Shared posts

18 Dec 15:11

The Old Soles of Brooklyn

"You didn't know what your father did until you were in your father's shoes." The Old Soles of Brooklyn.
18 Dec 15:06

#IllRideWithYou Is an Exercise In Viral Empathy

by Tasbeeh Herwees

As it was revealed that the gunmen holding victims hostage at an Australian chocolate shop were possibly linked to Islamic State militants, Australian Muslims on Twitter expressed fears of retaliation from angered Australians. On Facebook, a woman named Rachel Jacobs wrote that she witnessed a Muslim woman on the train silently remove her hijab (headscarf) as news of the hostage situation spread. “I ran after her at the train station. I said, ‘put it back on. I’ll walk with u’. She started to cry and hugged me for about a minute – then walked off alone,” wrote Jacobs.

In response, non-Muslim Australians began offering their company to Muslims taking public transport. Twitter user Tessa Kum was the first to do so, and began tweeting her support with the hashtag #IllRideWithYou. “If you reg take the #373 bus b/w Coogee/MartinPl, wear religious attire, & don’t feel safe alone: I’ll ride with you. @ me for schedule,” she tweeted. It wasn’t long before thousands of Australians were partaking in the campaign, posting their bus and train routes and offering rides to Muslim neighbors. Within a day, over 90,300 tweets had been posted with the hashtag.  

17 Dec 17:18

Xmas tree: symbol of joy or blazing death torch?

by Mark Frauenfelder

bdt

For sheer excitement value I'm going with blazing death torch.

17 Dec 14:15

http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/dspn/everyone/~3/yO9Oo7P6GZs/



Found by cjmarxer
15 Dec 17:13

YouTube gets with the times, allows fans to create GIFs from videos

by Sam Machkovech
wskent

It is upon us.

If you're a young person on the Internet, you've likely been down this tough road before. You have an idea for an awesome animated GIF—the kind that will rack up likes, karma, or other worthless points on your social-media site of choice—but once you find your ideal video source, you're stymied by getting GIF-fy with it. You have to hunt for weird third-party services that take too long to export and process your desired clip, all while being bombarded by ads (and possibly dealing with a dumb watermark on the GIF of your dreams).

This week, YouTube followed through on November plans to cut out the middle-man and rolled out a limited test version of its new GIF creator, which allows fans to make a six-second GIF from any compatible clip. Though YouTube officially announced the idea in a November "creator preview" demo, the launch came this week, as intrepid YouTube user Andy Baio found the GIF menu hidden in the "share" portion of a PBS Idea Channel video.

The functionality is simple and limited, with the most impressive feature being the ability to add text to both the top and bottom of the output GIF (in the popular Impact font seen in most image macros, at that). Otherwise, attributes like animation speed and size can't be tweaked, and users can't seek through a video and create a GIF out of mulitple scenes; their ideal GIF will need to contain footage from a single, concurrent chunk.

Read 1 remaining paragraphs | Comments

13 Dec 00:37

.gif it to me baby » Online » Sonstiges » Forum » Supertopic

by annka
wskent

into the weekend. let's go.

12 Dec 16:19

The 2014 kottke.org Holiday Gift Guide

by Jason Kottke
wskent

Best guide I've found. Solid links.

Last year, I did a meta holiday gift guide where I picked some of the best items off of the best gift guides out there. Since we're getting down to the wire here on shopping time (not that you should buy anything for anyone this holiday season or any other time of the year), let's crank up this year's version.

Consider giving to charity this year. If you can't spare the time to volunteer (look here or Google for specific opportunities in your area), go on Charity Navigator or Give Well to find an organization worth your attention. Or go on Kiva and give small loans to dozens of families around the world.

For their list this year, The Wirecutter did a list of The Things We Want to Give. Items include The Neat Ice Kit, Benton's ham, and The Flavor Thesaurus. Hmm, I picked all food stuff there. I must be hungry.

I recommend these every year: the Tovolo King Cube Ice Tray and the KitchenAid Professional 600 Series 6-Quart Stand Mixer.

From Boing Boing's Happy Mutant's Gift Guide 2014, the excellent Eyes on the Prize documentary on DVD, the LifeSpan TR1200-DT5 Treadmill Desk, a Lodge 10.5-inch round skillet (can personally vouch for this), and perhaps my favorite Amazon item of all time, the 55-gallon drum of personal lubricant. Don't worry, the latter item includes a lube pump so you don't need to buy it separately.

For the sports fan in your life, SB Nation's 2014 Holiday Gift Guide includes Zubaz pants (!!), Big League Chew, the Bluetooth Gramophone, and a home beer brewing kit. Throwback-errific!

Among the items on the Tools & Toys Christmas Catalog, Bartlett's Familiar Quotations and the Bellroy Slim Sleeve Wallet (which is my own personal wallet).

Nothing on Mat Honan's 8 Perfect Gift Ideas for 'Twitter Dads' really grabbed me (even though I am an official Twitter Dad), except for the Bugaboo Bee. We had the first iteration of that stroller and it was the absolute best thing. We wore out two sets of wheels strollering Ollie and Minna around the city in that thing.

But I'll take one of everything off of The Kid Should See This Gift Guide. Especially Animalium, the Crosley portable turntable, My Neighbor Totoro on Blu-ray, and a vintage typewriter. [Update: My friend Dan says to avoid Crosley turntables: "They use ceramic cartridges that track 3x as heavy as standard carts, permanently damaging records." I have no idea what that means, but Dan knows things about turntables so you might want to make another choice.]

Good year for science-ish nonfiction books: How We Got to Now by Steven Johnson, What If? by Randall Munroe, Being Mortal by Atul Gawande, Superintelligence by Nick Bostrom, and Creativity, Inc. by Ed Catmull.

And cookbooks: Plenty More from Yotam Ottolenghi, MEAT by Pat LaFrieda, Tartine Bread by Chad Robertson, Michael Ruhlman's Egg, Death & Co: Modern Classic Cocktails, My Paris Kitchen from David Lebovitz (whose Paris dining recommendations are top notch), and Jeffrey Morgenthaler's The Bar Book.

The Brooklyn Holiday Gift Guide features products made locally in Brooklyn, including bracelets with subways maps and kottke.org favorite, Tattly.

Tom Bihn's What We're Giving list includes Fairbault wool blankets and their own Shop Bag. (via @widepipe)

One of many holiday lists from Food52, the Under $25 Gift Guide features Heirloom Seed Art Packets and this Water Bottle with Charcoal Filter.

The Continuous Lean went on a serious listing bender with The Epic ACL Holiday Gift Guide 2014. The stylish selections include the Whiskey Wedge, the Jaguar F-Type Project 7, and the Lego Architecture Fallingwater set.

Josh Rives made a list of gifts that don't suck. Among the non-suckage is The Dangerous Book for Boys, Coudal and Draplin's excellent Field Notes, and Cards Against Humanity.

Many many things on the NY Times Holiday Gift Guide, including Julia, Child these awesome cement stair planters, and History of the World in 1,000 Objects.

Since their acquisition by Vox, Eater has been better than ever. Their Holiday Gift Ideas 2014 package is overflowing with good choices, among them are sausages from Butcher & the Boar (smoooooked cheddarwurst!!!) and Fictitious Dishes.

Speaking of Vox, The Verge has a load of tech-oriented picks, including a selection under . They recommend MUJI notebooks and David Mitchell's The Bone Clocks. One of The Verge's more baller picks is the Nintendo Wii U Mario Kart 8 Deluxe Set. Which, droooooool. Santa, you got me covered on this?

Misc: the Good Web Bundle gives you subscriptions to five indie services/sites for one low price. You can get 8GB flash drives in necklace form now. From Haruki Murakami, a recently released short novel about "a boy imprisoned in a nightmarish library". I have no idea if they are actually vintage or just made to look so, but you can find several vintage Soviet chess sets on Etsy (like this one); I bought one recently and if someone faked it, they did a good job. (Even if it's fake, it's real, etc.) You can buy Post-It Notes that are almost two-feet across.

Update: Added the guide from Tools & Toys and added a warning about the portable turntable. Added giant Post-It Notes. Added The Brooklyn Holiday Gift Guide. Added Tom Bihn's list. Added Food52 list. Added The Continuous Lean set. Added a list of gifts that don't suck. Added lists from the NY Times, Eater, and The Verge.

Tags: kottke.org
12 Dec 16:11

This week's sponsor: MyFonts

wskent

#TechNerd

Thanks to MyFonts for sponsoring A List Apart this week! Take a look at their list of the 50 most popular fonts on the web right now.

11 Dec 00:27

Guest Post: Olaf

by CrayonsForBrains
wskent

there's that old creativity.

Olaf- onijake
Olaf finds a new hobby! Thanks to Reddit user onijake for this, great job!

10 Dec 20:27

http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/dspn/everyone/~3/dhgL0CEaTg8/

wskent

A pregnant gerbil?



Found by Ryan Crane
10 Dec 20:25

http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/dspn/everyone/~3/eQQiQJCrx10/

10 Dec 20:10

http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/dspn/everyone/~3/eUPQKusInJ0/



Found by brandon scharr
09 Dec 22:08

http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/dspn/everyone/~3/MLUMwsd0HxM/

wskent

hungry hungry ______



Found by Dave McCall
09 Dec 19:58

http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/dspn/everyone/~3/yD6_ETMvqz4/

wskent

haunting.



Found by Dave McCall
09 Dec 19:57

http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/dspn/everyone/~3/GlTQuGm3jFg/



Found by Pamela Cocconi
09 Dec 15:38

A Bar on North Avenue

wskent

AWESOME READ. Ebert at his best. A classic.

A classic FDL and one of our favorite pieces by Roger Ebert, A Bar on North Avenue. "O'Rourke's was the ultimate singles bar, it was said: You went there with a date, and came home alone."
09 Dec 12:11

Described as the "scream of a thousand corpses" -- the Aztec death whistle

by Mark Frauenfelder
wskent

the last thing you hear.

The Aztec death whistle produces a sound so horrifying, it will chill you to the bone. Described as the "scream of a thousand corpses," the death whistle sounds like the cry of the un-dead, or the torment of a human being burned alive.

[via]

08 Dec 21:39

Grumpy Cat makes more money than Gwyneth Paltrow

by Mark Frauenfelder
wskent

Finally, justice.

Reuters


Reuters

Grumpy Cat's earnings from books, a film, and other products bearing his likeness have topped $100 million in two years. Read the rest

08 Dec 21:37

Bad Sex in Fiction

wskent

Let's do better.

"Somewhere in the night a stray rocket went off." Ben Okri has won the 22nd annual Literary Review Bad Sex in Fiction Award, for The Age of Magic (Head of Zeus).
08 Dec 19:26

Cold Mailman - Time is of the essence

wskent

Monday jam with pretty video.



Cold Mailman - Time is of the essence

08 Dec 18:37

This Clever Electric Toothbrush Is Like a Bidet for Your Mouth

by Liana Bandziulis
wskent

Unplesant title.

This Clever Electric Toothbrush Is Like a Bidet for Your Mouth

Most toothbrushes are pretty good at getting toothpaste onto your teeth. The Rinser Brush also helps wash it off.

The post This Clever Electric Toothbrush Is Like a Bidet for Your Mouth appeared first on WIRED.


05 Dec 21:59

Fashion Photographer Asks: “What If Guys Were Social Networks?”

by Benjamin Starr
wskent

I ilked this. Particularly Instagram. Sidenote: Why does social media love blue?

Viktorija Pashuta instagram
Viktorija Pashuta instagram

Fashion photographer Viktorija Pashuta asks the question: what if guys were social networks? Her latest series sees models dressed in the colors and fashion you might associate with each network… and if you ask me, she nailed it.

“Even though they share very similar functions and features, each social network has its own character and style,” writes Pashuta on her blog. “Facebook depicted as casual, Twitter as classic, Pinterest as creative, LinkedIn as Business, Instagram as vintage, Flickr as artsy, Tumblr as hip and Google+ as innovative.”

The series comes as a followup to her popular What If Girls Were Internet Browsers series (check out that hair for Opera!).

Facebook

Viktorija Pashuta facebook

Flickr

Viktorija Pashuta flickr

Google +

Viktorija Pashuta google plus

LinkedIn

Viktorija Pashuta linkedin

Pinterest

Viktorija Pashuta pinterest

Tumblr

Viktorija Pashuta tumblr

Twitter

Viktorija Pashuta twitter

Viktorija Pashuta roundup

(via Petapixel)

05 Dec 21:57

Brief History of Web Design

wskent

For those who are #CodingCurious

05 Dec 16:45

The "power tower feeding frenzy" and hyper-large numbers

by Jason Kottke
wskent

break y'brain.

What's a large number? A billion? A billion times a billion? A billion to the billionth power? A googol? A googolplex? A googolplex is 10^googol, BTW:

So a googol is 1 with just 100 zeros after it, which is a number 10 billion times bigger than the grains of sand that would fill the universe. Can you possibly imagine what kind of number is produced when you put a googol zeros after the 1?

That's pretty big, right? Not. Even. It turns out you can construct numbers that are so much larger than a googolplex, that it's gonna light your head on fire just to read about them. Put on your asbestos hat and feast your eyes on Graham's Number.

Moving up another level, exponentiation is iterated multiplication. Instead of saying 3 x 3 x 3 x 3, exponentiation allows me to bundle that string into the more concise 3^4.

Now, the thing is, this is where most people stop. In the real world, exponentiation is the highest operation we tend to ever use in the hyperoperation sequence. And when I was envisioning my huge googolplex^googolplex number, I was doing the very best I could using the highest level I knew -- exponentiation. On Level 3, the way to go as huge as possible is to make the base number massive and the exponent number massive. Once I had done that, I had maxed out.

The key to breaking through the ceiling to the really big numbers is understanding that you can go up more levels of operations -- you can keep iterating up infinitely. That's the way numbers get truly huge.

You might get lost around the "power tower feeding frenzy" bit or the "power tower feeding frenzies psycho festival" bit, but persist...the end result is really just beyond superlatives. (via @daveg)

Update: In this video, you can listen to the inventor of Graham's number, Ron Graham, explain all about it.

(via @eightohnine)

Tags: mathematics   Ron Graham
04 Dec 02:00

Four Tops Remix

wskent

AWESOME. this is so funky. makes me move.

Bernadette! James Jamerson killing it on bass.
04 Dec 01:36

Video: That photo has probably been taken already

by David Pescovitz
wskent

#wordnerd

From the delightfully-named Dictionary of Obscure Sorrows, a video depicting what they call "vemödalen" defined as "the frustration of photographing something amazing when thousands of identical photos already exist."

04 Dec 00:54

Downtown Is for People

by editors
wskent

"Believing their block maps instead of their eyes, developers think of downtown streets as dividers of areas, not as the unifiers they are." LOVE JANE JACOBS.

On the then-new phenomenon of dead downtowns.

Jane Jacobs | Fortune | Apr 1958
[Full Story]
03 Dec 19:55

New York Public Library will rent Wi-Fi hotspots to people who need it most

by Megan Geuss
wskent

so fucking cool.

The New York Public Library, as well as the Queens Library and the Brooklyn Public Library, will begin renting out 10,000 Wi-Fi hotspots to residents later this month, The Wall Street Journal reported on Tuesday. A press release provided to Ars by the New York Public library noted that the New York and Brooklyn Public Libraries will rent out the hotspots for six months to a year to residents who don't have broadband and who are enrolled in library programs and adult learning programs. The Queens Library will lend the mobile hotspots from five of its libraries to anyone with a library card.

The hotspots will be provided by Sprint.

A New York Public Library spokesperson told Ars via e-mail that people who borrow the hotspots will need "to sign an 'acceptable use agreement'" as required by Sprint. "It essentially states that the user will not do anything illegal with the Wi-Fi (such as illegally download movies)," the spokesperson said. In addition, renters of the hotspots will be afforded the same privacy protections they would have if they had purchased the hotspot themselves.

Read 5 remaining paragraphs | Comments

03 Dec 19:49

This is what cows look like when you blow dry them

by David Mizejewski
wskent

cuz you know you were curious.

G2YpErL

These girls got their hair did.

02 Dec 18:51

The Tool That Helps You Search Every Page You’ve Ever Visited

by Klint Finley
wskent

Thoughts? This reminds me of that fad where people wanted to share their web history. I could see this taking off like celebrity playlists, author bibliographies or expert recommended lists might. maybe.

The Tool That Helps You Search Every Page You’ve Ever Visited

Fetching.io caches every single web page you visit, creating your own personal search engine consisting only of your own browsing history

The post The Tool That Helps You Search Every Page You’ve Ever Visited appeared first on WIRED.