Links
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140 Characters » How Twitter Was Born
How Twitter went from idea to product. I love stories like this because you know how much it means to the people involved. (via Preoccupations)
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A daily diary of Depression-era life, told on Twitter.: The Social Path
Entries from a line-a-day diary kept from 1937 to 1941 posted daily to Twitter. (via Infovore)
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Global Futures Studies & Research by the MILLENNIUM PROJECT
“Functions under the auspices of the World Federation of UN Associations.”
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RubyFrontier Documentation
Another CMS… imitating Userland Frontier. I can’t decide if this is brilliance and/or madness. (via Daring Fireball)
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Nanoc: a Ruby CMS that generates static HTML » home
Another little CMS. “runs on your local computer and compiles Markdown, Textile, Haml, etc. documents into static web pages, ready for uploading to any web host.” (via Daring Fireball)
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Webby :: Webby
Mini CMS in Ruby. Mainly just converts text into web pages using a variety of templating languages. (via Daring Fireball)
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Corner Cottage, St Ives
We stayed here this past week. Lovely little place, great location, sleeps up to five. St Ives was great, if wet, this time of year: quiet, friendly, beautiful and tasty.
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Fraser Speirs – On the Flickr support in iPhoto ‘09
I know Speirs could be accused of bias but it doesn’t sound like iPhoto ‘09’s Flickr integration is going to be any use to me at all. Sounds awful. (via Daring Fireball)
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Mathusalem - Google Code
Interesting-sounding backup utility for Mac OS X. Backs up in the background to “local drives, iDisk, WebDAV, AFP, SMB, FTP, SFTP or Amazon S3”. Maybe for when StrongSpace finally disappears. (via Tom Taylor on Twitter)
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FreeAgent - Online accounting for freelancers and small businesses
Another online thing for freelance types, this one for accounting. Lots of UK-specific stuff.
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YouTube - The T-Mobile Dance
An IprovEverywhere type stunt as an advert but very nicely done. I love how the participants only gradually join in. (via Preoccupations)
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ASCII by Jason Scott / FUCK THE CLOUD
A follow-up to the previous link on why keeping your stuff on servers run by other companies is a recipe for trouble. I try to avoid this but some things, like Flickr, make me nervous. (via Blech)
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ASCII by Jason Scott / Eviction, or the Coming Datapocalypse
Catching up on stuff… AOL Hometown shut down and wiped all its users’ sites with four weeks’ notice. It’s bad enough when chunks of the web disappear, but worse like this. (via Simon Willison)
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Xero is the world’s easiest accounting system.
And one more for good measure. (via Haddock)
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FreshBooks - Online Invoicing, Time Tracking and Expense Service
Looks interesting, for possible future use. (via Haddock)
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Simple online time tracking, timesheet and reporting software: Harvest
What it says. Haven’t tried it. (via Haddock)
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TDO Mini Forms Wordpress Plugin (v0.12.6) [thedeadone.net]
Very flexible plugin that lets you create custom forms which create new WordPress posts with their data. Confusing and ugly UI, but nicely powerful.
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LifeStreamBackup.com
Launching soon, a backup for Flickr and weblogs. Google Docs, Twitter, YouTube and Facebook backup promised. As I said earlier, all these sites should offer this service by default. (via Blech)
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ChangeDetection - Know when any web page changes
I’m sure there are similar services but if I don’t save this I’ll forget which one I signed up with to watch a page.
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Google Open Source Blog: Google Blog Converters 1.0 Released
Excellent - scripts to convert between Blogger, LiveJournal, MovableType and WordPress. I reckon every single online service should have an “Export” button and nag you if you haven’t backed-up in a while. (via Tom Taylor)
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Reduced Circumstances - Current showcase
Run actors’ showcases at Soho Theatre twice a year.
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The Printed Blog | Home
A trial of a twice-daily very local newspaper in some US locations using content from blogs. It would be difficult to be any worse than, say, Metro, London Lite, Evening Standard, etc. in London.
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Noisy Decent Graphics: All the ephemera that’s fit to print
I haven’t even seen one of these (yet) but it’s already one of my favourite objects. I’ve wanted to do something like this for ages but Russell and Ben actually did it, and did it much better than I’d ever have done it.
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Tabbloid
Will regularly email you a PDF of your chosen RSS feeds. Couldn’t be much simpler. (via Russell Davies)
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Russell Davies: meet the new schtick (2)
Part two of a write-up of a talk Russell gave. Real-world things derived from the internet’s good stuff make me excited.
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A Typographic Survey of the City of London on Vimeo
Lovely little video about the typography used in public throughout the City. Only criticism: sound recording is very poor quality. Otherwise, fab. (via Blech)
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Twee as Fuck
Fanzine, monthly London club night, record label. Looks great. (Warning: the naughty page plays music when it loads.)
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The Django Book: Version 2.0 (English)
Lets people attach comments to individual paragraphs. Quite nicely done compared to some similar implementations (eg, BookGlutton, CommentPress).
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Requirements for an invoice | Business Link
Not thrilling, but useful and clearly presented, for UK businesses.
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Preoccupations: Our work (so far) this year
Going to talk to those pupils was great fun and this describes how incredibly lucky and clever they are. Very impressive (David and them, not me).