Links
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Shirky: A Group Is Its Own Worst Enemy
Clay’s 2003 ETech talk about online communities is still a good read.
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General Magic: Oral History of the Influential Tech Company
“Oral history” seems to mean “interviews broken into tiny snippets to give the impression of a conversation” but this excerpt of a book is still good. I remember that interface from an early Wired article.
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Making
Detailed and fascinating look at the issues with trying to make the time HTML element work for dates hundreds or thousands of years old. (via:tominsam)
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American-on-American Action Abroad: Sorry For Travel Writing At You
“Watching two British people run into one another in America is a wholly different type of delight, like watching two grifters trying to run the same scam in a small town instantly clock one another and freeze during a game of high-stakes poker.”
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How did you find your passion? - career work motivation | Ask MetaFilter
A great answer (from 2008) that’s realistic and emphasises that you don’t need to (sometimes shouldn’t) turn your passion, if you even have one, into your career.
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Olympus PEN-F
Purely because it’s a lovely review of a camera. Nicely written, detailed without being nerdy-in-a-bad-way, and open to a change of mind.
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BBC - Press Office - Studio fast facts
2002 press release about the BBCi studio. (via @mattb)
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How an Ex-Cop Rigged McDonald’s Monopoly Game and Stole Millions
That’s a good read. (via Kottke)
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Bronson Pinchot Discusses All Things Audiobooks — Vulture
Interesting on how he thinks about recording audiobooks.
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Joel Simon - Evolving Floorplans
I really like this idea, and the results, as a first experiment with something. (via Kottke)
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that unsolvable lack
Interesting background about celebrity PR,and thoughts on that profile of Gwyneth Paltrow and GOOP (looked from this piece).
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A pre-history of weeknotes, plus why I write them and perhaps why you should too (Week 16)
By Matt Webb. A lovely summary, and kindly citing my own weeknotes.
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Stacking the Bricks: How the Blog Broke the Web
I don’t agree with this - that the chronological format, and blogging software - somehow “broke” what was good about the early web, but it’s still interesting to consider.
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What Cracking Open a Sonos One Tells Us About the Sonos IPO
Comparing the innards of a Sonos One with an Amazon Echo Plus. Surprisingly fascinating.
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How to treat Morrissey? Stop listening to him | Stewart Lee | Opinion | The Guardian
Good generally, but particularly for the stock of rock analogy.
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Retirement Investing Today: Resignation in
I’ve been reading RIT for a few years and, after One More Year or two, he’s retired. Good work.
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You don’t have to live in public
Lots of good advice about working (as opposed to living) in public online.
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All Things Linguistic
A blog about linguistics, by Gretchen McCulloch, focusing on the net and space and that kind of thing. Loads of fascinating posts. (via Ask MeFi)
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Blot
“Blot is a blogging platform with no interface. It creates a special folder in your Dropbox and publishes files you put inside.” (via Warren Ellis)
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Vintage Home Plans
A tumblr of artists’ impressions and floor plans for “20th century houses from around the world”.
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Retrobatch, from Flying Meat
Really nice batch image processing tool for Mac. I love the visual workflows.
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How the Disposable Straw Explains Modern Capitalism - The Atlantic
So many interesting things in this. (via @frankieroberto)
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CSS Grid Layout Interface Builder | LayoutIt!
Very nifty thing for constructing a grid and getting the HTML and CSS for it using CSS Grid. (via FaveJet)
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Tapes - The Mckenzie Tapes
Lots of digitised cassettes of rock gigs in New York from the ‘80s and ‘90s. It’d be nice to have a list of artists, but I’m getting picky. (via Things Magazine)
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django-bakery documentation
“A set of helpers for baking your Django site out as flat files” made and used by the LA Times Data Desk. (via Simon Willison)
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Mithering about the unmodellable
On the difficulties of modelling how Parliament works, and the pros and cons of doing so. (via @markhurrell)
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D3.js Charts: Towards Updatable Code | Toptal
A useful variant on the D3.js modular pattern, allowing you to pass updated data (or other things) into an already-rendered chart.
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Modernist Architecture: The Barbican Complex: Exploring London’s Radiant City
Nice picture essay about the place. Helped that he had good weather!
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How is this speedrun possible? Super Mario Bros. World Record Explained - YouTube
A better watch than I expected. Quite amazing. (via Kottke, a while back)
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Art — Detroit Photographic Company
Nice photos by Roy Feldman. (via The Online Photographer)