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  • bbglasses:

    Go for it everyday in big and little ways.

    Source: zenpencils.com
    • 2 months ago
    • 54329 notes
  • wired:

Apple officially trademarked its store design last week, an endeavor the company has been pursuing since May 2010.
After being rejected twice by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, which claimed the store design was not “inherently distinctive,” Apple submitted additional materials and drawings, and gained the trademark on its mall-centric, rectangular store layouts.

    wired:

    Apple officially trademarked its store design last week, an endeavor the company has been pursuing since May 2010.

    After being rejected twice by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, which claimed the store design was not “inherently distinctive,” Apple submitted additional materials and drawings, and gained the trademark on its mall-centric, rectangular store layouts.

    Source: Wired
    • 4 months ago
    • 140 notes
  • colchrishadfield:

Our atmosphere acts as a lens, distorting the sun as it crosses the horizon.

    colchrishadfield:

    Our atmosphere acts as a lens, distorting the sun as it crosses the horizon.

    Source: twitter.com
    • 4 months ago
    • 2808 notes
  • colchrishadfield:

Our atmosphere acts as a lens, distorting the sun as it crosses the horizon.

    colchrishadfield:

    Our atmosphere acts as a lens, distorting the sun as it crosses the horizon.

    Source: twitter.com
    • 4 months ago
    • 2808 notes
  • thisbigcity:

Could one of India’s biggest slums be considered a sustainable community? Maybe so, argues Rachel Smith, citing sense of place, buzzing atmosphere and active citizens. What do you think? Can a slum be a sustainable community?

    thisbigcity:

    Could one of India’s biggest slums be considered a sustainable community? Maybe so, argues Rachel Smith, citing sense of place, buzzing atmosphere and active citizens. What do you think? Can a slum be a sustainable community?

    Source: thisbigcity.net
    • 4 months ago
    • 41 notes
  • “Dharavi, one of India’s biggest slums, is a mixed-use self-contained residential and commercial ‘development’ with a guesstimated population in excess of 1 million. It has a real, and very genuine, sense of community. It has a sense of purpose, its full of people with spirit and determination but most of all it has that ‘sense of place’ that adorns Australian property development and real estate marketing materials.”
    — Rachel Smith considers whether one of India’s biggest slum has more sense of community than the Australian city she lives in (via thisbigcity)
    Source: thisbigcity
    • 4 months ago
    • 35 notes
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