Links
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LRB · job
Now that’s a job advert. No faffing. “The ‘London Review of Books’ is looking for an editor, preferably one with an interest in politics and history. Would suit a young, disaffected academic.”
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New Lightroom plug-in – CaptureTime to Exif - John Beardsworth
Bascially a Lightroom-plugin front-end for Exiftool. Lets you easily update the Date Time Original EXIF field (eg, for setting the date a scanned photo was taken) but also add other arguments manually.
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Who killed the Intel microprocessor? | asymco
I never knew about the difference between Intel (who design, manufacture and sell microprocessors) and ARM (who license microprocessors which designers use as part of a chip which is then manufactured by a fabricator).
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Obama London: Inexplicable Edits on Sarah Palin’s Facebook Page
It’s fascinating how quickly Palin’s team remove comments (and fair enough; it’s their page). It’s annoying how many people shout that this is “censorship”, as if they wouldn’t do the same if the tables were turned.
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Exquisite Tweets
Really handy way of being able to point at an entire Twitter conversation, or a hand-curated selection of tweets, from James Wheare.
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Cyclists in the City: HGVs - Time to make common cause with pedestrians and motorcyclists?
Some figures on how pedestrian and cycle casualties are caused in the City. Only 5% of pedestrian casualties are the result of cyclists, although pedestrians generally feel cyclists are dangerous.
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From zero to coder hero: Synchronizing django with twitter using django-syncr
How to fix the out-of-date django-syncr to work with Twitter’s OAuth.
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Danfairs/django-syncr at danfairs - GitHub
What looks like the most active copy of django-syncr around. Dan’s adding stuff to the ‘danfairs’ branch.
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Django-syncr - Project Hosting on Google Code
The “official” django-syncr source, but not updated since December 2008.
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Django-syncr: Synchronize Django with the web | JesseLegg.com
Introduction to django-syncr, which grabs Twitter, Flickr, Delicious, etc stuff from your accounts to your own Django-powered website.
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YouTube - The London Nobody Knows (Part 1 of 4) Documentary
‘The London Nobody Knows’ has found its way to YouTube. Watch, if you haven’t seen it, and you like/know London, in case it disappears.
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The Web Is a Customer Service Medium (Ftrain.com)
“The web is not, despite the desires of so many, a publishing medium. The web is a customer service medium. ‘Intense moderation’ in a customer service medium is what ‘editing’ was for publishing. … Turn your readers into members. Not visitors, not subscribers; you want members.”
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And Now Presenting: Amazing Satellite Images Of The Ghost Cities Of China
I skipped this link the first couple of times seeing it, but I’m glad I finally looked. Amazing, stunning amounts of development, largely uninhabited. (via BERG)
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Simon Reynolds’ 2010 (Playlist by philgyford - Spotify)
I made a playlist of all of the albums and tracks Simon Reynolds liked most from 2010. Well, those I could find on Spotify, around 50%.
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That Gormandizer Man: How London buses are numbered - TfL come up trumps!
A lovely and interesting email from TfL. I love how historic numbers are maintained/adapted. It’s the kind of thing that has no direct benefit to a company’s profit, but it makes the world a better place.
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Cyberspace When You’re Dead - NYTimes.com
Long article about what happens to peoples’ online lives after they die. Good stuff, although I find so many companies’ focus on safeguarding passwords odd; it doesn’t seem like the big problem in this area. (via Haddock)
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ThinkUp: Social Media Insights Engine
Looks fascinating - a PHP/MySQL project you can install which then grabs your Twitter and Facebook network info and processes and graphs it al. (via Preoccupations)
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Rory Hyde Projects / Blog » Blog Archive » ‘Know No Boundaries’: an interview with Matt Webb of BERG London
Nice interview with Webb about design and BERG and stuff. (via Preoccupations)
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Staging Servers, Source Control & Deploy Workflows, And Other Stuff Nobody Teaches You: MicroISV on a Shoestring
Handy description of git and staging/production environments and workflow. In like reading how other people do things. (via mildlydiverting)
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URL Design — Warpspire
Tips for designing URLs, most of which seems like common sense to me, but also some tips re HTML5 Javascript shenanigans. (via Simon Willison)
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Boardwalk Empire VFX Breakdowns of Season 1 on Vimeo
I love watching these kinds of effects reels. It’s amazing what you see these days that’s so realistic you don’t really notice the effects. (via Kottke)
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Christmas on the high street: retail winners and losers | Business | guardian.co.uk
2011’s award for ‘Most Pointless And Over The Top Use Of Flash’ has already been won by the Guardian! Horrifyingly hilarious. (via @dracos)
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How to represent a pension investment account? / Questions / Discussion Area - Moneydance Support
It’s currently impossible to represent UK pensions in Moneydance, which is otherwise quite good.
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Flickr: The Broad Street & old Liverpool Street station, London Pool
Some good old pics. I should remember a lot more of the old Liverpool and Broad Street stations than I do.
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Old maps of Southwark - Southwark Council
Not just maps of Southwark, but good resolution PDFs of historical maps of London. Good. (via @alanconnor)
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LRB · Vol. 33 No. 1 · 6 January 2011 · letters
I must have missed the government’s embarrassment and apologies over its peaceful citizens being treated like this by the police in the student protests.
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LRB · David Runciman · Look…
For this: “a new divide in British public life: between the people who say ‘Look…’ and the people who say ‘So…’”
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LRB · John Lanchester · Let Us Pay
On the future of the newspaper industry. Many good nuggets, including: “New York Times, if it stopped printing a physical edition of the paper, could afford to give every subscriber a free Kindle. Not the bog-standard Kindle, but the one with free global data access. And not just one Kindle, but four Kindles. And not just once, but every year.”
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The battle of Towton: Nasty, brutish and not that short | The Economist
Fascinating account of a War of the Roses battle from an excavated mass grave. I didn’t know men of the time weren’t much shorter than the average today (people shrank in the Victorian era). (via Kottke)
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LRB · August Kleinzahler · Diary
I really enjoyed this description of a road trip in the American West, although it’s for subscribers only.