Icon and Pictogram Links: Difference between revisions

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*[http://picto.dpri.kyoto-u.ac.jp/ Pictogram System for Natural Disaster Reduction]
Interesting comparison! Britain lacks the setaoapirn of powers as the PM is also the majority leader of the House of Commons unlike the American president and Congress. But I think the first image slightly oversimplifies the US political model. While there is a popular vote on the president, it's primarily the electoral college vote that counts. Furthermore the president nominates justices to the Supreme Court it needs to be ratified by the Senate and receive a relatively respectable approval from the ABA. I just realised that the images are pretty outdated so it's quite an unfair presentation of the British government. In 2005 the Constitutional Reform Act established the Supreme Court. Although the justices are the previous law lords from the House of Lords, new appointments are now determined by an independent body.
*[http://www.compositechnologies.com/symbol/index.html Graphic Symbols for application in Signage Systems]
 
== Articles ==
*[http://www.pharmj.com/Editorial/19991009/forum/pictograms.html How pictograms can reinforce patient information]
 
== Otto Neurath ==
*[http://ezines.onb.ac.at:8080/ejournal/pub/ejour-97-II/neuemed/neurath.html Sprechende Zeichen] Article about Otto Neurath (in German)
*[http://www.neurath.at/htm/neurath_set.html Bildersprache - Otto Neurath Visualisierungen] Book about Otto Neurath's visualizations (in German)
*[http://www.heise.de/tp/r4/artikel/13/13678/1.html Otto Neurath Revisited] (in German)
*[http://www.heise.de/tp/r4/artikel/2/2169/2.html Isotype im WWW] (in German)
 
[[Category:Web resources]]

Latest revision as of 13:47, 20 February 2013

Interesting comparison! Britain lacks the setaoapirn of powers as the PM is also the majority leader of the House of Commons unlike the American president and Congress. But I think the first image slightly oversimplifies the US political model. While there is a popular vote on the president, it's primarily the electoral college vote that counts. Furthermore the president nominates justices to the Supreme Court it needs to be ratified by the Senate and receive a relatively respectable approval from the ABA. I just realised that the images are pretty outdated so it's quite an unfair presentation of the British government. In 2005 the Constitutional Reform Act established the Supreme Court. Although the justices are the previous law lords from the House of Lords, new appointments are now determined by an independent body.