Links
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How Many People Have Ever Lived on Earth? - Population Reference Bureau
The number of people alive today is something like, very vaguely, 6% of all those who ever lived. (via @GreatDismal)
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AJAX with CSRF Protection in Codeigniter 2.0 | AYM Systems
This was handy.
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Impostor syndrome - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
“Regardless of what level of success they may have achieved in their chosen field of work or study or what external proof they may have of their competence, those with the syndrome remain convinced internally they do not deserve the success they have achieved and are actually frauds.” (via Haddock)
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Snap Bird - search twitter’s history
Lets you search your Twitter friends’ tweets, or a specific person’s tweets (and more), further back than 10 days (unlike official Twitter search). (via Haddock)
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Doonesbury Strip - Oct 14, 2008
“This *is* Rick Redfern, Post political reporter, right?” “Um… No. I write a blog now.” “Oh… I’m so sorry, man. I didn’t know.”
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BBC iPlayer - Click: 26/02/2011
Pepys’ Diary gets a little plug around the 23 minute mark in the current edition of ‘Click’ on BBC News 24. (UK only I expect.)
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Sohei Nishino - Diorama map London (Detailed info)
Stunning photographic collage photo-maps of cities. Currently at Michael Hoppen Gallery, SW3 3TD until 2nd April. (via Blech)
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Thoughts of a Bohemian » Blog Archive » The fire this time
It’s not just digital archives that are being destroyed: The liquidator in charge of the defunct Corbis Sygma agency is planning to destroy an archive of 12 million photos. We need a real world Archive Team. Grrrrrrrrr. (via The Online Photographer)
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Wilderness to brothels to Apple store: the History of Development in one block
I like this description of one spot of Manhattan and how it changed over the centuries. Although calling the block’s current state “the ultimate culmination of centuries of development” assumes nothing’s going to change ever again. (via @GreatDismal)
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SamKnows - Telephone Exchange Search
Handy thing that shows you lots of information about your nearest telephone exchange, and the broadband services, LLU operators, etc available.
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Reading Marx’s Capital with David Harvey » Reading Capital
“David Harvey has been teaching Karl Marx’s Capital, Volume I for nearly 40 years, and his lectures are now available online for the first time. This open course consists of 13 video lectures of Professor Harvey’s close chapter by chapter reading of Capital, Volume I.” I bet that’s good. Also, CC-licensed.
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LRB · Benjamin Kunkel · How Much Is Too Much?
“Harvey observes these contradictions sharpening over time, as finance capital becomes ever more mobile while beds of infrastructure grow increasingly Procrustean: ‘The disjunction of the quest for hypermobility and an increasingly sclerotic built environment (think of the huge amount of fixed capital embedded in Tokyo or New York City) becomes ever more dramatic.’”
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Pattern, a Python module for mining web data
Lovely looking module for grabbing data from a variety of web sources, analysing it, and displaying results in different ways. (via Waxy)
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MySociety » Blog Archive » Seeking to Contract an Interactive Designer for FixMyTransport
The good folks at mySociety are looking for a freelance designer to make their new project beautiful and lovely.
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Dancarroll / django-activitysync / source – Bitbucket
Django app for aggregating activity from different services, currently Twitter, Google Reader and Reddit.
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Virtualenv and pip Basics | Jontourage
Nothing I didn’t already know, but explained simply and clearly, which will be handy if I have to describe this stuff to anyone else.
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DJ Matthew Africa - I Wish You Would - Ninety-Now
I’m far from a connoisseur, but I really enjoyed these four podcast mixes featuring 1990s east-coast indie-label rap.
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C21Media: C21Media to launch Silicon Roundabout Insider
Oh dear oh dear. Makes me feel punchy. That must also be a candidate for most unbearably animated page on the Internet. (via @mattb)
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Hundreds of Tourist Photos Weaved into One (18 total) - My Modern Metropolis
Really stunning images of tourist sites made out of hundreds of overlaid tourist snaps. Beautiful. I want these on my walls. (via Blech)
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The REAL Death Of The Music Industry
Some good graphs and stats about the US recorded music industry. I’m amazed at how few albums and singles per capita are bought, even at the industry’s peak (now: 1.25 albums, 3.7 singles, per year). (via Daring Fireball)
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The Sartorialist: On the Street….London Color Story, London
Some Londoners appear to be dressing themselves after that Hollywood movie teal-and-orange colour grading craze.
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One Terabyte of Kilobyte Age | Digging through the Geocities Torrent
A blog outlining some peoples’ explorations of the torrent of all the archived GeoCities data. Some lovely old bits of early web archaeology in there.
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ASCII by Jason Scott / A Valentine from Archive Team
Surprise! Yahoo is deleting even *more* user-created content. This time Yahoo Video. It’s like Yahoo! doesn’t feel hated enough yet. But I keep loving Archive Team more. (via Tom Taylor)
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Programming Amazon EC2 - O’Reilly Media
This book’s just come out. Anyone read it? Any good? Any other recommendations for getting up to speed with hosting on AWS? Ta.
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Albert Einstein Institution - Publications - 005 From Dictatorship to Democracy
Full PDF text of this 1993 book by Gene Sharp, who was interviewed on ‘Today’ this morning. It’s apparently been cited by some of those in the current revolutions.
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CV Dazzle by Adam Harvey
“Camouflage from face detection.” Good stuff. By a student at ITP. (via @GreatDismal)
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David Long :: Hidden City
“The Secret Alleys, Courts and Yards of London’s Square Mile” Sounds like a good read.
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Married and moving to Hollywood
I just like John August’s suggestions on how to maintain a good relationship if you both move somewhere because one of you has a new, all-consuming new job.
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Help Center | Facebook
How to download all of your “information” from your Facebook account. (vi Preoccupations)
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London’s first aerial walkways | News | Property news | Homes & Property
I’m assuming it’s just the Standard’s subeditor who thinks these are the “first aerial walkways” in London, rather than architecture writer Ruth Bloomfield. That would be silly…