A Quote by Freeman Thomas

I think of a designer as a processor of information — like a scriptwriter or a novelist. — © Freeman Thomas
I think of a designer as a processor of information — like a scriptwriter or a novelist.
The body itself is an information processor. Memory resides not just in brains but in every cell. No wonder genetics bloomed along with information theory. DNA is the quintessential information molecule, the most advanced message processor at the cellular level - an alphabet and a code, 6 billion bits to form a human being.
We're flooding people with information. We need to feed it through a processor. A human must turn information into intelligence or knowledge.
I like to think of myself as an unmediated novelist - or perhaps a national novelist.
The human mind is a story processor, not a logic processor.
The challenge is for the graphic designer to turn data into information and information into messages of meaning.
To speak today of a famous novelist is like speaking of a famous cabinetmaker or speedboat designer. Adjective is inappropriate to noun.
It's called the Samsung Chromebook Plus, and it runs on an ARM processor, the same type of processor that powers the vast majority of smartphones and tablets. It was designed in close cooperation with Google.
All my siblings became artists. One's a novelist, my brother is a painter, my sister was a costume designer.
How a designer gets from thought to thing is, at least in broad strokes, straightforward: (1) A designer conceives a purpose. (2) To accomplish that purpose, the designer forms a plan. (3) To execute the plan, the designer specifies building materials and assembly instructions. (4) Finally, the designer or some surrogate applies the assembly instructions to the building materials. What emerges is a designed object, and the designer is successful to the degree that the object fulfills the designer's purpose.
What we're really trying to do is have heterogeneous systems really become the foundation of our computing going forward. And that's the idea that you make every processor and every accelerator a peer processor.
They can't yank a novelist like they can a pitcher. A novelist has to go the full nine, even if it kills him.
Where I am from, people are into designer brands, but not, like, the cool ones, just like any designer brand, and I wasn't that type.
I think it is an anarchistic idea to have information on the front and the back. Normally if you add information to information, you have more information.
If you've taken the job to be the stylist for a collection, then I think it's important for you to really listen to the designer and look at the board. Look at the wall, look at what the designer is interested in, and then move on to that. But the designer also must not lose sight of the reason for their point of view. Otherwise it won't come across.
As a designer, as you get used to Kinect, it's such a different experience for me as a designer - for any designer.
Sigmund Freud was a novelist with a scientific background. He just didn't know he was a novelist. All those damn psychiatrists after him, they didn't know he was a novelist either.
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