Links
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Indietracks Festival
Jolly nice, virtually free, 52-track compilation of twee/indiepop tunes. How can you go wrong, unless you hate nice things?
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Pareidoloop
“1. generate random polygons. 2. feed them into a face detector. 3. mutate to increase recognition confidence.” All done in-browser. Lovely stuff from Philip McCarthy. Code on Github.
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Advanced Projects Series // Eiger Waterproof Field Jacket || Mission Workshop
Mmmmm, nice (sold out) jacket.
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Chrome Web Store - Pendule
I stumbled across this Chrome add-on yesterday which provides lots of very handy things that the standard developer tools don’t.
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WordPress › Toolbox « Free WordPress Themes
“A semantic, HTML5, canvas for CSS artists and an ultra-minimal set of super-clean templates for your own WordPress theme development.”
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WordPress › Boilerplate « Free WordPress Themes
“A merger … of the HTML5 Boilerplate and the Starkers theme.” Handy for starting theme development with. I imagine.
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The full story and conclusion of Tim and Freya #traintales (with image, tweets) · JaneyGodley · Storify
Blimey. A really good read - must have been even more gripping in real time.
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The physical constraints of London’s streets | As Easy As Riding A Bike
Countering the “London’s streets are two narrow for proper Dutch-style cycling lanes” idea with many, many photos of London’s wide main roads. (via Cyclists in the City)
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Origin of the @reply – Digging through twitter’s history | Anarchogeek
Nice bit of digging. (via Kottke)
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Another Studio - MONUmini Barbican Tower
10cm tall stainless steel sheet model of a Barbican tower.
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Samuel Pepys, Swedish Tweets and the craziest photo app yet (ft. Phil Gyford, Samuel Pepys Diary blog) | Off The Wall Post
I’m on this podcast talking about Pepys and Pretend Office and, you know, stuff. It was fun!
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Peity • progressive
Nice jQuery plugin for turning lists of numbers into little pie charts, graphs or bar charts. Sparklines. (via Brett Terpstra)
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Revans/bash-it
Even if just as a source of handy bash bits and pieces, rather than installing the whole thing, handy. (via Brett Terpstra)
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Home - Annotator - Annotating the Web
“An open-source JavaScript library and tool that can be added to any webpage to make it annotatable. Annotations can have comments, tags, users and more.” (via Brett Terpstra)
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xdissent/ievms
Automated setting up of Microsoft’s virtual machines for testing versions of Internet Explorer, using VirtualBox. (via @mattb)
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Facebook should make a camera ( 3 Jul., 2012, at Interconnected)
I’m still amazed how unprogressive the camera market is. Aside from lack of product design innovation, cameras are so unconnected. Here we are in 2012 and very, very few even have wifi or GPS, never mind 3G, slick interfaces, integration with third-party services, etc.
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Building and dismantling the Windows advantage | asymco
Blimey, those are quite some graphs, showing ratio of Windows:Mac, and Windows:Apple sales over time. (via Daring Fireball)
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A successful Git branching model » nvie.com
Good-sounding group workflow for using Git. (Last year I apparently already linked to the modified version they use at GitHub.) (via Haddock)
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Pimping out git log - Bart’s Blog
Very nice and super-easy to implement. See the Update for the most recent command. (via Haddock)
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Twitter / mattb: @philgyford those “estimat
“@philgyford those “estimates” always upset me. I didn’t estimate, I wrote down the first 15 companies I could think of in half an hour.” Exactly.
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Demos | Publications - A Tale of Tech City
Free download PDF of the report. Page 53 includes the “15 companies in 2008” meme as only one of several unreliable figures. (via @jwheare)
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Olympic Park legacy plan threatens Tech City growth, report warns | Business | guardian.co.uk
“That compares with an estimated 15 companies as recently as 2008.” The Guardian trotting out that ridiculous stat yet again. Even the Demos report the article is about (but doesn’t link to) says that figure is only one of several unreliable ones.
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Pixastic: JavaScript Image Processing
I keep forgetting the name of this and appear to have not bookmarked it before. “A JavaScript library which allows you to perform a variety of operations, filters and fancy effects on images.”
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Infrastructure for Startups
Even without the talk itself, Paul Hammond’s slides are a good, sensible read. (via @infovore)
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Play This Thing! | Game Reviews | Free Games | Independent Games | Game Culture
“By the end, you feel as if you have experienced a form of art; it feels like poetry, though it is not, and like the best poetry, it expresses something meaningful about the human condition.” Nice review of the site I helped make a while back. (via Infovore)
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Satellite Eyes
Tom Taylor made a really lovely thing. If you use a Mac you should try it.
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Doonesbury Comic Strip, June 17, 2012 on GoComics.com
I just cried at an eight-frame comic (well, eight frames plus the previous x years).
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The Online Photographer: Set Those Expectations Low
“Photography is a superb hobby, one of the best. It’s when you try to make a living at it that it is so likely to resist you. I don’t think other hobbies have this problem. I mean, consider, say, fly-fishing, or building plastic model planes. Very few people who do those things assume they’re going to ‘go pro’ someday. Very few people try. It doesn’t generally come up.”
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Republicans for Revolution by Mark Lilla | The New York Review of Books
“People who know what kind of new world they want to create through revolution are trouble enough; those who only know what they want to destroy are a curse.” Also for the definitions of “liberal” and “conservative” half-way through, and the potted history of the origins of neoconservatism.
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Safety is an Expensive Illusion
For the middle bit in which he calculates the lifetime cost (in money and time) of driving a larger, very sliightly safer, car.