FT, Apple's reported to be moving from its $1.99 standard...

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on February 11, 2010 09:56

George Lois on MTV's Changes to His Original Logo: Less Snookie, More Stones

Exclusive: George Lois, the ad man behind the original "I want my MTV" campaign weighs in on the new logo. "The visuals they're using now are of those silly reality TV people, instead of talent like David Bowie."

MTVWe've watched it coming from a mile away, with one reality show after another eclipsing good ol' fashioned music videos, but now it's official: MTV is no longer music television. The new logo is cropped and scaled to fit today's 16:9 aspect ratio TVs versus the old 4:3 standard, and...

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on February 11, 2010 09:00

How the iPad Might Bring Us Back to Our Print Roots

iPad


I'm going to admit that I'm excited about the iPad. And from the buzz it seems I might be alone on this one. I'm seeing comments that range from, "That's it?" to "This is an iPhone with a larger screen." Adding to the thoughtful sentiments are calls for the heads of AT&T executives for their sub par network service. I've got my pitchfork and torch in hand and am ready for the AT&T witchhunt, but I'm putting them down to use an iPad first.


My excitement doesn't brew from iPad's functionality...

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on February 11, 2010 09:00

Infographic of the Day: Twitter's Explosive Growth, Behind the Scenes

A mesmerizing look at the programming that's gone into creating Twitter.

twitter

Setting up Twitter was just a matter of building the thing and then watching it explode, right? Not even close: To make sure the operation can handle an exponentially growing user base, the code has to constantly revised and improved.

To illustrate that, Ben Sandofsky, an engineer at Twitter, ran the site's code through Code Swarm, a data viz program that tracks programming changes (a little bit like tracking redline...

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on February 11, 2010 08:40

Loving Thy Neighbors: American Volunteer Ranks Swell

[image error]

Infographic: Rob Vargas


One happy consequence of last year's rough economic season was that more people had more time on their hands--and instead of playing Wii all day (though there was, undoubtedly, plenty of that, too), they decided to chip in, help out, do good. Volunteering in America has, in fact, been on a three year run. Here we illuminate the ways in which this spirit is manifesting itself. Hopefully it will persist as the economy improves and more people return to work.






 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on February 11, 2010 08:28

David Lidsky's Blog

David Lidsky
David Lidsky isn't a Goodreads Author (yet), but they do have a blog, so here are some recent posts imported from their feed.
Follow David Lidsky's blog with rss.