First Look at RIM’s App Store for BlackBerry Devices

“Aimed to launch on the the BlackBerry Storm’s version 4.7 operating system, the BlackBerry Application Center will allow the user to find, browse and install/upgrade third-party BlackBerry apps hosted by carriers.” Setting aside the fact that it’s aesthetically and typographically anemic compared to Apple’s, I wonder why RIM waited so long to do something like this. Can it really be that the idea didn’t occur to them until after the App Store launched? That they are really only executing in reaction to Apple’s moves instead of trying to get out ahead of the game? If so, a change in approach would seem to be warranted.

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Paid Content: Tina Brown Launches The Daily Beast

“Brown’s high-profile move to the Web from glossy print… [is] meant as a smart one-stop news shop, an effort to break new ground in news aggregation by mixing lots of outbound links with heavy doses of curation and original content.”Iit’s probably too early to tell whether it makes for a compelling user experience, but I’m not bowled over aesthetically, at least.

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Twelve Splash Pages from Will Eisner’s “The Spirit”

In advance of Frank Miller’s adaptation of this significant but little known comics character, these twelve examples are intended “to show once and for all why Miller can’t hope to bring [creator Will Eisner’s] genius to life.” Personally, I’m more optimistic about this film, but these pages do demonstrate Eisner’s visionary and ambitious facility with the comics medium — and make a compelling case for how inherently difficult it would be to translate that genius to the cinema.

Note that many of these splash pages rely on a masterful sense of typographic whimsy; in my opinion, they can hold their own against most of the finest examples in the wider canon of great graphic design. The comics medium in general owes much to Eisner, not least for the fact that he was probably the first and most faithful believer in the long-term potential of comics as a mature art form. So if nothing else, I hope Frank Miller’s film draws more attention to the man’s under-served legacy.

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NYT: New York City, Tear Down These Walls

Times architecture critic Nicolai Ourousoff on removing eyesores from the city’s skylines. “True, the city is close to broke. But even with Wall Street types contemplating the end and construction of new luxury towers grinding to a halt, why give in to despair? Instead of crying over what can’t be built, why not refocus our energies on knocking down the structures that not only fail to bring us joy, but actually bring us down?”

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43 Folders: Learning from “The Wire” to Write Into Your Arc

The estimable Merlin Mann has been writing lately about a surprisingly under-explored topic: how to blog better. This particular post takes a look at what story arcs in “The Wire” can teach bloggers about themes in blog writing. Also includes, at the bottom, a terrific presentation deck outlining these ideas. But really, he had me at “The Wire.”

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