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In Clouds That Drift

Dec 1, 1992 • Posted in PoetryLeave a Comment

Going on a boat ride ?

Last year I went on an extended trip through the deserts of Jordan and learned all about packing outside my comfort zone. This summer I faced a new travel challenge: how to pack for a diving expedition on the Great Barrier Reef, but I wanted this trip to be different, since I wanted to travel with a little more luxury, so I found a great limo services at the Ross Limo company, to take me to the airport from the beginning.

After spending more than three days on the 100-foot Spoilsport with a dozen crew members and 23 other passengers, it was easy to put together a list of what to bring — and what to leave on land — when you’re preparing for your first (or next) live-aboard boat trip and of course you cant forget your supplies for any emergency, check this weblink and get a special trip package.

Here are my rules for packing when you’re going out to sea:

1. Keep it simple.

Even on popular cruise lines, space in the rooms are limited. Don’t bring a bag that won’t slide under a bunk or fit on a small closet shelf. Pack outfits you don’t mind wearing multiple times, and avoid major beauty supplies, especially on a dive boat where no one cares if you hair is blown dry after a day in the water.

Think very carefully about what you might actually need, and cross everything else off your list.

In clouds that drift
tomorrows come.

Mountains that were there
disappear.

Time like waves of an
unknown sea,

Wash away the earth
from our feet.

James T. Hubbell
December 1992

Dec 1, 1992 • Posted in PoetryLeave a Comment

 

Best Ecommerce Websites: 22 Winning Designs

An ecommerce marketplace is a website where the products are provided by several third parties that are not owned and operated by you. Usually customers have access to different coupon codes that they can use when shopping through these websites. Visit https://www.raise.com/coupons/target and get all the details.

An ecommerce site must provide an efficient ordering system in order to compete in this industry.

An ecommerce site must also provide a business model that supports its customers.

In order for ecommerce to compete effectively, it must establish clear and objective rules and policies for its customers to follow.

Businesses must also implement clear and precise pricing policies that support their products and their products’ prices.

In order for an ecommerce site to compete effectively in this industry, it must be well organized with effective policies and procedures.

It is very important to have a strong structure, policies and procedures in order to ensure your ecommerce business model is successful.

An ecommerce site’s business model depends on several factors. These include:

-Commerce systems and pricing

-Your website’s functionality

-How well you attract your customers

-The business of the site

-Product category

-Key product categories and sub-categories Use of ecommerce strategies and marketing campaigns

Commerce systems

An ecommerce website must have a coherent strategy in order to be successful. A good strategy includes: Using the right products and platforms. Using products with the highest quality, features and prices. Creating a broad platform that provides your customers with a multitude of options.

Setting up and maintaining your website’s systems. Each site has its own strengths and weaknesses, therefore it is important to analyze and build a strategy that incorporates all aspects. A strategy must include: How the business will be built from the ground up. What is expected of it at the start. How it will operate. How it will react to changes in the market. The strategy also reflects how the business will respond to threats and disruptions to its operations. Examples of this include: a competitor offering a better product or service, or an economic downturn. Creating a brand or a company image. A great ecommerce website needs to be creative and innovative; it must stand out from the crowd. It has to differentiate itself from competitors; and it has to have good customer service and fast order fulfillment.

Creating a company’s image is crucial. How the business will position itself and how it will position itself against competitors. This is particularly important in a retail environment, which can generate much higher margins. It is important to explain how it will be perceived by customers. It also needs to explain why the business is unique and better than others. If the business does not explain this well, the images on its website can easily appear bland and generic.

Brand image is important on most ecommerce websites. In fact, a well-crafted and creative brand image can also help a business stand out from competitors. Brand image is important on most ecommerce websites. In fact, a well-crafted and creative brand image can also help a business stand out from competitors.

 

Architecture of Jubilation

Jan 1, 1974 • Posted in UncategorizedLeave a Comment

I wrote Architecture of Jubilation in 1974. It is still helping to guide my work today.
~James Hubbell

Architecture of Jubilation - drawing by James Hubbell

It is my belief that we are passing through a gate from one age to another perhaps more profound than the changes medieval man faced with the rise of Humanism and the age we call the Renaissance. We have spent the last five hundred years trying to understand the world by dividing it into parts. We are now at the task of putting our world back together. We are seeking a vision of a whole world, with ourselves as part of the whole. Read the rest of this entry »

Walls and Trees

Oct 15, 1970 • Posted in Uncategorized • Leave a Comment

The marvel of being alive, of being aware of the planet on which we stand, is a GREAT GIFT. Add to this marvel, our knowledge that man is related by common matter, by evolution, and by existence to the stars, to the sea, to a leaf, and to a bird in flight. Then to think that as humans and artists we may add to this world of beauty and wonder is a gift, which makes us indeed fortunate.

I often wonder at the endless variation in nature! She is never content with duplications but with a bursting joy seems to create marvels of use, of form, of color and texture, sometimes even to the extent that her practicality could be questioned. Then, I think of modern man and his desire for security and control. He is so willing to harness life to the yoke of reason, and to place beauty, mystery and meaning in the hands of science and the computer.

Probably the great dilemma of our age is that of meaning. Seemingly, the old values are not enough. We appear unwilling to accept life as sufficient to give meaning to existence. This is a question that you will have to answer, first for yourselves, then in your work, then perhaps for others.

If I were to ask nature for one clue that might help, say the question of means and ends, she would say they are inseparable. Death is not the meaning of life. The oak tree is not the meaning of the acorn. There can never be a utopia.

In the life of a tree, there is no point of perfect fulfillment. It is the process of life and change that makes each point in its existence meaningful. If you want a beautiful life or a beautiful building, then you must make the moments beautiful. The process must be inseparable to the end.

The moments in a building’s life: conception, designing, construction, and the living, should each be aesthetic and rewarding. A building or a work of art should never be thought of as something on a pedestal, something precious. If it is not a part of the process of life, it is only a curiosity. The first tools we have to work with are our hands, our heads and our hearts.

Creation is never just an explanation of existence. It is part of existence, and therefore, an enlargement of its mystery.

I wish that we could live in homes as marvelous and beautiful as that of the snail and that we could build cities as endlessly rewarding as a forest.

If you want to create beauty, you need not understand it. To find it you must seek it. Great architecture, as with music or life, cannot be known or understood through reason or books. It must be needed and loved. Only then will it give back meaning.

James T. Hubbell
Lecture to Architectural Students,
San Luis Obispo
October 15, 1965