May 31, 2013
Local People With Their Arms Crossed
— "Hey, look at me. I'm featured on the front of my local newspaper." #
Rollit, skee ball Chrome experiment
— absurdly impressive WebGL experiment synced with your smart phone #
Humble Indie Bundle 8
— awesome lineup includes Hotline Miami, Dear Esther, Little Inferno, and Proteus #
Polygon feature on LGBT indie games
— Twine has been transformative for bringing new voices into the fold #
Jay Silver's TED talk on turning everyday objects into computer interfaces
— the creator of Makey Makey, which I highly recommend (via) #
Steven Universe pilot
— Rebecca Sugar, the artist behind Adventure Time's best songs, starts her own show #
The Girl Who Turned to Bone
— how rare diseases are now treated, and how people support each other online (via) #
Daily Dot on the pre-history of Tumblr
— interviews with the guys behind anarchaia and Projectionist #
How does copyright work in space?
— Hatfield negotiated a license directly with Bowie, but it's otherwise complicated #
LEGO's full-scale X-Wing model arrives in Times Square
— a 42:1 scale LEGO model of a LEGO model of a model #
Computer Beach Party
— so bad it's good; don't miss Jason Scott's great backstory and interview with the director #
NYT asks Scroll Kit developer not to use their name
— asking him to take down the assets is fine, but this is overreaching #
Soylent, the post-food drink, raises $230k in a day
— his blog is fascinating and, of course, there's a subreddit #
Amazon introduces Kindle Worlds, official licensing for fanfic
— John Scalzi notes that Amazon gets exclusive copyright and licensors can use your new elements without compensation #
Yahoo approves Tumblr acquisition for $1.1B
— the community isn't taking it well; let's hope Yahoo learned from their first billion-dollar mistake #
Bret Victor on drawing dynamic visualizations
— I really wish Bret would independently release some of his work as products #
Welcome to Google Island
— short fiction by Mat Honan, inspired by Larry Page's comments at I/O (via) #
Interview with a Metafilter troll, ten years later
— randomly, I'd commented in his first post (via) #
Nintendo claims ad revenue over fan-made YouTube videos
— Minecraft was offered the same deal and turned it down #