
[W]e need a Slow Internet Movement along the lines of Slow Food and Slow Cinema, if we’re really going to take advantage of the archival nature of the Web. It’s not just about being first and fast and superficial;
Designers helped new publishers make their site look as if it was bursting with content when, in fact, it might’ve only contained 10 articles. Or maybe 1,000 articles?








https://eyeondesign.aiga.org/theres-too-much-damn-content-and-slick-ux-design-is-making-it-worse/



There’s a home-cooked quality to a bowl of noodles at Minca. And there’s a homey vibe to the restaurant. Minca is a good place to meet a friend and sit and talk and eat and drink, and eat and talk and sit and drink some more.
http://www.rebeccablood.net/archive/2010/06/a_slow_web.html
https://jackcheng.com/the-slow-web/
Airplane Mode
iDoneThis is a part of the slow web movement. After you email us, your calendar is not updated instantaneously. But rest up, and you’ll find an updated calendar when you wake