Link Archives
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February 3, 2012
Avería, the average font (preview them all) [via]
February 2, 2012
How and why Mark Jaquith became an atheist (gripping personal story of the life-affirming shift from faith to evidence) [via]
Where's the Pixel? (find and click on the black pixel; you may need to clean your screen first) [via]
ARTINFO on the chilling effect of the Prince v. Cariou copyright ruling (the journalist mentions me and Kind of Bloop)
Darkness (a brilliant 24-hour comic by French cartoonist Boulet) [via]
January 31, 2012
Nano quadrotors flying in formation (don't miss the figure 8 pattern at the end) [via]
Bootstrap 2 released (here's the announcement)
Jeff Atwood on the risks of unmoderated communities (left to their own devices, popular online communities get taken over by cheap, easy gags) [via]
How and why J.D. Roth sold Get Rich Slowly (interesting tale of a founder selling his site, but unable to share the details for years)
Yahoo lays off in-house Flickr support team (from what I hear, it was done with 10 minutes' notice to Flickr management)
Mapstalgia (videogame maps drawn from memory)
January 30, 2012
Shit Programmers Say (strikingly similar to Shit Rocks Say)
Impressions of Corporate Logos by a 5-Year-Old ("a cheetah, a cheetah, a cheetah")
Bellbot (web app that beeps when you get new signups or sales)
ScratchML (markup language for recording and replaying turntablism)
Why are software development task estimations regularly off by a factor of 2-3? (nice piece of Quora fiction) [via]
David Carr on Kickstarter's film funding at Sundance (10% of the festival was funded on Kickstarter, with two optioned by HBO)
Why ten-year attendee Mike Pusateri's skipping SXSW this year (I made the same decision to skip this year; I may regret it, but it just wasn't fun last year)
MegaUpload's user data set to be destroyed by Friday (collateral damage in the copyright war)
Blogging declines across the Inc. 500 (too bad; Twitter and Facebook aren't a replacement for longer-form communication)
January 29, 2012
ChatChat (Terry Cavanagh's multiplayer game about being a cat) [via]
January 27, 2012
Identifying Ice Cube's "Good Day" (process of elimination)
Milkshake (an open-source WebGL music visualizer based on Milkdrop)
January 26, 2012
Typographica's favorite typefaces of 2011 (returning after a two-year break)
Pirating the Oscars, 2012 (now with 10 years of data; I'll republish the article here tomorrow)
Colbert interviews Maurice Sendak (a national treasure; part two)
January 25, 2012
Warby Parker's Annual Report (lovely design) [via]
Mario meets Tim from Braid (with cameos from Limbo and Super Meat Boy)
Bootstrap 2 ready for testing and feedback (here's the awesome preview, with responsive design, new plugins, and tons of new components)
January 24, 2012
Method of Action's color matching game (love the colorblind mode)
One Hour Per Second (visualizing the incredible rate of YouTube uploads)
Nelson Minar on Microsoft 1995 vs. Google 2012 (Google will be in trouble if their strategy succeeds, or if it doesn't)
January 23, 2012
Get Money, Turn Gay (new Auto-Tune the News starring Joseph Gordon-Lewitt and Vermin Supreme)
Mr. Daisey and the Apple Factory (finally listened to this stunning This American Life episode; it led to this response from Apple)
Focus on the User (hack by Twitter, Facebook and Myspace devs shows how Google sacrifices relevance for Google+ promotion) [via]
January 22, 2012
Plancast post-mortem (sad to hear they're ending development, it showed potential)
January 20, 2012
Jonathan Coulton on MegaUpload and the overblown threat of piracy (essential reading, along with Tim O'Reilly's post from earlier this week)
Anil Dash on the history and future of web protest (related: Marco Arment on stopping the next SOPA)
Congress puts SOPA/PIPA on hold, Rep. Lamar Smith finally caves (nice work, Internet)
State of the demoscene, 1991-2011 (a long decline since the mid-1990s) [via]
Star Wars Uncut: The Director's Cut (the final edit of the amazing, crowdsourced Star Wars remake that won an Emmy)
TorrentFreak on the legal files lost in the MegaUpload shutdown (I'm sure top men are working on returning those files) [via]
January 19, 2012
Wat (simple nerd test: do you laugh harder at the photos or the code output?) [via]
Supreme Court rules Congress can re-copyright public domain works (noooooo)
Twitter buys Summify, shuts it down (until it's integrated into Twitter, try Percolate, which I use daily)
Feds shut down MegaUpload in global operation (here's the indictment; Swizz Beatz was their secret CEO?!)
Zapatou's mashup of 71 "Rolling in the Deep" YouTube covers (man, I wish Kutiman would do a Thru-You followup)
@grammer_man, a Twitter bot that corrects misspellings (using word lists from Wikipedia; some great responses so far) [via]
January 18, 2012
Where does Congress stand on SOPA/PIPA? (updated constantly; more Republicans now oppose it, but Democrats still support it 40-34)
Republic, Lost (essential Lessig lecture on "striking at the root" to fix government) [via]
Sal Khan's explanation of SOPA and PIPA (hands down, the fairest and clearest explanation of the goals and risks I've seen for the layperson)
Amit Gupta found a bone marrow donor! (and saved future lives, thanks to the international donor drives)
PIPA supporters violating copyright (including cropping out credits)
Clay Shirky's TED talk on defending our freedom to share (or why SOPA is a bad idea)
Herpderpedia (hoping some of them channel their anger into picking up the phone)
Why Larry Lessig isn't at the center of the SOPA fight (the root cause of SOPA/PIPA is the corrupting influence of money on Congress)
Alexis Madrigal on the SOPA blackouts ("to solve this particular problem, Congress merely has to do what it does best: nothing")
The Day the LOLCats Died ("our web means more that lawyers, lobbies, and lies") [via]
FARK goes white to protest SOPA/PIPA (the video says it all)
Stop the Wall (great video from Reddit's Alexis Ohanian on stopping SOPA/PIPA, and a handy tool to make calls)
The Oatmeal on SOPA (love that he says he's pirated constantly, but that this is the wrong way to address it)
The Rise and Fall of Personal Computing (awesome research and charts from Horace Dediu)
Visualizing Twitter conversations about SOPA (nice graph work by Fred Benenson using Slurp 140, Google Refine, R, and Cytoscape)
BuzzFeed's 20 Images That Will Change Your Life (well played, BuzzFeed)
January 17, 2012
Algorithmic Search for Love (an automated supercut machine, it uses a locally-hosted film collection and caption transcripts) [via]
Reddit's technical examination of SOPA and PROTECT IP (Wikipedia, Reddit, Boing Boing, and others are all going dark tomorrow in protest; join them)
The Fixie Bike Index (tongue-in-cheek guide to measuring hipster cities based on used bike listings) [via]
Cut the Rope in HTML5 (smoothest game I've seen so far, how it was made; related: Command and Conquer) [via]
NYT on productivity and privacy (contrast that with Square's new office) [via]
Mark Otto on building Twitter's Bootstrap (Bootstrap 2.0 is shaping up nicely)
Jerry Yang resigns from Yahoo (I always liked Jerry, I hope he starts something new)
ClueDB (Joshua Schachter's repurposed his lifehack site into a daily email)
Elevator: Source (delightfully surreal co-op elevator simulator; watch the gameplay video)
January 16, 2012
Hello (Lionel Ritchie recreated with film clips)
Mocality's sting operation to catch Google Kenya's poaching their listings (missed this while I was out last week, some fantastic investigative work starting with unique user-agent/IP combos)
Dying Fetus - Grotesque Impalement (Radio Disney Version) (another brilliant genre-bending cover from Andy Rehfeldt; related: Justin Bieber as death metal)
Making Love to WebKit (try scrolling; the 3D header doesn't contain any images) [via]
January 15, 2012
Where the top 100 box office films of 2011 are streaming (Netflix only had four of the top 100, less than half the previous year)
January 14, 2012
Google Image Search recursion (the Universe, Google, and LulzSec are featured prominently) [via]
January 10, 2012
My Guantánamo Nightmare (also: Notes From a Guantánamo Survivor; commemorating its shameful 10th anniversary) [via]
January 9, 2012
Kickstarter's Year in Review 2011 (amazing look back, don't miss the interactive stats post with nearly $100M pledged last year)
January 7, 2012
Key Features (commissioned interactive fiction by Andrew Plotkin, with in-game objects available as MakerBot-printable designs)
The Restart Page (reboot sequences from retro GUIs) [via]
January 6, 2012
NASA goes open-source (finally, I can process National Polar-orbiting Operational Environmental Satellite System Preparatory Project Sensor and Environmental Data Records!)
Kill Screen's top 25 games of 2011 (along with all the judges' ballots)
SOPA-supporting news networks uniformly ignored SOPA (CNN was the only network to mention it, once) [via]
January 4, 2012
horse_ebooks: This is a romantic story. If you do not (from a wonderful Tumblr of fanfic inspired by everyone's favorite spambot)
Vi Hart joins Khan Academy (my favorite mathemusician working one of the best online learning resources) [via]
Google penalizes Chrome homepage after paid links debacle (bizarre story of an ad buy gone awry and the self-flagellation that followed) [via]
January 3, 2012
@StealthMountain (the responses are hilarious)
Paypal hates violins (bizarre policy, I wonder what else they've ordered destroyed?)
Record MP3 (dead-simple utility for recording audio and getting a link, perfect for MTurk tasks)
Robot avatar brushes a cat remotely in virtual reality (using a Kinect, head-mounted display, Wii remotes, and treadmill for navigation)
Real-life Wipeout using quantum levitation (sadly, appears to be a rendered fake for a viral ad; but it's very doable)
Clay Johnson on confirmation bias and the election cycle (this should be an Internet law: "Anything we want to be true we can find online.")
January 2, 2012
Metafilter's Best Post Contest winners announced (some incredible entries, including Falco's career, Muppet Labs, and the untold story of Sesame Street's David)
js.js, a Javascript interpreter in Javascript (yo dawg; related: Narcissus, a more practical take on the same idea) [via]
Clean Your App Permissions (handy links to the popular app permission dashboards)
Let's Play: Ancient Greek Punishment ("writhe in pain and dislodge the eagle!")
January 1, 2012
Scrollorama (fun jQuery plugin for scrolling effects; related: Impress.js)
Code Year, learn to code in 2012 (free service from Codecademy sends an interactive coding lesson to you weekly) [via]
David Weinberger's Top Ten List of Top Ten Lists of Top Ten Lists
December 31, 2011
James Joyce and Virginia Woolf copyrights expire tonight (sadly, no published U.S. works will enter the public domain until 2018)
The Verge's best tech writing of 2011 (any list that starts with Paul Ford is solid, in my book)
Why Notch isn't hiring more Minecraft developers (concerned more hands will dilute the game's unique voice)
Shot-by-shot comparison of Raiders of the Lost Ark intro to vintage adventure movies (two years of editing, with scenes from 30 different films) [via]
December 30, 2011
Daniel Sinker's best hacker-journalism of 2011 (some really amazing work, and nearly all of it open-source)
Instant webserver for the current directory (with some handy alternatives in the comments) [via]
Wikipeetia (the mispelled misspelled encyclopedia) [via]
The Ramsey Brothers' Home Video Commentaries ("looking back, I feel I really did embody the role of little brother") [via]
Marvel lawyers insist mutants aren't humans (to avoid getting taxed as "dolls," rather than lower for "toys"; story starts at 2:50 in the audio) [via]
imgur's best images of 2011 (also, MLKSHK's most liked images of the year)
New Yorker's profile of Carrie Brownstein's double-life (splitting time between music and comedy)
College professor seeds Internet with fake term paper to catch plagiarists (hilarity ensues)
December 29, 2011
Augmented Reality with Processing (great tutorial)
Tim Minchin's Woody Allen Jesus (ITV refused to air it) [via]
NYT on fair use and appropriation in the art world (more shifting attitudes on copyright and reuse)
It's A Wonderful Life, As Told By TV Sitcoms (and Back To The Future II)
December 28, 2011
Remaking famous artworks with photographs (the Dali remake won) [via]
Dissecting misogyny on a Reddit /r/atheism post (related: YouTube's reaction to the Gamer Girl Manifesto)
December 27, 2011
Penny Arcade destroys scumbag marketing firm (don't miss the questionable apology, just posted)
Said the Gramophone's Best Songs of 2011 (as always, thoughtful writing and selection) [via]
Stamen's Angry Birds time tracker (Mike open-sourced the code)
December 26, 2011
Metafilter backgrounder on the O Brother, Where Are Thou? soundtrack (song-by-song breakdown with supporting videos; watch Down from the Mountain on YouTube)
December 24, 2011
Fireplace beta (a pixelized fireplace for PC/Mac)
December 23, 2011
Hitler reacts to SOPA ("Don't cry, Disney owns the rights to that emotion.") [via]
December 22, 2011
Technology Review profiles Jason Scott and Archive Team (great feature on the all-volunteer preservation effort) [via]
#DearInventor (brief open letters to unnamed inventors) [via]
Creative Applications' top 10 projects of 2011 (tons of inspiring stuff in here; related: their top 10 iOS projects)
Bradley Manning Had Secrets (six-minute pixelized animated short using transcripts from the Manning/Lamo chats) [via]
ARTorNOT (the copyright notice is a nice touch) [via]
The Lives They Loved (NYT highlights stories of lost loved ones from its readers)
December 20, 2011
Wired Magazine feature on Ian Bogost and Cow Clicker (still, one of my favorite games about games)
Frank Chimero on the shame in Louis C.K.'s comedy (related: David Carr's interview with Louie on his web experiment)
The Verge's in-depth feature on Kickstarter's impact on product development (fascinating to see how different industries have been affected, from board games to comics)
December 19, 2011
Amazon Web Services is excited (love the comment from Amazon's Jeff Barr)
December 16, 2011
NYT's obituary for Christopher Hitchens (his final essay reconsidered "what doesn't kill you makes you stronger" ) [via]
Twitter by Post (Giles Turnbull takes @replies, RTs, and favs offline)
December 13, 2011
Louis CK on the success of his $5 video sales experiment ($200k in profit in the first three days, $500k sales so far)
Ed Piskor's Nostalgic Memories of the NES (loving his series for Boing Boing)
The Single Lane Super Highway (new project by Aaron Koblin)
Flight Plan (I love this guy's work; also: reality show teams waiting)
Sony, Universal, Fox, Google employees caught pirating (Googlers should know how to use a proxy by now)
Give Me Something to Read's 2011 Highlights (some of the year's best long-form journalism)
FAA approves iPads in cockpits (I'm guessing pilots won't be forced to turn them off during take-off and landing)
December 12, 2011
Megaupload sues Universal over fraudulent DMCA takedowns (I don't particularly trust Megaupload, but this is clearly an abuse of the DMCA)
The pr0n Index (safe for work, estimates what percentage of Google Images results for a phrase are NSFW) [via]
Google Shoot View (Street View as a first-person shooter) [via]
Louis CK's Live at the Beacon ($5 DRM-free, money goes directly to him; he did a great IAmA)
December 11, 2011
Michael Robertson on the record labels' demands on streaming services (he argues that they'll never be profitable, as a result)
Future Drama (Tumblelog tracking visions of technology's future)
December 10, 2011
You Have Downloaded (search public BitTorrent downloads by IP address; TorrentFreak interviewed the creators)
December 9, 2011
Rage Cast Member (Disney employees vent with memes)
Twine (very cool Kickstarter project for building wireless sensors connected to web services)
Major label stars endorse Megaupload in video (they buried the lede here; Megaupload built a tool for their users to bypass DNS blacklists)
First chapter of Clay Johnson's The Information Diet (highly recommended book about consuming information healthier; go buy it)
The Daily Show on predatory "free" iOS games for kids (worth it just to see Gameview's CEO squirm)
Xeni Jardin on her breast cancer diagnosis (reading her tweets in real-time was devastating and took tremendous bravery)
Indie Game: The Movie on meeting Kevin Smith and following dreams (they were accepted into Sundance, one of 14 films funded on Kickstarter to do so; Kevin responds)
Occupy Wall Street occupies Law & Order replica of Zuccotti Park ("Everyone knew their lines.")
Once Upon (Facebook, Google+ and YouTube remade 1997-style, best viewed with Netscape 4.03)
ICE releases popular hip-hop blog's domain after year of deception (excellent case study of how SOPA would be abused)
December 8, 2011
Shigeru Miyamoto to work on smaller games at Nintendo (thank you, Mr. Miyamoto)
Family Guy writer's first-person account of his Occupy LA arrest (sickening treatment at the hands of the LAPD; there's absolutely no excuse for this)
Cowbird (collaborative storytelling platform from Jonathan Harris)
Twitter launches major redesign (available now in new iPhone and Android apps, rolling out to web soon)
December 6, 2011
Maciej Ceglowski on the dangers of free web services (if you love a service, demand that they find a business model or clone them yourself)
December 4, 2011
Interregnum, an animated short on French proto-hacker René Carmille (he sabotaged the Nazi's IBM punchcard census, saving countless lives in the process)
Swiss government keeps downloading legal after piracy study (they concluded it leads to more sales for music, movies, games, and concert tickets) [via]
December 1, 2011
Echofi (solid Pandora-ish radio for Spotify, powered by the Echonest)
Introducing the Federal Social Media Index (my new project at Expert Labs, a dashboard tracking 125 federal agencies on Twitter)
November 30, 2011
Matt Haughey interviews Rob "CmdrTaco" Malda (my big take-away: don't sell)
US judge orders hundreds of domains "de-indexed" from Google, Facebook, Twitter (who needs SOPA? truly horrible ruling)
The Willard Asylum Suitcases (several more here) [via]
Spotify adds apps (download the preview release here; MoodAgent and SongKick are both brilliant)
November 29, 2011
Gregg Gethard recounts the story of his painfully awkward Carmen Sandiego appearance (how awkward? watch his intro) [via]
Taco Fiction (cleverly-written heist comedy, winner of IFComp 2011)
BERG's Little Printer (ridiculously adorable network-enabled thermal printer)
November 28, 2011
Jamie Zawinski on Mike Arrington and the myths of startup success (Arrington responds)
Hacking carbon emissions into Minecraft (burning objects creates virtual air pollution)
David OReilly's The External World (from the surreal mind behind Please Say Something, and more) [via]
Every Beatles song, played at once (all 226 songs synchronized so they end simultaneously; see how long you can take it)
November 27, 2011
Feast (a video tribute to food in film)
The Karate Kid Rehearsal Movie (shot on cheap camcorders, it has the feel of 1980s home movies) [via]
November 24, 2011
SiriProxy (hacking Siri without jailbreak; watch the video demo) [via]
Prelude of the Chambered in Minecraft (sheer madness, porting Notch's pseudo-3D FPS Ludum Dare entry to redstone circuits)
November 23, 2011
Alex Howard's comprehensive overview of SOPA and PROTECT IP (long, essential coverage of who's against it and why)
November 22, 2011
UMG sues Grooveshark for 100,000 uploaded songs (including 1,791 songs uploaded by the CEO himself)
Gawker on Megyn Kelly downplaying pepper spray as a "food product" (only linking to this for the comments, which slayed me)
Paul Motian, dead at 80 (loading up my playlist with his Frisell and Evans collaborations in memory) [via]
Sophia Grace and Rosie interview celebs at the AMAs (110% unadulterated cute; odds are you've seen their 22M views video and Ellen appearance)
DARPA Shredder Challenge (try your hand at five of the hardest jigsaw puzzles ever)
Address Is Approximate (touching stop-motion animation story using Google Street View)
NYT on NYPD's mistreatment of reporters covering Occupy (the NYPD is refusing press passes to anyone covering Occupy, and no passes at all until January)
Occuprint (posters from the #occupy movement)
GQ takes Aziz Ansari, David Chang, and James Murphy to Tokyo (I want to try that gnarly ramen) [via]
xkcd's Money chart (insanely comprehensive visualization of what things cost and where money goes)
Desert Bus ported to iOS (Penn & Teller gave permission for anyone to port it at the Comic-Con 2010)
Idea Lab on the web's political movement against SOPA (making some progress, Tumblr sent an average of 3.6 calls per second to Congress) [via]
Facebook shows 4.74 average distance between users (updating Migram's six degrees experiment, down from 5.28 hops in 2008)
The Atlantic's online ad revenue exceeds print (proof that innovative, experimental reporting done lean can be sustainable) [via]
November 21, 2011
Occupy Lulz
November 20, 2011
Jim Romenesko on his resignation from Poynter (the sordid details)
November 19, 2011
Occupy Wall Street as Pong [via]
November 18, 2011
Arrested Development returning as a Netflix exclusive in 2013 (reviving dearly-loved shows canceled by idiot TV execs sounds like a plan to me)
Minecraft 1.0 launched at MineCon (in Minecraft style, a barebones iOS version came out Wednesday with future updates promised)
November 17, 2011
A History of the Sky (time-lapse mosaic of 360 full days in chronological order; more on the project) [via]
November 16, 2011
Nintendo Preview Music Jam (hour-long VHS tapes of NES gameplay with '80s dance music; Maniac Mansion and Janet Jackson, anyone?)
November 15, 2011
Vines, a flipbook love story from Paul to Anna (related: Johnny Chung Lee on technology as a story)
Google adds verbatim search mode (I like to think I had something to do with this)
November 14, 2011
Irina Werning's second Back to the Future series (taking Young Me Now Me to the next level)
Visualization of 11/11/11 11:11 activity on Twitter (love the second wave isolated to countries that use 12-hour time)
November 13, 2011
Cave Story tool-assisted speedrun (the annotations are fantastic, it took nearly 270,000 reloads to finish; uses Hourglass for recording)
November 12, 2011
Jailbreak the Patriarchy (Chrome extension gender-swaps pronouns on every webpage) [via]
November 11, 2011
24 Hours of Flickr (artist prints out every public photo uploaded to Flickr in a 24-hour period)
The Awl profiles the creator of Is Anyone Up? (posting identifying nude photos without permission; amazing the commenters aren't anonymous)
Olly, the web-connected smelly robot (beats the vaporware Digiscents iSmell, which didn't give you control over which smells were emitted) [via]
November 10, 2011
Parallel Flickr (Aaron's work-in-progress tool mirrors your Flickr photos, retaining permissions and URL structure)
Abobo's Big Adventure trailer released (I'm excited about this platformer that remixes NES history)
Bil Keane's dysfunctional relationship with the Internet (the Gettingit article from 1999 still holds up)
Novelist interviews reviewer who hated his book (love the moment the critic talks about seeing the email arrive in his inboc) [via]
November 9, 2011
NYT Magazine on Internet satirists in China (using carefully-veiled humor to work around the eye of government censorship)
Mixel (Khoi Vinh's collaborative drawing and remixing app for iPad; his thoughts on the app)
Canvas community reinterprets memes (doubles as an excellent meme IQ test)
What I Didn't Write About When I Wrote About Quitting Facebook ("But I had to come back. That's where all the people are.") [via]
The GAG Quartet's le Internet Medley (loving the Reddit vs. 4chan arguments in the comments)
Kinect BeatWheel (quick, someone show this to Gregg Gillis)
Zorba, a game by Pippin Barr ("Dance? Did you say dance?")
November 8, 2011
PoleRiders (new game by Bennett Foddy, the creator of GIRP and QWOP; meant for two players, but the training mode is fun)
Adobe ends development of mobile Flash player, refocuses on HTML5 (a good time to re-read Steve Jobs' thoughts on Flash)
The Social Graph Is Neither ("we have tasted of the blogroll and the lolcat and found that they were good")
November 7, 2011
Meanwhile released for iPhone/iPad (Jason Shiga's mind-expanding puzzle comic ported to iOS by interactive fiction legend Andrew Plotkin)
Story of Genki (from Tim and Eric's Professor Genki's Super Ethical Reality Climax ) [via]
November 6, 2011
Bohemian Rhapsichord (try holding shift to auto-trigger clips, or ctrl to queue them) [via]
86th Birthday Rage [via]
November 3, 2011
Chris Wetherell on dreams, discernment, and Google Reader (thoughts from its founder; related: Mihai's history of social features in Reader)
Skinemax ("Koyaanisqatsi for a generation raised on late night television and B-movie VHS tapes")
November 2, 2011
PETMAN (future killing machine from Boston Dynamics, the creators of BigDog) [via]
November 1, 2011
Supercut.org (I redesigned the site as a community-driven database; related: I did some analysis of the meme in my new Wired column)
October 31, 2011
src img (bookmarklet finds original images using Google Image Search's reverse lookup)
Los Angeles Plays Itself (2003) (history of L.A. in film, made almost entirely from existing film footage) [via]
October 28, 2011
Christian Marclay's Telephones (the grandaddy of supercuts from 1995 is finally back online)
Codify, game editor for the iPad (sadly, there's no way to share your games and it's unlikely Apple will approve one)
How Caitlin Curran lost her job over Occupy Wall Street (you may have seen her very clever sign) [via]
October 27, 2011
When I Do This, I Imagine I'm Doing This... (Canvas gets imaginative)
Hyperbole and a Half's Adventures in Depression (I guess that explains why she hasn't posted in five months)
PataNoir (fascinating "surreal noir" interactive fiction where every metaphor becomes real) [via]
Shape Type (from the creator of Kern Type, a game of letterform design; I got 72/100)
Baroque.me (Alexander Chen's lovely interactive visualization of Bach's Cello Suites, Prelude 1)
Vimeo vs. Indie Game Developers (Brandon Boyer digs into Vimeo's frustrating anti-game policy)
October 26, 2011
Richard Stallman's list of requests when speaking (includes preferences for room temperature, egg yolks, folk dances, and why not to buy him a parrot; I find this man fascinating)
Melissa Gira Grant on early camgirl culture (camgirls aren't gone, they just moved to Stickam)
Class-action Yelp lawsuits dismissed (as suspected, another judge found that the claims of extortion were unfounded)
Oakland police throw flash grenade into crowd helping injured protestor (the protestor, an Iraq veteran, is in critical condition with a skull fracture)
PROTECT IP Act Breaks the Internet (produced by Kirby Ferguson from Everything Is A Remix; please write to Congress to stop this awful bill)
John Hodgman is The Deranged Millionaire (quite likely the best book trailer ever)
October 25, 2011
Nest (gorgeous learning thermostat created by leaders of the iPod design team)
Siri Meets Eliza (Prince of Persia creator Jordan Mechner brings two eras of natural-language processing together)
A Game About Game Literacy (more of a brutally hard platformer than a metagame, but well made)
RIP John McCarthy, AI pioneer (he coined "artificial intelligence," and invented Lisp and garbage collection; The Robot and The Baby from 2001 is worth reading)
Analysis of the Steve Jobs tribute messages (some stats pulled from the 10,975 messages from fans and friends) [via]
October 22, 2011
Teaser for Next Restaurant's Childhood menu (Grant Achatz was interviewed about the concept and creative menu) [via]
October 21, 2011
Occupy the Internet (try it on Goldman Sachs)
Mourning the death of Google Reader's social features (and again, only a week's notice to save everything? really?)
October 20, 2011
Pink Floyd's Dark Side of the Moon at Wembley Empire Pool, 1974 (immaculate fan-remastered BBC broadcast, download the album)
Google redesigning Reader, removing existing social features next week (are shared linkblogs and all shared/starred posts really getting deleted with only a week's notice?)
October 19, 2011
Adobe's official post on the Photoshop deblur tech demo (much clearer images than the bootleg video of the live demo)
2012 IGF Pirate Kart (bundling together 300+ indie games too small to warrant the $95 IGF entry fee) [via]
Google Books' WebGL Bookcase (Aaron Koblin wrote about it; try hitting "H" for the control panel) [via]
Take This Lollipop (incredibly creepy use of the Facebook API; Jenna Wortham interviews the creator)
October 18, 2011
Killing the Abraham (Caterina Fake on how founders propagate culture in their own image)
Jotly ("Like ducks? Jotly will show you big and little ducks!") [via]
Dan Bruno designed his first game at age 5 (Backgammon II, a racing game with WEPONS)
German theater group stages live-action, point-and-click adventure games (audience tries to solve puzzles with real actors in a scene; related: Action Castle) [via]
SocialFlow's analysis of the spread of the #OccupyWallStreet hashtag (see also: their analysis of how trending topics work, using OWS as an example) [via]
Generation X Doesn't Want to Hear It ("Right now, Generation X just wants a beer and to be left alone.") [via]
140bytes Music SoftSynth (takes an argument and synthesizes 30 seconds of audio in only 138 bytes) [via]
Void Gaze, Nullsleep's interactive fiction meets animated GIFs (also worth trying: maybe make some change, Aaron Reed's IF based on the sport killings of Afghan civilians) [via]
Chris Poole's talk on online identity and self-expression ("Google and Facebook would have you believe that you're a mirror ... but we're more like diamonds.") [via]
October 17, 2011
The Billboard Wayback Machine (neat visualization built on the community-powered Whitburn project)
Adrian Holovaty's YouTube-powered insult generator (467 people don't understand regular expressions)
October 12, 2011
Easter eggs in Siri (sex, drugs, and the meaning of life)
Matt Taibbi suggests concrete demands for Occupy Wall Street protestors (related: charts explain why they have reason to be angry)
October 11, 2011
Blackboards in Porn (grading the nonsense written on mostly safe-for-work classroom scenery)
Vanity Fair's The Woman Who Knew Too Much (the same power struggle fueling the Occupy protests)
Ira Glass Sex Tape (pitch perfect parody, I'm not sure most listeners would notice until the 4-minute mark)
Bret Victor's Up and Down the Ladder of Abstraction (must-read piece on interactive infovis, with a playful header)
Echo Nest's Brian Whitman on music resolution issues in Facebook ("I cannot think of a worse fate: hearing something worse than John Mayer when you have to click on a link that says John Mayer.")
Justin Hall's GameLayers postmortem (emotional, thoughtful look at the failure of PMOG and The Nethernet, his browser-based MMO)
Make Pixel Art (Ben Brown and Katie Spence's awesome new pixel editor with built-in sharing)
Internet Story (a year old, but new to me) [via]
Kickstarter hits one million backers (at a current rate of $100M pledged per year; by comparison, the NEA's budget is $154M)
October 10, 2011
Watsky's "Amazing Grace" at #OccupyLA ("the waves of grain on the stolen land, theft is as American as a Cola can")
October 9, 2011
The Wub Machine (instant dubstep remixes, just add Echo Nest)
October 8, 2011
Plink, a multiplayer audio experiment built with Node and Web Audio (see also: ToneCraft, by the same creator)
October 7, 2011
Photojojo/Jelly founder Amit Gupta's search for a bone marrow donor (if you're of South Asian descent, please get swabbed; Seth Godin's giving $10k to whoever donates)
October 6, 2011
Jason Kottke's roundup of Steve Jobs memories (I also liked this simple musical tribute)
Olson timezone database shut down over IP case (the volunteer-run open-source project is the definitive source for global tz info)
Steven Levy's Wired obituary for Steve Jobs (the best I've read)
Apple's "Think Different" ad narrated by Steve Jobs (amazingly, I'd never heard this version)