This Gorgeous Game Teaches You the History of Typography | Gizmodo


Do you like type? Did you go see the movie Helvetica and break out in tears of joyful satisfaction at the end credits? Do you have a graphic designer cousin who taught you what sans serif meant, and did you think it was fascinating? You’re going love Type:Rider.

This new game for iOS and Android takes the history of typography and transforms it into a beautifully mesmerizing game.

Then there’s the typography. For each asterisk you collect, you unlock a piece of the history of typography from cave paintings to Comic Sans. Each level represents a different period in human history starting with “Origins” followed by “Gothic” which jumps in around Gutenberg’s time.

Read: This Gorgeous Game Teaches You the History of Typography | Gizmodo.

Type:Rider – TRAILER – EN from Cosmografik on Vimeo.

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Russia Launching New Search Engine Sputnik to Compete With Google | Mashable


Rostelecom, the country’s state-controlled telecom service, has been charged with creating a search engine to compete with the likes of Google, as well as well local search-engine leader Yandex, which is based in the Netherlands, according to Reuters.

Read: Russia Launching New Search Engine Sputnik to Compete With Google | Mashable.

Adults Reading YA Novels, 7 Unconventional Reasons to Read, VPL Bring Books Back Amnesty Week, Girl Donates 1 MM Books


Are you a YA addict? Jezebel says you should Never Be Ashamed of Being an Adult Into Young Adult Novels.

Beyond the simple pleasure of reading here are 7 Unconventional Reasons Why You Absolutely Should Be Reading Books | HuffPost Books

Vancouver Library offers amnesty for readers facing overdue fines | The Vancouver Sun. Bring your books back Oct. 21-27 in person to have book fines cleared from your library card.

Heartwarming story of determination. Maria Keller, 13-Year-Old Minnesota Girl, Donates 1 Million Books | HuffPostBooks

The Future Of Storytelling Is About To Get Wild | ReadWrite


Many of us go about our lives constantly surrounded by screens, immersed in various “stories”: movies, TV shows, books, plot-driven video games, news articles, advertising, and more. Whether we realize it or not, we’re creating new behaviors, routines, mindsets, and expectations around what we watch, read or play—which in turn presents new challenges and opportunities for creators and marketers.

In other words, while the fundamentals of good storytelling remain the same, technology is changing how stories can be told. But what does that mean exactly?

Since last year, Latitude, a strategic insights consultancy, has been conducting an ongoing Future of Storytelling initiative to understand what audiences want for the long haul. Below are eight predictions for the future of storytelling based on what we found. (More information about Latitude’s multi-phase research project is available here.)

  1. Stories Come Out Of The Screen, Into The Physical World
  2. Characters Will Become Connections
  3. Stories Will Unfold From Different Vantage Points
  4. Stories Will Be Told 24/7
  5. Storytelling Goes Bottom-Up
  6. Stories Will Make The World A Better Place
  7. Videos Will Offer One-Click Storefronts
  8. Passive Or Active Experience—It’ll Be Your Choice

Read: The Future Of Storytelling Is About To Get Wild | ReadWrite.

Latitude - Characters Will Become Connections

Librarian Tattoo Calendar Challenges Stereotypes (PHOTOS) | Emily Grace Mehrer | HuffPost Books


The Rhode Island Library Association (RILA) is challenging people to check their preconceived library notions at the door. RILA’s fall fundraising plans include the launch of the first ever Tattooed Librarians of the Ocean State 2014 calendar, which features twelve librarians and library workers representing the many working professionals who are proud of their career, their ink, and the stories they tell.

Tattooed Librarians

Read: Librarian Tattoo Calendar Challenges Stereotypes (PHOTOS) | Emily Grace Mehrer | HuffPost Books.

Andrew Fitzgerald: Adventures in Twitter fiction | TED.com


In the 1930s, broadcast radio introduced an entirely new form of storytelling; today, micro-blogging platforms like Twitter are changing the scene again. Andrew Fitzgerald takes a look at the (aptly) short but fascinating history of new forms of creative experimentation in fiction and storytelling.

via Andrew Fitzgerald: Adventures in Twitter fiction | Video on TED.com.

Digital Comic Books Offer Students New Ways of Learning | Mashable


Comic book lovers and educators got on stage for two different panels at New York Comic Con yesterday to talk both about how comic books can ignite classroom discussion and how librarians can digitally bring those beloved books into schools.

Common Core, a new set of national curriculum standards that teachers nationwide are advised to follow, accepts graphic novels as a medium that instructors can use to teach students. But Nathan Tubbs, a sixth grade science teacher in Brooklyn, is excited by how comic books can turn kids who would otherwise never pick up a book into avid readers, even if that reading isn’t directly associated with class.

Read the full story: Digital Comic Books Offer Students New Ways of Learning | Mashable.

Wiki editing session at Brown University recognizes women in science | Brown University


For generations, including this one, women in science have remained underrepresented and underrecognized. On Oct. 15, 2013, from 3 p.m. to 8:30 p.m, people who want to change that can gather at a Wikipedia “edit-a-thon” to increase the representation of women in science and technology. The event marks Ada Lovelace Day, named for the 19th-century female scientist who pioneered computational programming.

Read: Wiki editing session at Brown University recognizes women in science | Brown University News and Events

Ada Lovelace Day Edit-a-Thon

McDonalds to stuff kids books into Happy Meals next month | USA Today


McDonalds, the kingpin of fast food and lightning rod for consumer activist groups, plans to distribute more than 20 million paperback books inside its Happy Meals in the U.S. during the two-week period between Nov. 1 and 14. 

Snips:

[T]he four books are based on McDonald’s own animated animals, including a goat, ant, dodo bird and, yes, a dinosaur…The books, whose titles include The Goat Who Ate Everything and Doddi the Dodo Goes to Orlando, will focus on nutrition, imagination and active play.

McComb says McDonald’s will partner with literacy non-profit Reading Is Fundamental to give out an additional 100,000 books. The Nov. 1 roll-out is a tie-in with National Family Literacy Day, she says. Each book is 24-28 pages. McDonald’s declined to give a dollar value for each book.

Read: McDonalds to stuff kids books into Happy Meals next month | USA Today.

Kate Spade Library Inspired Goodies


Librarians love to celebrate their profession. We spend thousands of dollars getting a Masters degree for what is arguably a notoriously difficult profession to acquire a salary, and even a job, equal to our educational investment. So its great to see designer Kate Spade produce some library inspired goodies. Anything that promotes the profession can only be good. Kate Spade, how about a nice retail discount for librarians, so we can afford to purchase one of these goodies?

Hipster/sexy librarian trope glasses bangle, ring or necklace. There are also studs.

This necklace is cute and sweet with the inscription “Boys Make Passes At Girls In Glasses”

Carry books and your eReader in this handbag and shopper. A small zip purse “Georgie” is available too.

This little owl will watch over your change. Some more wise owl stuff.

Instead of your plastic iPhone cover how about this leather one.

For your iPad.

Or this card catalog inspired case.

Like books and bright colours? This scarf may be for you.

Three book clutch offerings. There was a lovely Pride & Prejudice clutch but of course its already sold out.