March 13, 2016
A poem made entirely from SXSW 2016 panel names
— "Lifehacks for Dads Who Do Fifty Percent: Big Data Will Choose the Next President." #
The covert 3D scan of Nefertiti bust appears to be a hoax
— I should have questioned this myself, but I assumed they did lots of post-processing cleanup (via) #
The Guardian on the global economic downturn for millenials
— "In the US, under-30s are now poorer than retired people" #
Data analysis uncovers crossword puzzle plagiarism scandal
— the data and source are available on Pwanson's site #
Wait But Why's Tim Urban procrastinates his TED talk about procrastination
— gripping reading for anyone with a fear of public speaking (via) #
Vox on the rise of American authoritarianism
— "Donald Trump could be just the first of many Trumps in American politics" #
Wintergatan's Marble Machine
— performative music instrument built from 2,000 marbles and 3,000 parts #
Vandelay Industries
— a Slack bot that searches every line from Seinfeld and posts an animated GIF #
How Gawker trolled Donald Trump into tweeting a Mussolini quote as his own
— Twitter bot making headlines #
"We Are the World" using Face Swap Live
— four years after Kyle McDonald and Arturo Castro's demos, real-time face substitution is an app #
PBS Idea Channel on ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?
— more than just ironic, it ties into how we experience art online and where we "live" #
Matt Taibbi on how America made Donald Trump unstoppable
— "Trump found the flaw in the American Death Star" #
Sailor Mercury on the intersection of art and technology
— art-inspired technology gives us new ideas instead of incremental improvements #
Metafilter's Gopher server is back after 15 years of downtime
— there's no Gopher client for Chrome, but you can use an HTTP gopher proxy to browse it #
Boston Dynamics' new demo of their Atlas humanoid robots
— that guy with the hockey stick will be first against the wall after the robot uprising #
Stripe Atlas
— targeted to non-US businesses, but seems pretty damned useful for U.S. businesses too #
Reagan and WarGames
— incredible story of how '80s government security policy was influenced by the film, though he wasn't the first to report it #
Paul Ford on Racter, a 1980s-era chatbot
— don't miss the scan of the book it wrote, worth it for the illustrations alone #
Artists covertly scan bust of Nefertiti and release data to public domain
— "the one object in the museum's collection off-limits to photographers" #
The Simpsons Sphere
— 360° video of 500 episodes at the same time; try it in the YouTube app on your phone #
How Google's Web Crawler Bypasses Paywalls
— still feels like bad practice that Google indexes content that isn't freely available on the web #
The Outpost Is Here
— the absurdly great launch lineup for XOXO's new shared workspace in Portland #
Secret Lives of Tumblr Teens
— as much about how people make money on Tumblr, and Yahoo's attempts to thwart it #
Smell Dating
— from Useless Press, a "publishing collective that creates eclectic Internet things" #