Typekey, central authentication for blog comments
— not limited to MovableType blogs, either (via) #
Scientific American on Tetris dreams
— I think everyone with the first generation Gameboy experienced this (via) #
LOAF, social network filtering for e-mail
— Maciej and Joshua's idea to filter mail by sharing your entire address book (via) #
Kema.com's entire vinyl series
— this is some of the most entertaining research I've ever seen online #
Vigilante group entraps and exposes online pedophiles
— the story of one person's exposure, here's their official site #
Anti-piracy vigilantes track P2P users
— they're logging and publishing the IP addresses of everyone that runs the fake cracks (via) #
Sports Illustrated's digital photo workflow
— a glimpse into a major magazine's editing process (via) #
100 most mispronounced words in the English language
— Febyuary, nucular, sherbert, and other verbage (via) #
Secret Service affidavit on Fox Entertainment's movie piracy bust
— fascinating details of how they caught a pirating employee #
Jeffrey Veen doesn't care about accessibility
— his SXSW notes are great reading for anyone who designs for the web #
Unreal 2004 comes on six CDs and takes up 5.5 gigs
— time to start distributing games on DVDs, I guess #
Degree Confluence Project world maps
— snapshots from every degree intersection in the world (via) #
United Media's lawyers C&Ded everyone hosting the "Hey Ya" Charlie Brown video
— copy of the cease and desist, and my local mirror of the video #
Great roundup of old ZX Spectrum software found on vinyl albums
— including the Thompson Twins graphic adventure game! (via) #
Lifeline, Konami's voice recognition game for the PS2
— the official site isn't very good, but the game sounds strangely good (via) #
Starbucks opens first music cafe in U.S.
— three blocks away from me, I'm heading over there to see Rufus play #
Comic books coming to the GBA in Japan
— distributed by kiosks that write to blank cartridges (via) #
40-page Mac ad from 1984's Newsweek
— Apple bought every page of advertising in the Nov/Dec 1984 issue #