Link Archives
Ads via The Deck
July 3, 2009
Brandon Boyer on Treasure World, DS game that turns wifi hotspots into collectible treasure (to play the game, you have to explore the real world)
TweetCraft, in-game Twitter client for World of Warcraft (supports uploading screenshots with TwitPic) [via]
Augmented reality iPhone London tube station finder (I really could've used this last week) [via]
Sour's "Hibi no Neiro," crowdsourced music video (choreographing 64 fans with webcams) [via]
Slate's Chris Wilson tracks 10,000 random YouTube URLs for 30 days (3% hit 1,000 views, more than I would've expected) [via]
Pinboard, Maciej Ceglowski's lightweight del.icio.us clone (on the roadmap: "Get acquired by Yahoo and slowly grow useless")
Donkey Kong easter egg discovered 25 years later (created by DadHacker and discovered by Don Hodges, two of my favorite gaming nerds)
Newspaper Club (building a customizable newspaper printing service in 60 days; they're using InDesign as the backend)
Kevin Kelly's Death Clock in Futurama (this might seem morbid to some, but I find it inspiring)
July 2, 2009
Paul Lamere's Coolness Index (are female singers uncool?)
Kickstarter's Big Day (13 projects ended on July 1, raising an average 188% of their goals)
Anil Dash on Malcolm Gladwell's criticism of Chris Anderson's Free (I read through Gladwell's New Yorker piece twice, and the arguments seem petty and off base)
72-year-old retired boxer beats up knife-wielding knucklehead (the inane Facebook photos make this story even more delicious)
July 1, 2009
Pez sues Burlingame Museum of Pez for copyright infringement (so disappointing)
RIAA wins lawsuit against Usenet.com (judge rules Betamax case doesn't apply; every other Usenet provider is next)
June 30, 2009
EveryBlock releases source code (it was a requirement of their funding from the Knight Foundation)
Hype Machine detects cheating on charts, names names (one of the bands responds in the comments and gets schooled by Anthony) [via]
Ze Frank on black, white, and shades of green (I'm loving this series)
China bans gold farming, real-world sale of virtual goods (Eurogamer estimates 1 million Chinese gold farmers with worldwide trade worth more than US$10 billion annually) [via]
The Pirate Bay sold to publicly-traded Swedish gaming company (Brokep's statement is delusional; being acquired will almost certainly kill the site)
Michael Rubin's "Droidmaker" book now available for free download! (authoritative 518-page history of Lucasfilm, the creation of Pixar, and much more) [via]
June 29, 2009
Jason Rohrer interviewed about "selling out" to make iPhone and ad games (he recently switched from free, open-source games; also, EA claims Spielberg's LMNO isn't cancelled)
Nedroid's Cosby Experiment (view all 190 Cosbys)
How the NYT kept their reporter's Taliban kidnapping off Wikipedia for seven months (they collaborated with Jimmy Wales directly to freeze the entry; NPR asks if it was ethical) [via]
David Fincher may direct Facebook film, adapted by Aaron Sorkin (possibly starring Michael Cera or Shia LaBeouf as Zuckerberg; this sounds familiar) [via]
Quarrygirl's undercover investigation of non-vegan ingredients used at L.A.-area vegan restaurants (outstanding blog reporting, with industrial food testing from 17 different restaurants and research into suppliers)
June 28, 2009
James Barnett's oil paintings of landscapes from video games (looking at the paintings, I felt like I'd actually visited those locations in real-life) [via]
WSJ interviews Brenda Brathwaite about "Train," a board game about the Holocaust (not all games need to be fun) [via]
June 27, 2009
How Rob Manuel accidentally started a Michael Jackson moonwalk flashmob (I'm in London right now, and I've seen several massive vigils and tributes on the streets) [via]
Top teams join forces to win Netflix Prize (check the leaderboard for the first score to break the 10% improvement threshold) [via]
Wired on the success of Nike+ (backstory on how it works and the Hawthorne effect; simply measuring something can change its behavior) [via]
June 26, 2009
Imeem to delete all user-added photos and videos, with five days' notice (with no way to back up videos at all) [via]
Shnabubula's chiptune tribute to Michael Jackson (also: Virt's incredible VRC6 cover of Thriller)
June 25, 2009
Metafilter user highlights 20 years of Elvis Costello's "adenoidal" voice in the NYT (Stephen Holden and Neil Strauss have a limited musical vocabulary) [via]
June 24, 2009
Flashterm, free telnet client for the web (I love his gallery page, full of BBSes)
Peter Nitsch's Flash port of AA-Lib, image-to-ASCII art library (the demo is fun; also: his real-time video conversion to ASCII) [via]
Simon Willison's four lessons from the Guardian's journalism crowdsourcing experiment (they deliberately made it game-like to encourage participation) [via]
June 22, 2009
Ze Frank's That Makes Me Think Of... (first of a series on Time.com, reminiscent of The Show) [via]
Paul Lamere on procedural video remixing with the Echo Nest API (this is way awesome, the mashup possibilities are endless)
June 19, 2009
Anil Dash on the first rapper vs. the first blogger ("all of blogging is hip hop")
Pixar grants dying 10-year-old girl's last wish to see "UP" (prepare to weep) [via]
June 18, 2009
Guardian crowdsources investigation into MPs' expenses (brilliantly using readers to dig through 700,000 documents to aid their investigation)
Paul Lamere's Passion Index for measuring band's true fans (he looks at the number of plays per listener for a simple metric)
Sudden Impact (cliche supercut of TV/film characters suddenly hit by moving vehicles)
June 17, 2009
How to enable iPhone OS 3.0 tethering on AT&T's network (not as flawless as I thought; it disables Visual Voicemail, but you can check manually until the new hack's out tomorrow)
Ross Racine's incredible artwork of aerial views of fictional city maps (drawn freehand in Photoshop, they contain no photos or scanned material)
TED interviews Clay Shirky about Iran and Twitter (related: Clay's TED talk from last month at the State Department)
Shaun Inman releases Fever, an elegantly designed feedreader (PHP/MySQL app, it recommends stories in your feeds based on link popularity)
Ze Frank's Art Hour (he still makes me giggle)
Microsoft IE8 contest insults other browsers (tarnished Chrome, boring Safari, and old Firefox; "get rid of it, or get lost")
Alice and Kev, the story of being homeless in Sims 3 (start from the beginning and keep reading; his writing is outstanding) [via]
June 16, 2009
SomethingAwful user's "urban exploration" of his neighbor's house (also known as "trespassing")
Chris Messina's scathing critique of Opera Unite (sending all traffic through Opera's proxies creates more centralization instead of less)
Google asks 50 random New Yorkers, "What's a browser?" (only about 8% knew; Rocketboom got very different answers on the NYU campus in 2005)
Play Mario Off, Keyboard Cat (Internet meme plus chiptunes equals Waxy love)
Sweet Juniper on Andrew WK's "Destroy Build Destroy" kid's show ("It's official: Andrew W.K., world's best babysitter.")
Autotune the News takes on JFK's inaugural speech (everything sounds better autotuned; see also: Winston Churchill and MLK)
Opera Unite (web server hosted in the browser using Opera's proxy servers for a simple URL; file sharing seems the most useful)
Shnabubula's alternate-reality versions of classic videogame music (Super Mario Bros. in a blender)
Alex Payne's Open Ideas (he's publishing his notebook of "someday" ideas, and they're all winners)
June 15, 2009
PS22 Chorus covers Lady Gaga's "Just Dance" (don't stop believin', kids)
Weird Al's "Craigslist" (Doors style parody featuring Ray Manzarek on keyboards, directed by Liam Lynch) [via]
BREADBOX64 (a Twitter client for the Commodore 64/128) [via]
John Martz's IE6 denial message for Momentile.com (new candidate for best error ever)
Diorama, stereoscopic 3D game for the iPhone (I want to see this on the Wii with head tracking) [via]
Dina Goldstein's Fallen Princesses photo series (what happens after the fairy tale's over?)
List of most frequently looked-up words on nytimes.com (more accurate stats since they removed the irritating double-click behavior in October)
June 14, 2009
Backbars, Greasemonkey script adds ambient bar charts to social news sites (unobtrusively visualizes popularity on Metafilter, Delicious, Reddit, Hacker News, etc) [via]
Hunch.com, decision-making engine, opens to the public (Caterina's new project is weird and good; worth checking out: the stats methods in the API and their cred system)
Nelson Minar on building social capital in multiplayer games (using an avatar creates a barrier to real-life interaction)
June 13, 2009
E_B_A tells the story behind the "Suing for Hotlinked Images" screenshot (the 2005 conversation is making the rounds again on Digg, Reddit, and Fark, without the followups)
140+ versions of Edward Cullen/Robert Pattinson in The Sims 3 (also: Boxxy, Tay Zonday, and Rick Astley all living in one house) [via]
Simon Willison's thoughtful essay on Facebook usernames and OpenID (he also notes that they're not doing an HTTP redirect, instead relying on JS) [via]
ARhrrrr, augmented reality first-person shooter on a handheld (runs on a prototype Nvidia Tegra dev kit; "orange Skittles act like proximity bombs") [via]
June 12, 2009
Ian Bogost on cascading failure from Google's malware detection (Twitter uses it for spam detection, which caused Ian's account to be suspended) [via]
Image: Facesquatting (fixed) (Mat Honan's collecting more examples)
Fleet Foxes singer on the beneficial effects of filesharing on music (he argues that free access to music history creates better musicians)
Mythbuster Adam Savage's Colossal Failures (great talk from Maker Faire on how his failures have changed him) [via]
The Simpsons Minus The Simpsons (hand-editing out the main characters, frame by frame)
Rob Matthews' printed hardbound edition of Wikipedia's featured articles (and it only represents less than 1/1000th of the total articles) [via]
Jim Rossignol on the Fermi paradox and why the aliens stayed home (our grandkids might find space exploration boring compared to next-gen virtual worlds and networks) [via]
Microsia, gorgeous sound game/tool for Windows (feels like an in-depth, HD version of Electroplankton) [via]
Windosill demo, now playable online (the first half of the game from the creator of Vector Park) [via]
June 11, 2009
Trending Topics, tracking Wikipedia zeitgeist (a completely open-source clone of Wikirank built on Hadoop and EC2) [via]
Daily Show visits the New York Times (I don't think they deserved this treatment; the NYT preemptively responded) [via]
Mr. Penumbra's Twenty-Four-Hour Book Store (must-read short fiction on data visualization, Google book scanning, and immortality)
Microsoft's Project Natal demo on Jimmy Fallon (Gavin Purcell says the bright red suits weren't for edge detection, but just being silly)
Slate on orphaned tweets (people who post once to Twitter and never return) [via]
Chinese government to require all new computers to ship with "Green Dam" filtering software (ostensibly to remove porn, but it also monitors activity and allows full government control over Internet usage)
June 10, 2009
Evaluating Google vs. Bing with Mechanical Turk (same as my experience, Google has a slim lead for most queries)
Bygone Bureau's feature on the indie gaming scene (interviews with the creators of Gravity Bone, You Have to Burn the Rope, and The Graveyard)
Last.fm's three founders announce their departure (they're leaving at the end of the month, close to the two-year anniversary of their acquisition)
Anil Dash on the future of Facebook usernames (entirely plausible; until Simon writes his up, I'm linking to Chris Messina's thoughtful essay)
June 7, 2009
Blind Search, compare results from Google, Bing, and Yahoo (in my queries, Google has an edge over Bing with Yahoo far behind)
Flixel, a free Actionscript library for building complex games without Flash (used to create Gravity Hook and Fathom, and includes the full source for Mode)
June 5, 2009
Joystiq on Scribblenauts for the DS (its absurdly large vocabulary lets players summon anything from a Kraken to a jackelope)
Alabaster, an interactive fiction fairy tale edited by Emily Short (multiple authors, procedural illustrations, and a tremendous amount of dialogue)
NYT publishes a new photo of the Tiananmen Square "Tank Man" (fascinating to see an iconic moment from a completely new angle) [via]
June 4, 2009
Ron Gilbert plays Secret of Monkey Island, 20 years later (his random thoughts and memories about making the game as he played through)
Ask Metafilter on musical cliches from TV and film (also, Kick Ass Classical ranks the top 100 classical songs by pop culture exposure)
Pocket Retro Game Emulator ($100 handheld plays NES, SNES, GBA, Genesis, and Neo Geo ROMs natively (and most likely illegally)) [via]
June 3, 2009
Google Squared goes live, structured data search (the quality is spotty, but it's still fun to play with; badly missing sorting and data export)
Dave Eggers on the death of print (he's conflating literacy with print, but I'm very excited to see his newspaper prototype) [via]
God Texts the Ten Commandments ("no omg's")
Han Solo, P.I. (don't miss the side-by-side; see also: Star Wars in the style of Macgyver, Dallas, and Airwolf)
The Beatles Rock Band animated intro, by Gorillaz animator Peter Candeland (incredible detail and hidden goodies in the newly-released HD version) [via]
Cool Guys Don't Look at Explosions ("the more you ignore it, the cooler you look"; it's almost a supercut)
Ask Metafilter on books that people proselytize (Aaron Cohen compiled a list of books and authors, ordered by most mentions)
June 2, 2009
JD Salinger sues over unauthorized Catcher in the Rye sequel (a fictional version of Salinger appears as a character in the book) [via]
John Martz's hand-drawn versions of famous album covers (more here and here)
Valve releases plugin to import Sketchup 3D models into Source maps (bring any object from Google's 3D Warehouse into a first-person game)
China blocking Twitter, Flickr, others in preparation for Tiananmen 20th anniversary (I find it fascinating how Chinese citizens view the GFW as an inconvenience or necessary evil)
Johnny Chung Lee reveals he worked on Project Natal (all my doubts about the technology just flew out the window; it is very real)
Steve Wiebe's live E3 attempt to break Billy Mitchell's Donkey Kong record (he just started) [via]
June 1, 2009
Dan & naD, a palindromic sketch (related: the What Song Is This? series) [via]
Chris Messina on Michael Moore's advice to Obama on GM (the actionable excerpt from Moore's original essay)
Kevin Kelly's Internet Mapping Project (hand-drawn maps of each person's view of the Internet) [via]
IGN/Gamespy shutting down ClassicGaming.com on August 31 (Jason Scott broke the news last week, this includes all hosted sites)
MTV's new original animated series, DJ & The Fro (like a modernized Beavis & Butthead, mocking YouTube instead of music videos)
Microsoft announces Project Natal, full-body motion capture for the Xbox 360 (control games without a controller, plus gestural media browsing, face recognition and object scanning) [via]
Boone Oakley (ad agency uses interactive YouTube videos as their homepage) [via]
Twitcaps, stream of images posted to Twitter (the most popular list is a glimpse into Twitter's evolving demographics) [via]
Lou Romano's incredible concept art for Pixar's UP (don't miss the color scripts and animated tests; also: NYT interviews Pete Docter) [via]
Telltale Games to release Tales of Monkey Island, five short episodic games (and Lucasarts is remaking the original game with new graphics and sound!)
Crush the Castle (addictive little Flash game, knocking down ragdolls on balancing structures)
xkcd inspires 4chan to turn /b/ into Twilight fan forum (in response to this excellent comic) [via]
David Lynch's Interview Project goes live (interviews with ordinary folks conducted on a 70-day road trip across America; directed by Lynch's son)
May 31, 2009
Know Your Meme tracks the origins of the "God Kills a Kitten" meme (appears to have originated from Portland's BarFly magazine in 1999)
Windows Update quietly installs Firefox extension (which can't be easily uninstalled; karma, indeed)
May 29, 2009
Zoho CEO on Google Wave, Microsoft Silverlight, and technology karma (even though Google's their biggest competitor, they've aligned with them because of their history) [via]
PatchMatch, incredible video demo of interactive content-aware image editing (taking seam carving to the next level, I really could've used this last week)
Yahoo! 360 closing down in July (they're providing a migration option and export tools, though only six weeks to use them)
The Onion's report on tracking down an NYU dorm fire (the future of news) [via]
Normalware's Bebot, surprisingly deep synth for the iPhone (don't miss the demo song by Jordan Rudess, showing how it's a full instrument) [via]
Twitter, as viewed by everybody who's never used Twitter (finally, the cliche's going away) [via]
Invaders! Possibly From Space! (Futurama fan makes a game based on a sketch based on a game)
Google Wave's full hour-long demo at Google I/O (don't miss the stunning demo of Rosy, real-time character-by-character language translation)
May 28, 2009
EFF chairman Brad Templeton makes a Hitler Downfall parody (don't miss his explanation of how he finally made the clip without breaking any laws) [via]
Hulu launches Desktop client for Windows/Mac (also, they just released browsing by air date and recommendations)
How Google Wave's spellcheck uses natural language processing (context-sensitive, it can correct there/their/they're and its/it's errors; also: Arrington interviews the founders)
Tim O'Reilly on the newly-announced Google Wave (real-time collaboration tool with an open protocol, blurring the line between email, IM, and personal publishing)
Don Bluth's Space Ace ported to iPhone (cheaper than the laserdisc version, but apparently, just as frustrating) [via]
Jeff Veen announces Typekit, licensing and hosting for web font embedding (short on details, but glad someone clever's trying to bridge the gap between developers and foundries)
Kevin Fox on Nilla wafers (I found this strangely touching)
May 27, 2009
Cabel Sasser on Panic's 50% off sale (every software company needs a green screen)
The Legion of Rock Stars (band wears 30dB noise-canceling headphones and plays along to rock songs)
Phreakmonkey surfs the web with a 300 baud acoustic modem from 1964 (at 6:30, he loads Wikipedia in Lynx; amazing it works so well with modern hardware) [via]
Zero Punctuation reviews Duke Nuke Forever ("taht's targic") [via]
Dennis Knopf's Bootyclipse series (booty-shaking videos on YouTube with the booty removed; the angry comments are funny)
May 26, 2009
Play Him Off, Green Day (Colbert gets in on the keyboard cat action)
Highlights from the truly horrible Star Wars first draft script (constraints led Lucas to make one great film; without them, he turned out films like this draft) [via]
Pick One (don't miss the top 10 (Sex, The Internet, Cats) and bottom 10 (AIDS, 9/11, Lil' Wayne)) [via]
May 25, 2009
nasty nets' YouTube Monster (culled from unrelated videos, like the visual version of In Bb 2.0)
Néojaponisme on the culture of anonymity for Japanese Internet users (opinionated but interesting article, particularly Japan's public vs. private personas)
Text Adventure, typography in video games (remember to adjust your fart volume) [via]
J. Chris Anderson on Toast, his standalone CouchDB chat demo (in the process, he explains some of the overlooked benefits of CouchDB)
May 24, 2009
Apple changes its mind, allows Eucalyptus into App Store (until Apple sorts out their approval process, it helps to have noisy friends)
The Male Programmer Privilege Checklist ("Having your desk near the entrance to your office without visitors assuming you're the receptionist.") [via]
May 23, 2009
Techcrunch reports CBS secretly gave Last.fm data to RIAA (Arrington says CBS lied to Last.fm and gave it to the RIAA without their knowledge; Last.fm is vehemently denying it, implying a personal vendetta)
May 22, 2009
An Optical Illusion by Ze Frank (put on a finger cot first)
The Deck Readership Survey (best survey ever; an excellent example of why I love The Deck so much) [via]
Intel's nerd rockstar ad (the way it should be! sadly, Intel hired an actor to play Ajay Bhatt)
Davario's Draw Yourself As A Teen meme on Livejournal (over 500 submissions in a year, some highlights)
May 21, 2009
Scott Schiller's forensics on a nasty piece of JS malware (the most bizarre Javascript obfuscation I've ever seen)
Buzzfeed's top video reactions to American Idol's finale (some very upset Adam Lambert fans, #9 is my personal favorite)
John Gruber on the next-gen iPhone's specs (he has the best sources of anyone in the industry, I'll bet this is dead-on accurate)
Sorry I'm Late, a stop-motion short film (I loved seeing how it was made, from the first test animations to the final shoot) [via]
U.S. government launches Data.gov, national data repository (not much there yet, but centralized data is good)
Project Gutenberg iPhone app blocked by Apple because of the Kama Sutra (note that Stanza, eReader, and Amazon's Kindle app all allow the same book) [via]
Infinite Summer, read Infinite Jest this summer (only 75 pages a week, easy!)
Brian & Eileen's Wedding Music Video (someone found a business model for lip dubs)
Tiny Art Director, little kids are difficult clients (I'm finding this very, very late, but every entry made me laugh) [via]
May 20, 2009
Mozilla Jetpack, extend Firefox with HTML, CSS, and jQuery (don't bother trying to grok it from the text, just watch the screencast)
Yahoo! Placemaker, extract world locations from unstructed content (also, Yahoo released the huge GeoPlanet/WOE placename database under a CC license)
Axono.me, isometric pixel art grid library for jQuery (check out the demos, including these racing cubes)
LEGO announces Frank Lloyd Wright sets (the Guggenheim and Fallingwater are first, continuing the LEGO Architecture series of landmarks)
Evan Roth's Intellectual Property Asshole Competition (he painted the HOPE poster and the AP photo it was based on; whoever C&Ds him first wins) [via]
Braid for Mac released (now there's no excuse not to buy it)
Fast Company on Taipei's innovative "zero landfill, total recycling" program (here's a first-person account of the system and video of the garbage trucks playing Fur Elise) [via]
May 19, 2009
Leaked video from Trico, new game by ICO/Shadow of the Colossus creators (their games seem to be weaving a larger narrative arc in the same fictional world)
Katy Hargrove's real-life molded Gummi Venus de Milos (life imitating art)
Fathom (tweaking the genre's cliches, it quickly shifts from 8-bit platformer to art game) [via]
Gmail Labs adds automatic language translation (getting closer to the Babel fish)
Tweeting Too Hard (dedicated to finding the most self-important, egotistical tweets)
ghstbstrsbstrs (clever, a digital collage without Photoshop) [via]
Joel Johnson on the divide between Wired Magazine vs. Wired.com (great comments from Wired employees past and present, including Chris Anderson, Leander Kahney, Steve Silberman, and Brian Lam)
May 18, 2009
Auto Tune The News #3 (last month, the New York Observer interviewed Michael Gregory about the series) [via]
Last Day Dream (a 42-second short film) [via]
Which of our beliefs will our grandchildren be appalled by? (Phil Dhingra highlights the best from a massive Reddit thread)
NYT's Maureen Dowd steals paragraph from Talking Points Memo's Josh Marshall (it would've been more fitting if she'd plagiarized from Twitter instead)
May 17, 2009
All Your Base dialogue, properly translated from Japanese to English (amazingly, I've never read the correct translation before)
Japanese trailer for "Muscle March" for WiiWare (defies description, the most intensely weird game I've ever seen)
Google's index of Wolfram|Alpha search results (they have no robots.txt at all; Google isn't parsing their Javascript, so Google can only see what's served statically from their results)
May 16, 2009
danah boyd's answers questions on Twitter about teen practices (I find this kind of thing absolutely fascinating)
WolframAlpha rendering text as images to prevent indexing (though they claim it's for "consistency," which is absurd; on second thought, I think Paul Ford's right, it's just Wolfram culture)
Hard Times with Ze Frank (Ze's second video for Buzzfeed, I'm hoping he'll keep making more)
Danger Mouse to release blank CD-ROM after legal fight with EMI (selling the packaging without the music; also, NPR's streaming the album) [via]
May 15, 2009
Updating the Web 2.0 logo collage for 2009 (tracking how many of the original sites are dead or acquired; or, in the case of WebJay, both) [via]
Wired's walkthrough of the May issue's hidden puzzles (reminds me of the golden era of Games Magazine) [via]
Stephen Wolfram demonstrates Wolfram|Alpha in detail (after watching the screencast, I'm much more excited about tonight's launch)
Us Now (one-hour free documentary about online collaboration and participatory government) [via]
May 14, 2009
Ian Bogost's Guru Meditation (Zen game released in two versions: the Atari 2600/Amiga Joyboard and the iPhone)
Vulture crunches the numbers on this season's SNL (charting cast member frequency, average appearances, and celebrity cameos) [via]
The Sound of Young America's Pledge Drive (a short film by Lonely Sandwich; donate to the best interview show around and get a Mustache TV)
Ubik's Voxel (absolutely stunning animated 3D pixel-ish art) [via]
F.A.T.'s KANYEFY bookmarklet, turn any site into Kanye West's blog (also on Kanye week: see the web through Kanye's eyes, Quotable Kanye (with API), and the Kanye rant detector)
Giant net-enabled Etch-A-Sketch hacked out of a 52" HD TV (related: giant collaborative Etch-A-Sketch from Siggraph 2006, projected on a giant screen) [via]
Greg Borenstein explains Why the Lucky Stiff's Bloopsaphone, with examples (write chiptunes in C or Ruby with a surprisingly readable syntax)
Buster Benson leaving Robot Co-op to do Enjoymentland full-time (one of my favorite people, always doing interesting things)
Gamasutra's Community Manager interview series (social network and gaming community managers could learn from one another)
Cracked's Most Baffling Pairings from Erotic Slash-Fiction (some gems in the comments, including this site dedicated to Radiohead slashfic)
Pixel City, Shamus Young's procedurally-generated city (his ten-part series of blog posts breaks down how it's made)
May 13, 2009
SNL's Casey Wilson Reads Internet Comments About Her (shenanigans! the Patton Oswalt comment was written by a Funny or Die employee) [via]
God gave me cookies (I think I'd be inclined to listen to salesmen and missionaries if they brought snacks)
LOST-inspired Doomsday Terminal for the iPhone (more interesting than the "gameplay" is that it allows anonymous messages between users)
Amazon Kindling (Rob Cockerham made a laser-engraved wooden Kindle)
Gizmodo's untold story of how three interns stole NASA's moon rocks (this 2004 LA Times article explains the background, but skipped details of the theft) [via]
May 12, 2009
Nick Montfort on extremely minimalist games (you just lost The Game)
Making old Trek look like new Trek (everything's better with lens flare) [via]
Google launches Search Options, date ordering for everyone (a nice companion to Twitter Search, looking forward to seeing how it evolves)
Times Wire, like Digg Spy for the New York Times (built on the Newswire API, it could use some analytics to gauge importance, like word count or clickthroughs) [via]
Suzanne Ciani composes the electronic soundtrack for Xenon pinball in 1979 (also: Suzanne demonstrating sound synthesis on 3-2-1 Contact) [via]
Pogo's Wonderland, free album of Alice in Wonderland mashups (I never knew the creator of the famous Alice video made more Alice songs)
Clap Your Hands Say Mario (hilarious hack controls Super Mario Bros. with a guitar, singing, clapping, and drums)
Phil Gyford's list of Ask Metafilter's introductory books (painstakingly compiled from this massive, wonderful thread) [via]
Judging programming language contentment using Twitter and Mechanical Turk (using humans to gauge sentiment, something it's hard for computers to do correctly)
Twitter meme could reveal answers to security questions (new meme: #robotname is your mother's maiden name and last 4 digits of your SSN)
Current interviews Mark "Afro Ninja" Hicks (hard to believe it's been five years since I first identified him) [via]
May 11, 2009
MonaTweeta II, encoding the Mona Lisa in 140 characters (using Chinese characters to send 210 bytes in 140 UTF-8 characters) [via]
Bad Astronomy reviews the science of the new Star Trek film (overall, it did better than most sci-fi; the comments reminded me of The Onion's take on the film) [via]
Jer Thorp's animated 3D visualization of take-offs and landings from Twitter (he grabbed every "just landed in..." query, extracted locations, and mapped the results with Processing)
May 10, 2009
Nintendo's documentary-style ad for Punch-Out (featuring The Wire's Sen. Clay "Sheeeiiiit" Davis as Little Mac's trainer, Doc)
Today Is A... (algorithmic guess of good/bad days based on news, stocks, and UK weather)
Globe and Mail's interview with Canadian cartoonist Seth (the wonderful video offers a revealing glimpse into his home and collections) [via]
May 9, 2009
Steven Spielberg reunites the Goonies cast (Goonies never say die!)
Mud Tub, using a pile of mud as a user interface (skip to 2:20 of the video to see them play Tetris by squishing mud around) [via]
May 8, 2009
The Sound of Young America's unaired pilot for Current TV (interviews with Patton Oswalt and Daily Show/Colbert Report writer/producer Ben Karlin)
Ze Frank as Jonah Peretti on Ashton Kutcher on BuzzFeed on Ashton (falling down a rabbit hole of celebrity and sincerity) [via]
The Stranger's 2009 Sex Survey (entertaining and mildly-NSFW charts and graphs, including this purity test)
The Anonymous Hugging Wall (like a platonic glory hole) [via]
Mike Frumin's sparkline map of NYC subway activity from 1905 to 2006 (don't miss his interactive version using OpenStreetMap)
10 Zen Monkey's exclusive with the "John Doe" and lawyer who sued Jason Fortuny (I hate to say it, but I agree with Fortuny that it was stretching copyright law)
May 7, 2009
Tabulating original vs. repurposed content on major gaming blogs (surprisingly, 21% of all posts were original reporting; see also: churnalism in British papers)
Gawker's Ryan Tate on citizen journalism and civic reporting (some local bloggers are digging far deeper than newspaper journalists) [via]
The Lonely Island's "For Your Consideration" promos for the MTV Movie Awards (my money's on Slaughter Shack, starring Will Arnett as "Eagleheart")
May 6, 2009
Daniel Benmergui's Today I Die (manipulate the words and characters to progress the story; from the creator of I Wish I Were the Moon)
Sean Tevis raising money for open government and his 2010 campaign (I just gave $40; he narrowly lost last year because of dirty tricks and a huge influx of GOP money)
Duke Nukem developer 3D Realms closes down (hopefully, marking the end of one of the longest vaporware projects of all-time)
The Dragnet Fugue aka "Fugue for Friday" (1975 composition from the creator of the Music Animation Machine)
Alice on YooouuuTuuube (like YouCube, half the fun is making your own)
Play Him Off, Keyboard Cat (more on the meme's origins; make your own) [via]
In Bb 2.0, a collaborative music and spoken word project (each person submitted a video performing in B flat major, which can be mixed at whim)
New Amazon Kindle supports native PDF reading (uses Adobe Reader Mobile, so no more conversion by email or $0.15/MB delivery fees)
Spewer (fun with liquid physics, designed by the artist behind Gish and Coil)
Tracing the real-world history of Jughead's crown-like hat (the dot and dash were just a shorthand for suggesting badges and pins) [via]
Metafilter's global 10th Anniversary Party (it's a testament to the team that the community's still so active and vibrant)
May 5, 2009
Chris Ware's animated Quimby the Mouse for This American Life (new animation with music by Andrew Bird) [via]
Refresh Cannon, multiplayer game played with a single avatar image (insanely clever, refresh to change angle and distance; also check out Refresh Hero, Refresh War, and just Refresh)
Time interviews Louis CK about consumer cynicism (his anecdotes on Conan about complaining passengers were all about himself)
The Biology of B-Movie Monsters (exploring the physiology of shrinking men, giant bugs, and E.T.; from 2003, but new to me) [via]
May 4, 2009
Jim Munroe's GDC: The Game (the Game Developers Conference organizers commissioned a playable text adventure about the show)
AUTO-MEME (there's an API, too)
Nieman Journalism Lab on @NPRBackstory (automated Twitter bot searches NPR's news archives for context for current news stories)
"You're," a printed portrait mashing up identity on various social sites (each portrait pulls in data from Flickr, Delicious, Twitter, and Last.fm) [via]
LA Times tracks the origin of SMS's 160 character limit ("This is perfectly sufficient.")
Jack Schulze discusses his influences for the Here & There maps (he has some interesting ideas about shifting perspective in first-person and God games)
May 3, 2009
Jay Leno's new ad slogan for Facebook (maybe this is his way of keeping up with Fallon)
Where Are You in the Movie? (if The Wizard of Oz spanned my lifetime, then Dorothy just met the Tin Man) [via]
May 2, 2009
MMMMound ("If it piles up, we post it.")
Fire alarm jam session (see also: car alarm and living room rave)
May 1, 2009
Danny Sullivan's preview of the Wolfram Alpha search engine (best explanation of what it does, and doesn't do, along with a good roundup of links)
Nedroid's Party Cat (party? party!)
Adblock Plus on their war with NoScript (you can read NoScript's deceptive rebuttal; cheating ad blockers only makes users angry) [via]
Paper Moon, monochrome Unity-based platformer inspired by pop-up books (the developers were featured in this week's great WSJ article on new business models for gaming)
Screenshots from Zen Bound's upcoming Nostalgia level pack (free update for all existing users)
High-res NASA moon landing photos restored by private fans in an abandoned McDonald's (amazing story about obsolete media preservation; start with the AP report and LA Times article, and work your way back) [via]
Jonathan Coulton's "First of May" performed in sign language (in case you need to know how to say "in flagrante delicto" in ASL) [via]
MP3: Cliffs of Nintendover (SLiVeR's jaw-dropping Eric Johnson cover recorded on a real NES)
Jack Schulze's incredible 3D horizonless map of Manhattan (currently running as a huge gatefold in Wired UK, prints are available with both directions) [via]
Pew study says churchgoers more likely to support torture (J-Walk notes that the threat of torture is a fundamental concept of hell)
Chris Messina on Comixology and the future of connected commerce (his local comic shop's iPhone integration lets you build a pull list waiting for you in the store)
79 versions of Popcorn, remixed into a single song (a hot mess, algorithmically beat-matched into a 12-minute collage with the Echo Nest remix API)
April 30, 2009
Lessig adds more details about the Warner Music DMCA request against him (oddly, none of the music in his presentation appears to belong to Warner)
Twitter launches integrated search for everyone (also: Twitter's admin section was hacked yesterday and screenshots were leaked; always interesting to see internal tools)
Android app turns G1 phone into a metal detector (using the internal digital compass) [via]
Recreating fear of heights in augmented reality (reminds me of this room-sized 3D demo, where you can see the subject's reflexes kick in)
Handmade grade-school book about the Apple //c from 1985 ("The most nesasary step to useing the computer is learning to program.") [via]
Rick Astley writes about Moot, 4chan, and the Rickrolling meme ("I find it bonkers, by the way!") [via]
Interview with Dutch director of "What's In The Box?", Half-Life inspired short film (he made the video himself for about $150; click the icon on the bottom-right for subtitles)
Bandcamp easter egg turns traffic stats into Defender playfield (a closer view of the gameplay towards the end of their screencast)
Flickr's Stewart Butterfield and Cal Henderson working on social gaming startup (in other Flickr news, George Oates joined the Internet Archive and Rev. Dan Catt's off to the UK)
Rod Stewart joins Jeff Beck on stage for first time in 25 years (soundboard recordings of "People Get Ready" and "I Ain't Superstitious")
April 29, 2009
Adventure 2600 Reboot (the classic Atari game remade in 16-bit graphics with new sounds; interview with the creator)
Motion Theory's Google Chrome ad (gorgeous animated evolution of browser UIs, plus greeked versions of popular Google sites)
Dan Gurewich's Real Life Twitter (he seems to be missing the self-consciousness gene)
Swine Flu amino acid sequence as ambient music (related: Has Madagascar Closed Its Port?) [via]
EveryBlock releases free iPhone app (look up health code violations at dinner and which street you're likely to get mugged on the way home)
Dreamhost's history of WebRing (sold for $3.5 million to Geocities, vested to $100M in Yahoo stock by 2000, and bought back for $10,000)
April 28, 2009
The White House joins Flickr (incredible detail in the high-res versions, you can almost read his notes)
Google adds public data visualizations to search results (announced right before the Wolfram Alpha demo) [via]