I watched Jiro Dreams of Sushi for the third-time last night. I couldn’t help but think about my old branding teacher that told the class to watch it. During my first watch, I just thought she liked sushi. It made me crave sushi for a month after that. A few years later I realized what […]

I decided that I’m going to start teaching myself JavaScript because I want to round out my front-end development skill set. I think it’ll be a good addition to my design skills in general. When I started trying to figure it out I found that when I was trying to make sense of JS, I would try to rephrase what was said in the book in to plain English, as best I could, breaking every little thing down step by step. I started to write down questions in a notebook and then typing them out later, so I can fill in the answers once I figured it out. I started doing this mostly because I have trouble reading and retaining information when trying to read a text screen. For novels and random blog posts this isn’t an issue, but when I’m trying to learn something from an e-book or Internet articles I had to up with an active type of system to retain the information I was trying to learn.

BFA Thesis Project Booklet http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ucllc/fpo/~3/J1-HiDly2YA/bfa-thesis-project.php

The difference between #UX and #UI: explained in cereal #design pic.twitter.com/INNvebHees — Scott Kerr (@scott_kerr) September 1, 2014