Categories
Toys/Games

Lego timeline

Gizmodo have worked with Lego to produce a full timeline of Lego figures.

This is a bit like taking a walk back through my childhood – I can vividly remember the day I got some of these figures. Unless they’ve been inherited by cousins I definitely have some of those original Space figures, but my favourites were always the Pirates and Castle.

There’s a chance I also have Boba Fett.

(thx to Myers)

Categories
The Web Work

SU websites talk, part 1

Back from the SUM Residential and I’ve started writing up my sessions for the new SUM site but I thought it made sense to stick them up here:

Using your website as a tool to rationalise your organisation by focusing on the user (or: People are stupid)

The Premise

What is a Students’ Union?

Or more importantly what is your Students’ Union? Your members? Your constitution? In the most succinct terms your Union is probably best described as one of those two, but if I asked you to show me your Union in all likelihood you would show me your Union building. Although they both exist physically neither your members as a group nor your constitution really work as something tangible you can think of when considering your Union so in most cases your Union building becomes a tangible anchor for your organisation.

If everything you offered took place in your building then this wouldn’t necessarily be a problem but a lot of what you do as a Union isn’t tied to your building, and this can become a problem when your members may not see themselves as involved with your Union because the activity isn’t taking place with your walls. There’s also the (slightly worrying) fact that quite a lot of your students will never visit your building.

Going back to the original question, “What is a/your Union?” The answer of course is many things, Advice and Welfare Services, Sports clubs, Societies, Staff-Student Liaison Committees, Campaigns, Bars, Clubs, Restaurants, Cafés, Volunteering, Jobs, the list goes on. And the one place they all come together is your website. While a football match no more takes place on your website than it does in your Union your Football Club will (or should) have a presence on your website. As the place where all these disparate arms of your organisation converge your website is the perfect place to rationalise your organisation and better explain what it is you actually do.

This may sound obvious – it should sound obvious – but that doesn’t stop it from not actually being the case. Often more time is spent thinking about a poster for the back of a toilet door than is spent on writing an article for your website. Your website is your most visible asset and it should be the anchor for your organisation.

Categories
Words

“…to which wise men stoop and fools aspire”

This is one for Jonny methinks.

The true punster’s mind cycles through homophones in search of a quip the way small children delight in rhymes or experiment babblingly with language. Accordingly, the least intolerable puns are those that avoid the pun’s essential puerility. Richard Whately, Archbishop of Dublin, was a specialist. He could effortlessly execute the double pun: Noah’s Ark was made of gopher-wood, he would say, but Joan of Arc was maid of Orleans. Some Whately-isms are so complex that they nearly amount to honest jokes: “Why can a man never starve in the Great Desert? Because he can eat the sand which is there. But what brought the sandwiches there? Why, Noah sent Ham, and his descendants mustered and bred.”

Categories
My Doodles

Belated Birthday Robot for Hayley

Categories
Toys/Games

Bunnies & Burrows

It turns out that Watership Down (the film adaptation of which is the perfect tool to instil a fear of trains, old rabbits, black rabbits, snares, cats, dogs, the sun and more in any impressionable child) had a fantasy role-playing adaptation, Bunnies & Burrows:

Bunnies & Burrows was the first role-playing game to allow for non-humanoid play. In addition, it was also the first role-playing game to have detailed martial arts rules (known as “Bun Fu”) and the first attempt at a skill system. For its time, the game was considered “light years” ahead of the Original Dungeons & Dragons.

As attractive as ‘Bun Fu’ sounds I can see why perhaps it didn’t take off. World of Warrencraft anyone?

Categories
Design

Landmine stickers

Clever UNICEF campaign to raise awareness of landmines and their victims.