The world around us seems as turbulent as it has ever been. Tremors across industry, across culture, across the environment, are profoundly reshaping everything we know. We started The Alpine Review as an attempt to understand those tremors from a long-term point of view — to look at how our immediate moment is shaped by the past and will shape us in the future.
A collection of ideas, thoughts and recent developments related to our environment and milieu.
Always pushing computing capacity further, Google has now invested in a quantum computer.
As we know, the iPhone is ‘designed in California, made in China,’ but maybe it needs a new label: ‘Made in China—and a few other places.’ How traditional ways of measuring global trade fail to reflect underlying complexities.
Tracking interesting signals, ideas and questions in the field of economics and society at large — Danny Meyer's bold 'no tip' experiment
Magazines are artefacts; a presence in one’s home, library, cafe, hotel or meeting place. Increasingly, magazines have been using this power to expand their reach into the real world, communicating identity and acting as a platform.
Ideas, thoughts and other curiosities about business and retail.
Alas, Vincon is no more and department stores are not exactly thriving. Perhaps IKEA is eating the design world, but Vincon should be remembered and revered as the icon of good taste that it was.
Fearing a future where humans are afraid to experiment, two of the world’s most renowned engineers and inventors are crusading to re-create a culture where science, technology, engineering, and the acceptance of failure is once again appreciated and respected.
Tracking interesting signals, ideas and questions that make society move.
ISIS’s capabilities in shaping this media culture have been underestimated. Rather than an organization, ISIS is better characterized as a movement.
A creative Berliner looking for a challenge also finds community in post-revolutionary Egypt where chaos is but one story among many.
In the context of the new chef craze, iconic culinary figure Jacques Pépin underlines the everlasting importance of simplicity and humility, reiterating that the main reason to cook remains the same: to share.
What makes Barca so good? Three great lessons that apply beyond the immediate confines of the sport.
As a doctor, Rob Gorski’s training and livelihood is intervention. But when it comes to his island, he’s decided to let nature run its course.
A collection of ideas, thoughts and recent developments related to our environment.
A timeless audio essay by Alan Watts seemed so in-tuned with the current state of the world, we made it into a special insert called "The Process of Life".
Long before Google famously allotted 20% of employee working hours for personal projects, Lockheed Martin created an entire division to think outside the box.
The shores of the Orkney islands are awash with myth, relic and uncounted time. These things are best taken with a dram.
A collection of ideas and thoughts that point to the future of architecture and urbanism.
The arrival of the internet was an extinction-level event for much of the old media. But can the new apex predators learn from the fates of those they supplanted?
Tracking interesting signals, ideas and questions in the innovation and tech space.
3D printing is here to stay, but exactly in what form and for how long is the bigger question. As designers of the future we have a responsibility to embrace new making, but we should ensure that we aren’t swept along with the hype.
A curated list of interesting makers that caught our eye.
Before Fabrica there was Dark Matter, strategic design and systems thinking. In discussion with Dan Hill, we further our understanding of those topics and go from Little Printers in London to bookkeeping in Venice.
Anchored in high craftsmanship, sober aesthetic with an eclectic touch, Shinola looks to rejuvenate an ancient tradition in the birthplace of American industrialism: Detroit, Mi.
Boris Anthony and Hugh McGuire discuss how much more might be possible when we truly bring books to digital.
Lewis Lapham argues that there’s a reason good writing is hard to find on the internet. What is good writing, anyway?
Patrick Pittman (PP), co-editor of The Alpine Review, sat down with the pair to talk about the benefits of a criminal mind, unconventional modes of understanding, and design and materiality.
Innovation is an art that requires peripheral vision, systems-thinking and a bit of chaos. Joi Ito, the head of the MIT Media Lab, has an insightful take on many aspects of today’s pillars of progress.
A big issue with our prevalent production model is that the cost of disposal of obsolete goods is excluded from profit calculations. In most cases, it means that cost is either ignored or passed on to society. Enter: the circular economy.
Micro-transitions give context and meaning to complex ecosystems. We just need to start looking at the invisible.
The road to fossil fuel transition is paved with complicated questions related to growth and scale. Scaling works well in periods of energy ‘ascent,’ when the supply of energy increases, but less in periods of energy ‘descent.