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Knowledge Workers Need an Industrial Revolution | DesignMind. Tools and processes for taking back the work week. Information workers waste an inordinate amount of time orchestrating work rather than doing work. Instead of creating new content to drive our businesses, organizations, and missions forward, we spend our time looking for information and people, and then connecting and coordinating them to ensure that good decisions are made, or that other people can do their jobs.

It is all terribly inefficient. There are some obvious moments when this inefficiency is exposed. For example, the technology tools that support our work—from conference bridges to projectors to screens—often fail to function properly, and we waste time fiddling around with them. But there is a deeper, more insidious inefficiency at the heart of information work, and most information workers are not even aware that we have a problem.

Our language betrays our ignorance. Good statistics on this topic are rare. Information work needs its industrial revolution. Sentient Workplace. Home - The Space. The Main Tap. Pattern Tap Library Pattern Tap 80 Patterns Sort By | Type | Style | Device Show Filters Hide Filters Interactive page 404 Typography from Acnplwgl Process Animation from Mega Comunicaçāo Visual Illustrations from Mijlo Form from Mais Pastel Navigation from Mais Pastel Hero Unit Icons from Icon-Works Typography from GCM Navigation from JetBlue Schedule from Startup Turkey Illustration from Injured By A Zombie Icon Navigation From Travel Dynamics Search Bar from Adioso Navigation from Triplagent Menu from colouredlines Form from Scoutzie Illustration from Tillamook Email subscription page from Litmus Hero Banner from Frog Design Case Study from Cooper Home from BooksWork Home from Square Cash Page Layout from MusicMatch Form from Scoutzie Load More Elements Behavior Code Pattern Tap Hundreds of thousands of people come through ZURB University, where they get the training they need to be awesome Product Designers.

Want more? Talk to us @patterntap Not a big talker? Stay in touch Keep up with Pattern Tap news. WILDDESIGN Blog about Design, Innovation, Creativity and cool stuff. Design mind | business. technology. design. Digital Market Asia | Media News | Planning | Strategy | Singapore. David Report. Gizmodo | Digital Lifestyle. Engadget. TreeHugger | Your source for green design & living news, commentary and advice. NOTCOT.ORG. TREND HUNTER - #1 in Trends, 2014 Trend Reports, Fashion Trends, Tech, Style, Design & Pop Culture. The Josh Spear Blog — Trendspotting.

Next Big Thing | William Higham's trends consultancy. The Cool Hunter - Welcome. The Dieline. LS:N Global. WGSN Fashion Trend Forecasting & Analysis | WGSN. Trendwatching.com | Consumer trends and insights from around the world. Synthetic Foods Could Combat Future Shortages. Colorful Madrid artists Remid and Okuda have combined two different aesthetics to create a colorful, breathtaking new style in the Streets of Colour mural series. The series brings vibrant murals to Miami, London, Oslo, Madrid, Brussels and La Rioja. The colorful street art pieces offer expressive love letters of Spanish culture to cities that embrace wine, food, culture and art.

Okuda brings a Cubist sensibility to the murals, painting with geometric shapes and bright neon colors. He specializes in street art, murals, sculptures and installations. His work has been exhibited in Paris, London, New York, Japan, the United Arab Emirates, South Africa, Chile and Brazil. French artist Remid employs a more abstract style, using bright colors and flat objects.

In Miami, the artists brought the Streets of Colour to the Wynwood Arts District with a brilliant 30×190-foot mural. The Streets of Colour is a collaboration of Remed and Okuda with Campo Viejowines. Faith Popcorn's | Brain Reserve. CEB Iconoculture Consumer Insights. Cool Hunting. JapanConsuming — Real insight on Japanese consumer markets. Publikationen | Trendbüro.