Shared posts

01 Nov 16:39

Mariah Carey Declares Halloween Over In Her Most Over-The-Top Christmas Kickoff Video Yet

Mariah Carey makes hundreds of thousands of dollars in royalties from "All I Want For Christmas Is You" every year and this year she's not waiting for the end of Thanksgiving to kick off the Christmas season.

08 Jul 15:21

Shred.

Kanji Yamanouchi, Japan's Consul General to the United States, was an 11-year-old boy in Japan the year Jimi Hendrix died. Here he plays "The Star-Spangled Banner" in a salute to frontline workers fighting COVID-19.

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30 Mar 13:29

Here Are Fast-Growing Vegetables You Can Grow At Home If You Don't Feel Like Going Out For Groceries

From radish to peas, here are some fast-growing crops that can probably take your mind off things during this period of self-isolation.

08 Feb 13:50

Soap Legend Susan Lucci Reveals Health Crisis And Emergency Heart Surgery

by Staff

Legendary soap star Susan Lucci has revealed a health crisis that forced to have emergency heart surgery. On her Instagram account, Lucci captioned a photo of herself, writing: “On a late October afternoon, I had a wakeup call. Narrowly missing a severe heart attack, I realized how vulnerable life is and how incredibly grateful I am to be here today.” The former “All My Children” star revealed she had a blockage in her heart and had to undergo emergency surgery. “I exercise daily, eat as healthy as possible and yet had a shock of a lifetime when I was told that I had a 90% blockage in the main artery of my heart,” Lucci wrote. “I learned that heart disease is the number 1 killer of women, claiming more precious lives every year than all forms of cancer combined.”

Lucci said that her father’s heart condition — he suffered a heart attack in his late 40s — put her at risk for the same. Lucci said, “My father had calcium build up in his arteries. It’s my DNA. No one should have to die of a heart attack — they just need to listen to their symptoms and act on them. My hope in telling my story is that I can help at least one wife, mother, sister and friend.”

‘All My Children’ star Susan Lucci: ‘Lucky to be alive’ after major heart artery blockage

Via www.mcall.com
After a slew of near-death escapades during her 41-year stint on “All My Children,”…
 

Editorial credit: Kathy Hutchins / Shutterstock.com

30 Oct 21:41

Watch this startlingly fast bass performance of "Flight of the Bumblebee"

by David Pescovitz

Davie504 tears his way through the famous orchestral interlude from Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov's opera "The Tale of Tsar Saltan" (1899-1900). From Wikipedia:

"Flight of the Bumblebee" is recognizable for its frantic pace when played up to tempo, with nearly uninterrupted runs of chromatic sixteenth notes. It is not so much the pitch or range of the notes that are played that challenges the musician, but simply the musician's ability to move to them quickly enough. Because of this and its complexity, it requires a great deal of skill to perform. Often in popular culture, it is thought of as being notoriously hard to play.

01 Jul 17:39

proud graduates

by kris

20150630-design

alternative first two panels: waking up at 1pm, returning to bed at 8pm.

optional: mom glowering from top of stairs

08 May 13:42

http://thewirecutter.com/updates/20365/

by Brian Lam

I’m careful picking gadgets but I’m even more careful when it comes to spending my time. Here’s an article on How I work and another on what I read. — @blam
We updated our Budget NAS piece with info on Synology’s new DS213J. At $220, it’s $100 cheaper than our top pick but it’s a lot slower and doesn’t have Wi-Fi. If saving money is more important than speed, this might be a good step down choice, but we still recommend spending the extra money since this is a long term investment.
De-wait-statused our Best Fitness Tracker piece. We added the Fitbit Flex as our pick for best wrist-mounted tracker (although the One is still the best overall since it’s more accurate).
Oh, added an upscale pick in the guide to the best umbrella.

01 May 20:39

I'm Brian Lam, and This Is How I Work

by Tessa Miller
Bill J Elliott

Brian runs The Wirecutter blog, which is my favorite tech gadget site...

"I recommend everyone either fix your job or quit it." No one is better suited to dish out this wisdom than Brian Lam. In 2011, after running the show at our sister site Gizmodo for five years, Brian started The Wirecutter. It's not a blog and it's not a news site—it's simply a guide to the world's best gadgets. The Wirecutter publishes 10 or so posts each month, giving Brian time to do other stuff he's passionate about (including surfing and writing about the ocean). If he wasn't such a genuinely awesome human, I'd hate his guts out of sheer jealousy. Here's what Brian had to say about workspaces, favorite gadgets, and more.

Location: Honolulu, HI or San Francisco, CA
Current Gig: I run TheWirecutter.com and I sometimes write stories about ocean exploration. I'm starting a new Wirecutter-like site in a few weeks, too.
Current mobile device: iPhone, iPad mini
Current computer: An aging 2009 MacBook Pro. I'll replace it this summer when the new Intel parts ship in the new MacBook Pros.
One word that best describes how you work: Flow

What apps/software/tools can't you live without?

A Verizon 4G modem, 1Password, Mailbox for iOS, TextExpander, and the custom WordPress theme we built to run Wirecutter off of.

What's your best time-saving trick?

I recommend everyone either fix your job or quit it. The best thing I ever did was get out of news. There is an undeniable truth that when you're in a job, you have to do the job under certain terms and constraints and stresses that you have no way of avoiding. But no one said you have to keep jobs that drive you nuts. (Not that I didn't love it—no other editor has even come close to lasting as long as I did there.)

I've only recently started managing my email better. I check it and answer it in bulk a few times a day. I also refuse 95% of all scheduled meetings and calls and just have people try me. I also have an inbox-whatever philosophy. I star stuff for later, and I get to it when I get to it, and I mass archive stuff every few months. But I have zero expectation that my inbox will ever be anything but a giant mess. I think of it as a raging river you can't really try to control.

What's your workspace like?

Pictured above: Brian's workspace.

A Safco cheapo standing desk with an old 24-inch Dell monitor, with an Imprint standing mat. And a stool because it's safer to take breaks from standing once in awhile. I'm about 15 feet from a bunch of ocean gear (surfboards, fins, goggles, sunscreen, wetsuits, swim trunks, Speedos, drying rack, handplanes, beach totes) and less than half a mile from the beach, so that when I need to take a break, I can be out the door and in the water within five minutes.

What's your favorite to-do list manager?

Things, but I wish Things and Fantastical would join forces and figure out how to do natural language date/time settings, integrated with my calendar.

Besides your phone and computer, what gadget can't you live without?

Sunglasses. Can't ever have too may pairs in Hawaii. Some are cheapies to leave on the beach, with nicer pairs for walking around.

What everyday thing are you better at than anyone else?

I guess I'm the best at stopping work mid-flow and getting outside. Even if every instinct I have is screaming at me to keep working, I have no problem getting outside to go exercise. Did I mention I gained 35 pounds when I had a traditional desk-all-day job? The memory of my plump cheeks reminds me to put health first.

What do you listen to while you work?

Nothing.

Are you more of an introvert or an extrovert?

Introvert. I like nature better than I like people.

Pictured above: Brian and his gear.

What's your sleep routine like?

I sleep about 6-8 hours a night, going to bed pretty early. Ideally I surf in the morning and I work until lunch. I'm big on short naps to get through the low energy parts of the day, since I don't really drink coffee.

Fill in the blank. I'd kill to see _______ answer these same questions.

Adam Savage or J.J. Abrams.

What's the best advice you've ever received?

Advice is futile, by Edith Zimmerman from The Hairpin. I'm really bossy and I realized only lately that I have to just hold my tongue nearly all the time, because I drive a lot of loved ones up the wall trying to help out when I should just be supporting them more passively.

You mentioned a new site launching soon. Can you give us the deets?

The Sweethome is basically like The Wirecutter—lots of hours put towards researching, testing, and interviewing the best sources to find things we like—but for home goods like sheets, towels, moisturizers, etc. It's been a haul because there isn't a ton of data out there already, but I think it will be helpful to a lot of people. We're looking to launch in the next few weeks, but we're taking our time to get it right, so we don't have a fixed date.

Anything else you want to add for readers?

Yeah. If you're building or rebooting your career, take it step-by-step, and figure out where your old and new talents overlap. Focus on the big picture and focus hard on each step, because it's too easy to get lost in a bunch of little meaningless tasks. Say no to things that are a waste of your time. All of this is probably obvious to half of you, but it's worth repeating: Focus, ignore, one step at a time. Also, this is not advice. It's just something that's worked for me.


The How I Work series asks heroes, experts, brilliant, and flat-out productive people to share their shortcuts, workspaces, routines, and more. Every Wednesday we'll feature a new guest and the gadgets, apps, tips, and tricks that keep them going. Have someone you'd kill to see featured, or questions you think we should ask? Email Tessa.