Best-of Office Architecture on Fubiz

Au programme du premier best-of Fubiz du mois d’Avril, voici une sélection de l’intérieur des bureaux de grandes sociétés regroupant différents noms très connus tel que Google, Pinterest, Twitter, Instagram, Nike. Nous avons choisi pour vous une sélection des bureaux les plus créatifs, originaux, et esthétiques.

Pinterest Office Architecture by Neal Schwartz.

Superdesk Installation by Clive Wilkinson Architects.

Airbnb Office Architecture by Gensler.

An Office In The Middle Of The Forest by Selgas Cano.

Inside Evernote Office in California by Studio O+A.

Dropbox Office Architecture by Boor Bridges Architecture and Geremia Interior Design.

Glass Office in Shanghai by AIM Architecture.

Google Tel-Aviv Office by Camenzind Evolution with Setter Architects and the studio Yaron Tal.

Google Tokyo Office by Klein Dytham.

Nike London Office Redesign by Rosie Lee.

Foxhead Office Architecture by Clive Wilkinson Architects.

IBM Office Redesign by Massimo Iosa Ghini.

Inside eBay Israel Office by Miki Mottes.

Inside Twitter Office by IA Interior Architects and Lundberg Design.

JWT Amsterdam Office by RJW Elsinga.

Lego Office by Rosan Bosch.

Inside Instagram Office by Geremia Design.

Inside Nike CEO Office by the CEO of Nike.

Nike London Office Redesign
12 Inside eBay Israel Office
5 Inside Evernote Office in California
13 Inside Twitter Office
16 Inside Instagram Office
1 Pinterest Office Architecture
2 Superdesk Installation
11 IBM Office Redesign
17 Inside Nike CEO Office
15 Lego Office
14 JWT Amsterdam Office
10 Foxhead-Office-Architecture-17.jpg
8 Google Tel-Aviv Office
7 Glass Office in Shanghai
6 Dropbox Office Architecture
4 An Office In The Middle Of The Forest
3 Airbnb Office Architecture
9 Google Tokyo Office
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Link About It: This Week’s Picks : A Twitter-shaped short story, Google’s new Nest, Four Tet’s “Thriller” and more in our weekly look at the web

Link About It: This Week's Picks


1. Hero-Glyphics Designer, illustrator and self-proclaimed nerd, Josh Lane perfectly blends hieroglyphics with mythical superheroes through his series of “hero-glyphics,” in which the likes of Spiderman, the X Men and the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles get the…

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Inside Twitter Office

Situés dans un bâtiment de 1937 dans le style Art deco à San Francisco, les locaux de Twitter proposent des espaces superbes et ont été conçus par IA Interior Architects et avec Lundberg Design. Une structure de 11 étapes proposant aux équipes d’avoir des espaces encourageant le travail et la bonne entente.

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Steps to unclutter Twitter

I love Twitter. It lets me stay in touch with friends and colleagues, replaces email and text chat in many situations, is a relaxing hangout and the end of the day, and is often a source of entertainment.

It can also be really annoying and a time waster.

Depending on whom you follow (or how many), the social media darling can introduce a lot of clutter into your digital life. Fortunately, you can take steps to make Twitter less annoying and more pleasant to use, and not be a total time suck.

  1. Use an app. Many people use Twitter via a web browser at Twitter.com. Since I’m often using a browser for other things, I dislike jumping back and forth to that window whenever I want to attend to Twitter. So, I use a stand-alone app, which can be hidden, recalled, quit, or ignored as I like, without forcing me to keep a browser tab open. There are so very many apps available, I can’t even begin to list them here. Safe to say, if you use a Mac, Windows, iOS, or Android, you’ll find one to your liking after doing a Google search and reading reviews.
  2. Mute and muffle. Depending on the app you use, you can choose to mute, muffle, or otherwise hide certain tweets from your timeline. You know those people who turn Twitter into a public chatroom with a hashtag like #AnnoyingChat? Mute that tag and you won’t see any of those tweets. You can also mute users (often temporarily), keywords and more. It’s a great way to de-clutter the stream.
  3. Hide the stream entirely. I’m required to do some tweeting at my day job but I don’t always want to see what everyone else is saying. Fortunately there’s Wren for Mac, which lets me publish tweets without seeing anything that anyone else is sharing. Sorry, Windows users. I searched high and low for an equivalent for you but failed.
  4. Pick a time of the day. Twitter is like potato chips: you can’t eat just one. If you tend to binge on the service, pick a time of day to use Twitter and stick to it. Set a timer and don’t let social media eat away at your productivity.
  5. Disable notifications. Many mobile apps will pop up a message when you receive a reply or a mention on Twitter. Others also alert you when one of your tweets has been marked as a favorite by another user. That’s nice to know, but unless you really need that information, consider killing those notifications.
  6. Use lists. Twitter introduced lists a while ago, and you really ought to use them. This feature lets you group users or messages by keyword, and see just the tweets that meet your criteria. This is a great idea if you need to use Twitter for work or just want to turn down the firehose of information a bit.
  7. Don’t go #nuts with #hashtags. Hashtags are those brief bits of text preceded by the pound sign #. They let users group similar tweets or follow a given topic. Some people abuse their hashtag power and go way overboard, though. Don’t be one of those people.

Related to the last, if you have a hashtag abuser among your followers and you use Tweetbot for Mac, check out these instructions from Brett Kelly on how to automatically hide any tweet with more than two hashtags.

My last bit of advice on de-cluttering Twitter is the most powerful: walk away from Twitter. Yes, it’s a lot of fun and often informative but honestly, unless you have a real dependence on that information (work, etc.), take some time off and walk away. It’ll be fine. I #promise.

EDITOR’S NOTE: If you’re already on Twitter, be sure to follow us at @unclutterer.

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#Flock by BERG for Twitter

The birds inside this cuckoo clock by London design studio BERG are programmed to poke their heads out to announce Twitter messages, retweets and new followers (+ movie).

#Flock, which was commissioned from BERG by social networking service Twitter, was built using BERG Cloud, the design studio’s operating system for network-connected products.

#Flock by BERG

Using a wirelessly controlled Arduino microcontroller, the three birds inside the clock are choreographed to respond immediately to activity on Twitter.

#Flock by BERG

Retweets, direct messages and new followers each trigger one of the three birds to pop out of the clock, accompanied by a snippet of birdsong.

#Flock by BERG

Like the studio’s Little Printer, the tiny thermal printer that led to the development of BERG Cloud, #Flock is a web-connected device designed to give digital data a physical expression.

#Flock by BERG

BERG isn’t the only design studio exploring ways of making digital data tangible – we previously featured a project to print muddled news headlines harvested from the internet and a plotter set up to write and re-write text from Wikipedia as it’s updated.

#Flock by BERG

Other machines on Dezeen include a mechanically operated sliding whistle that uses a bellow and levers to mimic birdsong – see all machines.

#Flock by BERG

Photographs are by BERG.

The post #Flock by BERG
for Twitter
appeared first on Dezeen.

ListenUp: Nina Simone, Brolin, I.B.E. and more in the first installment of our weekly music recap previously aired on Twitter

ListenUp

For the past year, we’ve been dutifully cataloging some of our favorite sounds at CH in a daily Tweet dubbed #ListenUp. With an array of time zones at play and the sporadic nature of Twitter, you may have missed out. So to keep your ears filled with quality tunes and…

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Link About It: This Week’s Picks: Dr. Seuss’ hat collection, Google ski maps, Beck’s take on Bowie and more in our look at the web this week

Link About It: This Week's Picks

1. A View From The Shard No longer do you need to climb to the observation deck of London’s tallest building for a view of the city, thanks to a new online app put out by The Guardian. Created using two high-res, 360-degree images taken by panoramic photographer Will…

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La vera natura di Twitter

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La vera natura di Twitter

Data Necklace: Wear your Tweets

Data Necklace

“The future of digital is physical”—this statement by Google Creative Lab’s Tom Uglow at last year’s Port Eliot Festival comes to mind when one encounters the Data Necklace. This new piece of jewelry from designer and software developer Stef Lewandowski is a wonderful example of how beautiful physical objects…

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Word Of Mouth: London Street Food

The Big Smoke’s top five mobile restaurants

While NYC has been loudly blazing the trail for a Twitter-hyped food truck revolution for some time, across the pond London is gradually creating its own community of street food vendors through a more stealth blend of social media, word of mouth and truck coup d’etat. To find out more about the city’s burgeoning street food culture, we checked in with Burgerac—London’s top burger detective—who tipped us off to five London joints dishing up delicious fare all over town. “With an ear to the ground, and an eye on Twitter, you can find wonderful food cooked by enthusiastic individuals in their homes and from their stalls and food trucks all over the capital,” he explains.

The blogs are abuzz about this newly formed culinary insurgence, but in typical English fashion Burgerac adds, “hype can be the enemy of enjoyment—the bottom line about all of these guys is that actually what they do is very simple. They just use good quality ingredients and do that one thing really super well, and that’s reflected by people’s reaction to what they’re doing.” See Burgerac’s picks below.

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Pitt Cue Trailer

Located under the Hungerford Bridge not far from the Tate Modern is the Pitt Cue Trailer, a food truck offering sweeping views of Big Ben and the Thames while you chow down on a super juicy pulled pork sandwich and a can of Brooklyn Lager. Topped with their legendary pickles and pickled onions, the pulled pork is where it’s at but serious barbecue fans should also consider adding on sausages or brisket.

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MotherFlipper Burgers

Less talked about than London’s revered Lucky Chip burger—but equally respected—MotherFlipper Burgers at King’s Cross station could easily give In-N-Out some stiff competition in an international burger contest. A simple stack of lettuce, onions, tender beef and buttered buns garnished with ketchup, mayo and mustard, MotherFlipper has mastered the basic burger.

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Banhmi11

With a few stalls around town (and a recently opened brick-and-mortar location in Shoreditch), Banhmi11 may be London’s most ubiquitous street food vendor, but it certainly hasn’t lost its touch. We downed one of their classic pork belly sandwiches at their Chatsworth Road market location, which starts with a toasted buttered baguette and then carrots, cucumbers, cilantro, special spices and the all-essential pork. Vegetarians will equally enjoy their tofu creation, featuring the same tasty fixings without the meat.

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Big Apple Hot Dogs

Big Apple Hot Dogs are a souped-up sausage version of NYC’s gourmet dog scene. Situated on a sidewalk just a stone’s throw from Old Street, this street cart serves up several styles of juicy sausages prepared by a local butcher, resting on buns by a local baker and smothered in toppings (like kimchee and sauerkraut) pickled by a friend.

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Homeslice Pizza

When the sun starts setting and most of the bazaar has cleared, you can find the trio behind Homeslice Pizza serving up wood-fired pies in an oven out in front of Ridley Road Market Bar in Dalston. Lovingly known as the closest thing to a thin crust Italian-style in London, Homeslice makes pies that are also on par with Brooklyn’s renowned pizza joint Roberta’s. The revolving menu includes everything from a classic margherita to an aubergine, spring onion and siracha pie—each best enjoyed with one of the bar’s ultra fresh ginger beer mojitos.

See more photos of these five food havens in the slideshow below. Images by Andrea Dicenzo.