I love this taxonomy of logical fallacies. Learn those, and you'll be well on your way to... something. Probably something good. [via tim walker]
July 27, 2007
There's a Star Trek wiki, almost 26,000 articles.
July 26, 2007
Four filmmakers are traveling the world in search of pick-up soccer/football games, aiming to produce a documentary.
July 26, 2007
Walk Score rates where you live based on how easy it is to walk to what you need. Unfortunately, it doesn't seem to take the presence of sidewalks into account, but it's still interesting.
July 26, 2007
Sofa Free is a photo collection of sofas left up for grabs.
July 26, 2007
A video of Merlin Mann talking to Google employees about Inbox Zero, e-mail management philosophy and technique. "Before you get good, you have to stop sucking." For the past two weeks, I've gone to bed with an empty inbox. It feels great. And now that I've got a good Seinfeld streak going (thx, Austin), I don't want to break it.
July 25, 2007
Lately there have been a couple good interviews with William Gibson in anticipation of his book, Spook Country. From his talk with the College Crier:
One of the assumptions that I had was that science fiction is necessarily always about the day in which it was written. And that was my conviction from having read a lot of old science fiction. 19th century science fiction obviously expresses all of the concerns and the neuroses of the 19th century and science fiction from the 1940's is the 1940's. George Orwell's 1984 is really 1948, the year in which he wrote it. It can't be about the future. It's about where the person who wrote it thought their present was, because you can't envision a future without having some sort of conviction, whether you express it or not in the text, about where your present is.
And recently on Amazon:
The thing that limits you with Google is what you can think of to google, really. There's some kind of personal best limitation on it, unless you get lucky and something you google throws up something you've never seen before. You're still really inside some annotated version of your own head.
July 25, 2007
Low-res pictures of fine jewelry distilled down to their fundamental brilliance, made into custom printed leather accessories: pixelated jewelry. [via userslib]
July 24, 2007
I was browsing through the Library of Congress website and came upon some cool posters from the Works Progress Administration. From that, I put together a little collection of library propaganda, lovely pro-literacy silkscreens and lithographs from our government.
July 24, 2007
Recent Flickr groups I like: Tea Sketches is tea stains + illustration, and Items We Carry is what people bring along in their pockets. Here's what I carry.
July 24, 2007
Holy smokes, I forgot my anniversary. It was about a year and a week ago that I offered the Web my first post. Here's to many more.
July 23, 2007
Mark Hurst just published a book to get you back on track: Bit Literacy: Productivity in the Age of Information and E-mail Overload. Could be a good one.
July 23, 2007
Here's 1500 or so prisoners dancing to Michael Jackson's Thriller. I love it. [via thought bucket]
July 23, 2007
Plates from George Catlin's 1844 North American Indian Portfolio. And I'm a sucker for celestial atlases, like Johann Rost's 1723 Atlas Portatilis Coelestis---note the fold-out pages for color illustrations. The Linda Hall Library has a number of other cool digital collections.
July 23, 2007
Janice Harayda pulled a very interesting quote from poet Philip Larkin---he isn't a big fan of poetry readings. The quote comes from an old interview in the Paris Review. I just finished the anthology Paris Review Interviews, Volume I, by the way. Very, very good reading. [via bookslut]
July 21, 2007
A simple infographic about Snape's cultural/emotional heritage. [via rebecca blood]
July 21, 2007
Sean calls it Pötterdämmerung. Just for that, Sean, I promise I'll get around to finishing book #3.
July 20, 2007
An open letter to Subway regarding cheese placement. Couldn't agree more.
July 20, 2007
On Flickr, Milo Manara's very graphic cartoon timeline of mankind.
July 20, 2007
A Jane Austen enthusiast ripped a few chapters from her books, changed the names, and submitted them to publishers. [via Mises]