Posts tagged interactive

Got backseat boredom? DVD players and Game Boys are so five years ago, but a new concept in rear seat entertainment technology that uses the windows themselves could replace squirminess and snoozing with interactive scribbling, sweeping and pinching.

Related ADWEEK article

Outsiders often see Afghanistan as a problem in need of a solution: a  conflict region that needs more troops or another election. But in  seeing Afghanistan as a problem, the people of the country, and their  desire for self-determination, are often overlooked.

From the Soviet invasion and the mujahideen resistance to the Taliban  and the American occupation, A Darkness Visible: Afghanistan examines thirty years of Afghan history. It is the story of ordinary  citizens whose lives play out in the shadow of superpowers. There are  tales of violence to be sure, but there is also love and even romance.

Based on 14 trips to Afghanistan between 1994 and 2010, A Darkness  Visible: Afghanistan is the work of renowned photojournalist Seamus  Murphy. His work chronicles a people caught time and again in political  turmoil, struggling to find their way.
Image and overview copy courtesy of Seamus Murphy and MediaStorm.

Outsiders often see Afghanistan as a problem in need of a solution: a conflict region that needs more troops or another election. But in seeing Afghanistan as a problem, the people of the country, and their desire for self-determination, are often overlooked.

From the Soviet invasion and the mujahideen resistance to the Taliban and the American occupation, A Darkness Visible: Afghanistan examines thirty years of Afghan history. It is the story of ordinary citizens whose lives play out in the shadow of superpowers. There are tales of violence to be sure, but there is also love and even romance.

Based on 14 trips to Afghanistan between 1994 and 2010, A Darkness Visible: Afghanistan is the work of renowned photojournalist Seamus Murphy. His work chronicles a people caught time and again in political turmoil, struggling to find their way.

Image and overview copy courtesy of Seamus Murphy and MediaStorm.