Full Motion Video and Websites Inside Print Magazines

Full Motion Video and Websites Inside Print Magazines


”[Making transistors out of plastic rather than silicon] could greatly expand the range of objects that connect to
the Internet, because electronic connections would be handled by a thin film or moldable material, rather than rigid
chips. A thin screen could be bound into a magazine, for instance, and connect wirelessly to a Web site.”

More than a few futurists have predicted the emergence of flexable computer screens and even entire computers that
could be rolled up or folded and stuck in a pocket. With print advertising and the competition between traditional
print and digital news delivery the way they are, why wouldn’t this technology first reach the consumer market in the
vehicle of a print periodical?

God save the magazine industry if advertisers push Quark-based layout artists to begin building motion graphics in
After Effects.




Leave a Reply

R-Echos

Since 2004, R-Echos is an experimental online magazine dedicated to republication; topics vary from biology to graphic design, from ecology to business. It agglomerates anything which is about art, computing, science. His form is made out of collages of texts, links, images, references, videos and sounds - choosen with care to take part to this very personnal publication.

* Electronest

  • About
  • Articles
  • Beta version
  • Categories
  • Defragmentation
  • Defragmentation 2
  • Index
  • Monthly Archives
  • OPML & Links
  • R-Echos.tv
  • Tags
  • Visual Index
  • Visualisation
  • Collections

  • Displaying
  • un-Realisation
  • Physical Interface
  • Augmented Reality
  • Publishing
  • Geometry
  • Visualisation
  • Recently republished | Most Read

    Subscribe in a reader

    Enter your email address:

    Delivered by FeedBurner