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28 Jun 17:24

Open Question: What's the impact of Reader's shutdown on traffic?

Russian Sledges

via firehose

Let’s say that there are only 1 million Google Reader users. In three days, that’s a million people who won’t be clicking on American Apparel ads. Which could directly effect the bottom line of websites that are entirely funded by ads, like blogs.

Is there anyway to know by how much though? What do you think the leading indicators might be?

I have enabled comments for this post so let me know if you have any answers.

On a side note, take a look at this alexa graph of blogger.com. I site like that has to be impacted by a Google Reader shutdown, right?

Blogger.com Alexa Traffic Graph http://www.alexa.com/siteinfo/blogger.com

28 Jun 17:23

Warhol Bunnies 3. Edie Sedgwick.

Russian Sledges

via multitask suicide



Warhol Bunnies 3.

Edie Sedgwick.

28 Jun 15:09

The New Yorker Cover Everyone Is Talking About

“It’s amazing to witness how attitudes on gay rights have evolved in my lifetime,” said Jack Hunter, the artist behind next week’s cover, “Moment of Joy.” Hunter, who originally submitted his image, unsolicited, to a Tumblr, continued, “This is great for our kids, a moment we can all celebrate.”
28 Jun 15:09

Not really a family-friendly word As pointed out by Alientonx,...

by ericisawesome
Russian Sledges

via firehose





Not really a family-friendly word

As pointed out by Alientonx, it looks like former presidential candidate Rick Santorum’s "Google problem" has seeped (ughhh) over to Animal Crossing: New Leaf.

BUY Animal Crossing: New Leaf, AC:NL guide, upcoming games
28 Jun 03:24

SCOTUS for the D&D Set (JPEG Image, 720 × 582 pixels)

by OnlyMrGodKnowsWhy
Russian Sledges

via firehose: I knew liking Sotomayor would pay off

multitasksuicide: personally I'd switch Alito and Thomas

Toaster Strudel: Why can't one of the women be evil!?? Wassup wit dat? #feminism

28 Jun 03:23

David Yow on why he hates “Love The One You’re With”

by russiansledges
AVC: The lyrics contain lines about both a “rose in a fisted glove” and the “eagle flies with the dove.” DY: Is Stephen Stills still alive? Do you know? AVC: He is. He’s 68 years old.  DY: Well, I’m going to choke the life out of him before he reaches 69. AVC: Why is this the song you picked out of all songs that exist? DY: It was really difficult for me because I’m not very hateful. Finding something that I hated was really difficult. The only thing that I really hate is stupidity, and this song is pretty fucking stupid.  I’m not completely naïve, and I understand that infidelity can happen or one-night stands or flings or whatever; that’s not unnatural. But the attitude, from the get-go, that if you can’t be with the person that you care about the most and that you love, you should go ahead and fuck whoever is there is completely repugnant.  I think Stephen Stills should be tortured to death. 
28 Jun 02:52

@gguillotte >> @stevestreza: The RSS debacle is fascinating. It suffers from every early adopter problem imaginable, but it’s going to have a flood of non-early-adopter users running from Google Reader. The next few days are going to be a beautiful entropic orchestra.

Russian Sledges

via firehose

The RSS debacle is fascinating. It suffers from every early adopter problem imaginable, but it’s going to have a flood of non-early-adopter users running from Google Reader. The next few days are going to be a beautiful entropic orchestra.
28 Jun 02:42

Compare the Front Pages of Yesterday’s Chicago Tribune and Sun-Times

by John Gruber
Russian Sledges

via firehose

popular shared this story from Daring Fireball.

Remember a few weeks ago when The Chicago Sun-Times fired its entire photography staff and claimed they could replace them with reporters armed with iPhones? Here’s the result.

28 Jun 02:39

Smokescream: 1942

by Dave
September 1942. "Fort Belvoir, Virginia. Sergeant George Camblair learning how to use a gas mask in a practice smokescreen." Sgt. Camblair in one of his scarier manifestations. (He could have used the mask back when he was peeling onions.) Photo by Jack Delano, Office of War Information. View full size.
28 Jun 02:39

Knits For The Chill 64. Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Jr.

Russian Sledges

via multitask suicide



Knits For The Chill 64.

Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Jr.

27 Jun 21:02

you were speaking on the senate floor - m4w

by russiansledges
You were speaking on the Senate floor for over 11 hours the other day for women's rights(which in turn are human rights-a cause I'm pretty fond of). It inspired me to come down there and support you. Don't tell my current governor, but I want you to be my new governor. My friends all feel the same way.
27 Jun 19:56

Ex libris

Russian Sledges

via firehose

27 Jun 19:44

Relaunch of Sponsor a Sutra

by Vic Swift
Russian Sledges

via overbey

Detail from Avalokitesvara as Saviour from Perils, 1919,0101,0.2
© The British Museum

Sponsor a Sutra, your opportunity to enable the copying of a Buddhist sutra just like the original patrons of the manuscripts, has been relaunched. We have a simpler pricing scheme, starting from just £35, and a new secure online payment system. You can add your own dedication or sponsor a sutra as a gift for a friend. All funds go directly to the digitisation work of IDP and enable us to make more material freely available online.
27 Jun 17:47

Mere C. S. Lewis

by thuudung
Russian Sledges

aw;dr

"dissing c.s. lewis" autoshare

The C.S. Lewis phenomenon. His stories are revered and his Christian apologetics beloved. But his arguments have not worn well… more»

27 Jun 17:13

The Boy Who Loved Math: The Improbable Life of Paul Erdős -- great kids' book

by Cory Doctorow
Russian Sledges

Erdős autoshare

via firehose


The Boy Who Loved Math: The Improbable Life of Paul Erdős is a beautifully written, beautifully illustrated kids' biography of Paul Erdős, the fantastically prolific itinerant mathematician who published more papers than any other mathematician in history.

Boy is written by Deborah Heiligman, with illustrations by LeUyen Pham, and the pair really worked to weave numbers and mathematics through the text, with lively, fun illustrations of a young Erdős learning about negative numbers, becoming obsessed with prime numbers and leading his high-school chums on a mathematical tour of Budapest. They also go to great lengths to capture the upside and downside of Erdős's legendary eccentricity -- his inability to fend for himself and his helplessness when it came to everyday tasks like cooking and doing laundry; his amazing generosity and brilliance and empathy in his working and personal life.

Ultimately, this is a book that celebrates the idea of following your weird, wooing the muse of the odd, and playing to your strengths rather than agonizing over your weaknesses. It's an inspiring and sweet tale of one of humanity's greatest mathematicians, and a parable about the magic of passion and obsession.

My daughter, who is five, demanded that I read it to her three times in a row, over three bedtimes, which is always a vote of confidence.

The Boy Who Loved Math: The Improbable Life of Paul Erdos

The illustrations and layouts in Boy are fabulous, and Roaring Brook was kind enough to supply us with three spreads (click each to embiggen):





    


27 Jun 17:01

avamartini01: Photo...

Russian Sledges

please stop

27 Jun 15:56

We're putting a TARDIS into orbit - Really! by 3 Stags — Kickstarter

by russiansledges
Yes, that's right. We have built the TARDIS satellite. It's finished! The 2013 launches are dedicated, and the manifests are filling up. Now we just need the money to put our satellite into the rocket. That's where you come in.
27 Jun 07:17

Not a Pretty Night in Texas

by Kathryn Jean Lopez
Russian Sledges

"the good people who run maternity homes [...] are the abolitionists of today"

this is one of those wonderful days when the corner froths

An “anti-abortion” bill was defeated last night in Austin and President Obama tweeted that it was “something special.” The eleven-hour filibuster circus, involved a cheerleading squad led by Planned Parenthood’s Cecile Richards, daughter of the late Texas governor Ann Richards, and the Twitter hashtag #StandwithWendy, which made an overnight celebrity of a Democratic legislator wearing pink sneakers (this was the most frequently mentioned fact).

Something special is happening in Austin tonight: http://t.co/RpbnCbO6zw #StandWithWendy

— Barack Obama (@BarackObama) June 26, 2013

Before the president's tweet, the highlight of the Twitter circus may have been when NARAL Pro-Choice Massachusetts retweeted a Jill Biden parody account:

If this bill passes, women will have to hold monthly funerals for their periods, like when you flush a goldfish. #StandWithWendy

— Dr. Jill Biden (@JillBidenVeep) June 26, 2013

This is the seriousness with which we take debates about late-term abortion in America?

So a bill trying to protect unborn children after 20 weeks has been defeated, and we’re celebrating a victory for “women” and “health” and “freedom”? When do we get tired of this?

I recently corresponded with Deborah Edge (more to come), who used to work for Douglas Karpan, an abortionist who has been accused of killing live babies and is currently under investigation. She talks about holding women’s hands during late-term abortions. “You become desensitized to what you are seeing.  It's almost like you are numb to it.  And you just keep thinking of the women and how you are ‘helping’ them.” She, like Abby Johnson, the former Texas Planned Parenthood clinic director who has become a pro-life activist, talks about the disconnect between the talking points and the reality. And about waking up, in her case, while assisting an ultrasound-guided abortion.

The brutality of late-term abortions helps no one, whatever cover late-term abortionists want to veil it in. (See Leroy Carhart.) Do we really feel no responsibility to do better? Of course, the good people who run maternity homes do and they are the abolitionists of today. Lend a hand to one today. You would be doing more to protect women’s health and help life than triumphalist tweeting does.

27 Jun 07:14

Twitter / BryanJFischer: SCOTUS today dehumanized ...

by russiansledges
SCOTUS today dehumanized supporters of natural marriage. Did the same thing to pro-family folks the Nazis did to Jews.
27 Jun 01:36

Texas Abortion Opponents To Cheer Selves Up With Execution

Russian Sledges

via firehose

AUSTIN, TX—Following state senator Wendy Davis’ successful filibuster of sweeping abortion restrictions last night, disappointed Texans told reporters they are looking forward to tonight’s scheduled execution of convicted murderer Kimber...
27 Jun 01:36

Report: No Gay People Actually Refer To Selves As 'Same-Sex Couple'

Russian Sledges

via firehose

WASHINGTON—Following the U.S. Supreme Court’s historic rulings on gay rights earlier in the day, a report issued Wednesday by the Human Rights Campaign reveals that not a single one of the nation’s millions of homosexuals actually refer ...
27 Jun 01:35

Bigot Relieved To Learn Gays In His State Still Effectively Subhuman

Russian Sledges

via firehose

NORMAN, OK—Following the Supreme Court’s landmark 5-4 ruling this morning striking down the Defense of Marriage Act, local bigot Donald Pohlman, 45, reportedly breathed a sigh of relief upon learning that homosexuals were still considered less...
27 Jun 01:32

A Young Hummingbird

Russian Sledges

via rosalind

27 Jun 01:30

Twitter / notjustmovies: Or Nazis did to gays MT ...

by russiansledges
Or Nazis did to gays MT @BryanJFischer SCOTUS today dehumanized supporters of natural marriage. Did the same thing the Nazis did to Jews.
27 Jun 01:16

African-Americans and artists

African’s did not chose to come here, be our slaves, and ultimately become African-Americans and artists.

26 Jun 23:36

#5276: alone with my thoughts



26 Jun 23:32

Sexist Disney Rejection Letter Shoots Down Woman Wanting to Join Their Animator School in 1938

by Rusty Blazenhoff
Russian Sledges

via multitask suicide

Disney Rejection Letter, 1938

In 1938, poor Miss Mary V. Ford of Searcy, Arkansas received this rejection letter from Walt Disney Productions letting her know that women have no chance of working in the creative area of their Inking and Painting Department and only a smidgen of a chance of tracing and filling in celluloids, “the only work open to women.” The letter, ironically signed by a different woman named “Mary,” was discovered by Ms. Ford’s grandson Kevin Burg after she died. A few years after this letter was sent, a woman by the name of Retta Scott joined Disney and became their first female animator. Her first project was creating art for the 1942 film Bambi.

image via Kevin Burg

via Business Insider, HRLori

26 Jun 23:31

Acting Air Force Secretary Recounts Journey to Equality

Russian Sledges

via multitask suicide

During a Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Pride Month event at the Pentagon today, the highest-ranking openly gay member of the Defense Department described his experiences witnessing the evolution of the law that banned openly gay service members, from its implementation to its eventual repeal.

Acting Air Force Secretary Eric Fanning noted the significance of Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel kicking off the DOD’s pride celebration, as just two years ago, gay and lesbian service members could not openly serve in the military.

Absent an association like DOD Pride to lend support, Fanning described the difficulties and sense of isolation that he and others at the Pentagon endured as the repeal process ran its course. “There were no other open LGBT appointees, and anyone serving openly in uniform was surely in the process of being discharged,” he said.

Fanning began working in the Pentagon 20 years ago, a time he described as a personally painful experience as DOD began to implement the law that came to be known as “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.”

“It was a deeply conflicting time for me,” the Air Force’s top civilian official said. “I was launching a career with strong support from amazing bosses who knew about my personal life. … I was being given opportunities that were being denied to people just like me. I was working for an institution that discriminated -- against people just like me.”

He also recalled how during that time, people spoke about gays and lesbians in “blistering and emotional ways,” denigrating them for simply wanting the right to serve their country while being honest about who they were.

Still, Fanning said, the military underwent the difficult process of opening doors to those it previously denied or constrained: women, immigrants looking to prove their patriotism and earn their citizenship, and to gays and lesbians.

“At times, it seemed agonizingly slow, or even that we were losing ground,” Fanning said. “But never once did we doubt we were on the right path.”

Relying on the diverse talents of a broader pool of people who are willing and able to serve has fortified the military, Fanning explained. “We are stronger for looking more like the society we are charged with protecting, and we are today … the finest military the world has ever known,” he said.

In the two years leading up to the repeal of “Don’t Ask Don’t Tell,” the debate had a remarkably different tone, due in great part to the support of the president and the then-chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Navy Adm. Mike Mullen.

"I cannot escape being troubled by the fact that we have in place a policy which forces young men and women to lie about who they are in order to defend their fellow citizens,” the admiral testified before Congress. “It comes down to integrity -- theirs as individuals and ours as an institution.”

Looking back to almost two decades earlier as a junior aide, Fanning said, he could never imagine having a chairman say things like Mullen did.

Fanning said most people had begun to accept the possibility of repeal long before it occurred, though he was fortunate enough to be present when the president signed the historic document.

Among the celebrations and congratulations, he said, many supporters asked what it was like to be in the Pentagon after the repeal.

“I answered honestly, and I think disappointingly, that … we went back to the building, and in my view, the building had already moved on past the decision and we talked about what we talk about every single day: the budget,” he said in a deadpan tone.

Fanning also said he’s received a bit of attention since he was nominated to be undersecretary of the Air Force -- not all of it welcome, some quite negative, and some that he described as “rather imaginative.”

“Many have speculated as to my agenda, what color I'll paint the planes, what designs I have on the uniforms,” he said. But like almost everyone else, he added, he remains focused on simply doing his job, and chiding comments are dwarfed by the outpouring of support he’s received in and out of the Pentagon.

“It reminds me that, as important as events like this are for our community, they're also important opportunities for our allies to identify themselves and to let us know they're right alongside us,” Fanning said. “Events like this give voice not just to us, but to those who support us.”
 

26 Jun 22:32

Readerpocalypse from firehose on dotdotdot

by gguillotte
A collection of reviews and thoughts on Google Reader, its erstwhile replacements, and RSS in general.
26 Jun 22:29

CIA's 'Facebook' Program Dramatically Cut Agency's Costs | Video | The Onion - America's Finest News Source

by gguillotte
Russian Sledges

via firehose ("a reminder that the Onion ran this in 2011")