Tag: architecture
What do you think happened here?
Previous installments of my infatuation with The Lord Dufferin apartments can be seen at the following links:
"He Don't Live Here No More"
May 10th, 2010
http://thedailymobile.posterous.com/he-dont-live-here-no-more-lord-dufferin-apart
"Making A Connection"
May 11th, 2010
http://thedailymobile.posterous.com/making-a-connection-jury-rigged-cable-box-at
Eat your heart out Liberty Village B.I.A.


Discovered a fantastic little street today: Gilead Place. In addition to these garage doors it’s also home to Jamie Kennedy’s Gilead Cafe and a row of swanky and modern townhouses.







Like New York, Chicago is one of those city that I always knew I’d visit and that when I did I would love it.
It did not disappoint.
Since I took my ‘real’ camera this is one of the few cameraphone photos I did take. You can view the images here.

I always enjoy finding these ‘building stains.’ It’s as though the demolished structure has gotten the last laugh and is thumbing it’s nose at the progress which deemed it expendable.

This image is the first iPhone photo I have ever posted to The Daily Mobile. Up to this point all the images on this blog (older,
non-Posterous posts can be viewed at http://twitpic.com/photos/TheDailyMobile ) were taken with a Nokia 6265i.
I think Nokia makes great handsets. My 6265i was a great handset – until it died. But, it got fixed and it was still a great handset. Then it died again; this time for good.
Apparently this was a common problem with the model, which was somewhat of an unwanted step-child for Nokia.
Nokia had long ago decided that GSM was the way of the future and CDMA would eventually die out. To that end, they essentially stopped making CDMA handsets. However, the size of the CDMA market in North America – particularly in Canada where number portability was not yet a reality, caused them to keep getting pulled back in. Albeit, with only half of their R&D ass in tow. Hence the 6265i: a handset with all the awesome
features of a regular Nokia product but with none of the stability or support.
It was my sheer love of the Nokia interface and features that made me revive the damn thing once and desperately attempt to do so a second time. Ultimately, it was not to be.
With my (finally) portable number, and the bright lights of the
smartphone world beckoning, I decided to take the plunge and get an iPhone.
Many months had passed between my Nokia dying and getting my iPhone, yet interestingly enough the dates almost perfectly coincided with two separate visits to the Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO).
So it is that The Daily Mobile climbed Frank Gehry’s stairs with Nokia and descends them with Apple.
This will not be the last time an image from my 6265i will be posted here but for the most part from now on The Daily Mobile has joined the ranks of the iPhonographer army.

I’ve got one word for you: synergy







