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Testimonials

Please find below a few reviews from the likes of Honda, Thrillist.com, Remark Translation, Caught by the River, and Campaign magazine.

Campaign magazine​

Nick Henderson (Deputy Editor)

Arguably the most advanced online magazine has launched, in the rather quirky shape of RubberDuck. …a venture that has very few comparable peers worldwide. The web-only car lifestyle magazine – the first of its kind in the world – uses the Ceros platform, which combines page-turning navigation with interactive elements such as mini games, music tracks and short videos.

Called to the Bar

Adrian Tierney-Jones​

While we’re on the written word, I’ve also been sent the second issue of a magazine called Doghouse... It has lovely production values, a pleasing aroma of paper... has the size and feel of Wallpaper, swells with an infectious liveliness and is a valuable record of pub life, whimsical and occasionally rambling, but well worth looking out for.

Caught by the River​

Robin Turner

I recently spent an afternoon in the Cock Tavern consuming Doghouse – ‘The Pub Magazine’. Doghouse is wonderful – a loveletter to all aspects of British pub culture put together in a glorious colour magazine. The first issue features stories on pub crawls, Japanese beer machines, back room rap battles and dogs that have been barred for pissing in the public bar.

Thrillist.com​

[badDETT] This clothing/music enterprise innovatively vends a new tee design every month that promotes an up n' coming band by slapping album art on the chest, and, on an inside label, scrawling a QR code for the corresponding tunes, which could be "hip-hop, lo-fi, grime, d&b, punk rock, jazz, soul revival, experimental, world music, indie, or other", so...congratulations, "grime", you are no longer "other"!​​

Honda​

Steve Kirk

[RubberDuckMagazine] Much more inventive and innovative than other similar sites out there. I really like the interactivity and the way the pages build.

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Remark!

Rebecca Edwards

Remark! Translation are very excited to be working with RubberDuckMagazine on their pioneering digital deaf-enabled function. Currently there are no similar projects to this available and at Remark! we love to be involved in anything groundbreaking. ...RubberDuck clearly understand the need for interactive translation, confirmed by research conducted by Deafness Cognition and Language (DCAL) research centre, as part of University college London, proving that in fact BSL users use a different area of the brain to process information when compared to their hearing counterparts. It falls under the visual side of the brain, proving that BSL users actually think in images and movement. To be able to link such a visual media as RubberDuck with translation is very exciting for us.

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