Timoni West is a web designer in San Francisco.
This is her blog.

Examine her portfolio here, find some new music, or follow her on Twitter, Flickr, or other places around the internet.

Posts about the future
August 8th, 2011

Simply put, we can’t keep preparing students for a world that doesn’t exist. We can’t keep ignoring the formidable cognitive skills they’re developing on their own. And above all, we must stop disparaging digital prowess just because some of us over 40 don’t happen to possess it. An institutional grudge match with the young can sabotage an entire culture.

When we criticize students for making digital videos instead of reading “Gravity’s Rainbow,” or squabbling on Politico.com instead of watching “The Candidate,” we are blinding ourselves to the world as it is.

Education Needs a Digital-Age Upgrade. If you couldn’t tell, I love browbeating older generations. And yes, I hope to remember this when I am an older generation.

January 14th, 2011

Imagine it’s 1995: almost no one but Gordon Gekko and Zack Morris have cellphones, pagers are the norm; dial-up modems screech and scream to connect you an internet without Google, Facebook, or YouTube; Dolly has not yet been cloned; the first Playstation is the cutting edge in gaming technology; the Human Genome Project is creeping along; Mir is still in space; MTV still plays music; Forrest Gump wins an academy award and Pixar releases their first feature film, Toy Story. Now take that mindset and pretend you’re reading the first page of a new sci-fi novel:

The year is 2010. America has been at war for the first decade of the 21st century and is recovering from the largest recession since the Great Depression. Air travel security uses full-body X-rays to detect weapons and bombs. The president, who is African-American, uses a wireless phone, which he keeps in his pocket, to communicate with his aides and cabinet members from anywhere in the world. This smart phone, called a “Blackberry,” allows him to access the world wide web at high speed, take pictures, and send emails.

It’s just after Christmas. The average family’s wish-list includes smart phones like the president’s “Blackberry” as well as other items like touch-screen tablet computers, robotic vacuums, and 3-D televisions. Video games can be controlled with nothing but gestures, voice commands and body movement. In the news, a rogue Australian cyberterrorist is wanted by world’s largest governments and corporations for leaking secret information over the world wide web; spaceflight has been privatized by two major companies, Virgin Galactic and SpaceX; and Time Magazine’s person of the year (and subject of an Oscar-worthy feature film) created a network, “Facebook,” which allows everyone (500 million people) to share their lives online.

October 14th, 2009
I’d be fat and have soft girlie hands, so I’m sure I could pull of some scam that I was a king from some far off land who had been mistakenly abandon, and they’d all take care of me.

Jeff Akston answers Kottke’s question: “How would you survive if suddenly transported back to 1000 AD?”, via Survival tips for the Middle Ages

That’s totally my plan too! (Also, I’ll have way better teeth than everybody my age.)

September 29th, 2009

Microsoft’s Courier Tablet | Blog | Nick Finck | UX/IA Pro, Speaker, and Community Cultivator.

If you haven’t watched this video yet, I definitely recommend it. I find it reassuring—it indicates that even if the technology isn’t currently available, we all apparently want the same kind of portable, book-like personal computer.

One thing that’s strikingly missing from this demo, though, is examples of sharing info. I rarely want to save an image just for my own personal reference; I’ll put it on delicious or Tumblr or ffffound or Twitter, tagged, with context, but available for anybody to see.

April 15th, 2009

It’s like heaven!