Author: fish1964

  • Hmm

    RainDelay

    Negative points for rain?

  • Rationing

    This article is painful to read. When people talk about Canada or the UK rationing health care, keep this in mind.

    Clark had to decide: Should she take Lily to the emergency room?

    She called a poison control hotline and the answer was yes: A Dramamine overdose could lead to seizures. The little girl should be monitored. When Clark asked what doctors would likely do, she was told they would likely give her activated charcoal and possibly pump her stomach.

    But Clark knew that the emergency room can be expensive. A few months earlier, she’d gone to the emergency after falling down her friend’s stairs. She ended up with a $1,200 bill that she still hadn’t paid.

    “I’m weighing my options,” Clark says. “She could have a seizure at any moment. It felt terrible, as a parent, to be in the position of having to do that.”

    Clark and her husband decided to give Lily some activated charcoal at home and drive to the emergency room. But they wouldn’t go inside.

    Instead, they pulled their car into the second row of the parking lot, about 100 feet from the entrance.

    https://twitter.com/cbaisa/status/1123400061143126017?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1123400061143126017&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.vox.com%2Fhealth-care%2F2019%2F5%2F10%2F18526696%2Fhealth-care-costs-er-emergency-room

  • Hmm

    Offered without comment…

  • NYC Evolution

    This may be mostly interesting to New Yorkers, but I enjoyed this video which animates the growth of New York from the initial settlements to today. I thought the pace of the video was too slow so I recommend running it at double speed:

    Details on this project here.

  • #LegaCCy

    CC Sabathia is a great pitcher and by all accounts a great person. Fun to see a ton of Yankee fans in Arizona for the milestone 3000th strikeout game. And nice to see #LegaCCy trending on twitter:

    https://twitter.com/MLB/status/1123445290982363137

  • Winner, Winner, Chicken Dinner

    Flagrant work plug post.

    Origami Risk has tons of amazing colleagues. We win all sorts of best places to work awards. Business Insurance has a Break Out Award, for “the next generation of insurance industry leaders”. I would argue that Origami has many folks who deserve this award, but it usually goes to larger insurance firms (brokers, carriers, etc.).

    But this year our very own Minda Rossman (Client Service Team Lead and rock star) won the award. We are crazy super proud of her.

    minda_rossman_200_200shar-100_s_c1_c_t-150x150

  • Logo Wars

    I wasn’t expecting to find a graphic design seminar on the conservative political site The Bulwark, but I did and it’s good. Jonathan V. Last has a compelling discussion of campaign logo design.

    The tl;dr; version is Beto and Mayor Pete good, Kamala and Biden not so good.

    Beto:

    betobeto

    Total consistency for the product mark.

    And the mark itself is incredibly striking. Designer Tony Casas took the candidate’s uncommon nickname, rendered it in a strong, ALL CAPS Abolition font. This gave him roughly a 16:9 ratio block to play with, so he stuck the whole thing inside a rectangle. And then he did something radical: Stark black and white.

    Mayor Pete:

    mayorpete-logos1

    There’s a lot to like here.

    • We have a central design—”Pete” inside an abstracted bridge.
    • That design has been pre-adapted to three different formats: landscape, circle, and square.
    • The designer has an entire color palette for the brand, relying on soft and earthy colors: Primarily blues with a yellow, an orange, and tan/brown/gold.

    Kamala Harris:

    kamala

    On paper, Harris, like Rubio, looks pretty formidable. And like Rubio, she has rolled out her campaign with a dumpster-fire logo. Seriously: It might be the worst political graphic design job in a generation.

    This is part of a good article discussing various logos (and how good Obama’s was). Remember Obama’s?

    obama-reduced

    Why is the Obama logo so great? Let us count the ways:

    • It subverts your color expectations by using a warm, engaging pale blue.
    • It conveys two types of motion: (1) The red road arching ahead into the distance moves your eye along the z-axis while, (2) The haze on the blue “O” gives the sense rising along the y-axis.
    • It gives you pleasing, perfect symmetry: The circular “O” on top with the “Obama ‘08” tag on the bottom framed by the overhanging “O” and “8.”
    • It can be used anywhere: On hats, yard signs, bumper stickers, pins—you could even substitute the logo for the “O” (or the design elements) in any word you wanted to mate to the campaign.

    And finally, today we got Biden’s:

    biden-logos-1

    If you believe Biden’s launch video, he decided to run for president in August of 2017. This logo looks like it was thrown together last night.

    Leave aside the red-striped “E” (which is an off-the-shelf element) and the color palette (which might as well be called “American Politics, Generic”) and just look at the positioning of the circles in this trainwreck. We have four of them—the outer circle, the “O” in “Joe,” and then two zeroes in “2020.”

    These circles should either be balanced or pointing in some sort of thematic direction. Or giving a sense of movement. Instead, they’re arranged haphazardly, like someone just threw darts at a board:

    logo-markup-1

    This scattershot arrangement is why your eye positively hates this logo.

    So many questions. “Am I the only one who thinks this logo makes it look like his name is Jo?” has been posed by multiple people on Twitter.

    I love this stuff…

  • Pigeons are Fast

    Who knew? As a city dweller, I generally consider pigeons dirty creatures. Yet they are smart (from the London Review of Books):

    Pigeons are more intelligent than we give them credit for, one of the few animals — along with great apes, dolphins and elephants — able to pass the mirror self-recognition test. If you mark a pigeon’s wing and let it look in a mirror it will try to remove the mark, realising that what it sees is a reflected image of its own body.

    and fast:

    They can fly extremely fast – up to 110 miles per hour – and with a following wind can cover 700 miles in a single uninterrupted flight (pigeons don’t like to fly at night but can be trained to do so). There are faster birds – peregrine falcons, the pigeon’s main predator, can reach 200 miles per hour on the stoop – but none can fly horizontally, under its own power, as quickly as a pigeon.

    I also only have three free articles this fortnight…

    Screenshot_20190422-182536