Showing 1-20 of 179 vectors found for Information Transfer
This symbol is part of a set originally created by Emily Read. It was published in The Pavement magazine, a periodical for the homeless community in London. The symbols are an up to date version of a traditional form of communication used by the homeless. Emily has kindly given her permission for the symbols to shared on Openclipart. Original at http://www.thepavement.org.uk/story.php?story=130
This symbol is part of a set originally created by Emily Read. It was published in The Pavement magazine, a periodical for the homeless community in London. The symbols are an up to date version of a traditional form of communication used by the homeless. Emily has kindly given her permission for the symbols to shared on Openclipart. Original at http://www.thepavement.org.uk/story.php?story=130
This symbol is part of a set originally created by Emily Read. It was published in The Pavement magazine, a periodical for the homeless community in London. The symbols are an up to date version of a traditional form of communication used by the homeless. Emily has kindly given her permission for the symbols to shared on Openclipart. Original at http://www.thepavement.org.uk/story.php?story=130
A really simple Web Scheme. Useful for a pedagogic explanation of the World Wide Web invented by Sir Tim Berners-Lee. Icons from the Tango Icon Project Team.
This is a graphic representing two different perspectives about food processing. Advertisement says: This product is natural and healthy for you. It contains the vitamins and minerals required for outstanding physical and mental performance. Science says: This product contains synthesized compounds meant to increase shelf life and taste sensation. Safe levels of exposure for this product will not endanger consumer's life.
Filing Cabinets depicting information overload. I used this illustration to create an animation in a presentation where the filing cabinets appeared one by one over a period of about 1.5 seconds total, which seemed fairly effective in illustrating a sense of being overwhelmed by information. This was a second attempt at this concept after the previous filing cabinet with a massive drawer, from which this was remixed. The cabinets are all the same except scaled, and the illusion of the cabinets being rotated is done merely by squashing or stretching them sideways relative to the one next to them.