You have to overwhelm the person sitting in front
of the computer screen wondering what to do.
Not exact matches
I always
wonder where my nights go too, and always feel so much better about myself on weeknights where I'm actually productive and not wasting away in front
of the tv /
computer / phone
screen.
I
wondered if the cat eye frames would even look good on me so I uploaded a picture
of myself in the «Try On» button at the top toolbar
of the selected glasses
screen and after I uploaded my own face from my
computer I found that the «cat eye» frames were not me at all.
The ones who sit in front
of their
computer screens for hours each day poring over travel sites and travel blogs and
wondering why they're still doing the 9 to 5 thing.
No
wonder then that this venue's slate
of group exhibitions, solo shows and performances (notably in the form
of Tommy Hartung's video adaptation
of the BBC's classic Ascent
of Man series, and Debo Eilers's Day - Glo assemblages
of everyday flotsam paired with
screen grabs
of cluttered
computer desktops) appears to express some idea
of art as a form
of cultural physics.
The technical analysts here, including the authors
of this paper, are * exactly * the type
of myopic prodigies who gleefully allowed a speck
of chipped paint in a tiny optical mount to mar the Hubble Telescope mirror, who confidently failed to actually test if Shuttle fuel tank o - rings might get brittle when frozen, and who sportingly neglected to stand back far enough from their
computer screens to
wonder if Canadians might have sent over metric instead
of English measurements for their billion dollar Mars rover.