Hanley Wood, LLC, the leading media and information company serving the housing and construction industries, announces the relaunch of its ARCHITECT brand Web site: architectmagazine.com
PORTLAND, Maine – What do six new Portland restaurants, a family making wine in a former dairy barn in Warren, a unique brewery in Belfast, and entrepreneurs making world-class wooden surfboards in York have to do with each other? They all make up Maine’s distinctive cultural landscape – the Maine that includes arts, music and culture; talented entrepreneurs; creative business enterprises; world-class dining and lodging, and much more. That’s the focus of Maine magazine – the brand new magazine launched by the publishers of Maine Home+Design – and what can be seen featured in its premiere issue this September, on shelves now.
In nearly every conference room across the business landscape it's inevitable that at some point the phrase "social media" enters the discussion. Marketers, PR and salespeople are among the first to engage in the discussions, trying to figure how networks can be leveraged to sell more stuff. But I'd like to propose another way to approach the topic. What if we looked at "social media" as a design problem? If you take a trip over to Wikipedia and enter the word "design" you'll see this at the very beginning of the entry:
Eye Lust Magazine is a small independent publication about art, and its intersection with the comedy and fashion world. We are small but perfectly formed; we touch on art, design, photography, ideas, poetry, writing, and comedy.