In March 2005, a photocopy was handed to me in preparation for work with one of the top wigs. It enumerated the rules necessary to avoid conflict and ensure efficient communication between me and someone who doesn't have time for bullshit.
Saturday, July 30, 2011
Selfish, Productive, Honest, Sign Me Up
Tuesday, April 12, 2011
The Job We Never Had at Google
http://agoogleaday.com/
I don't like Google's solution to today's April 12 question. But it's really just due to the ambiguity of the question itself.
My standard for top performance search answering:
- single set of search terms
- answer comes up on 1st page search results
- answer can clearly be read from the search preview, without clicking through to a website
I'd only rate myself a B on this question. It took two sets of search terms for me to find the answer. Better than Google's 3 though.
Sunday, March 13, 2011
Semi-Annual and/or Sporadic Thoughts on Daylight Savings
- This is the first daylight savings since I bought a new atomic clock for the kitchen. I wanted to stay up and watch it set itself, but forgot and went to bed 15 minutes before it should have happened :(
- When our office manager sent out a "spring forward" reminder on Friday, I was tempted to hit reply all and give one of my classic "standard time" rants. But I didn't...
- Someecards.com seems to be an appropriate outlet for that sort of thing:
Sunday, December 05, 2010
My Eyes! My Eyes!
A Bully Finds a Pulpit on the Web
Quick Summation Quote:
“Hello, My name is Stanley with DecorMyEyes.com,” the post began. “I just wanted to let you guys know that the more replies you people post, the more business and the more hits and sales I get. My goal is NEGATIVE advertisement.”
A Little Deeper:
Lady buys glasses online. Wants to return them. Merchant says no. Customer says they'll dispute the charge. Merchant says:
“Listen, bitch,” he fumed, according to Ms. Rodriguez. “I know your address. I’m one bridge over” — a reference, it turned out, to the company’s office in Brooklyn. Then, she said, he threatened to find her and commit an act of sexual violence too graphic to describe in a newspaper.
It's all a stunt for a better Google ranking. And it worked!
(Or, at least it used to work.)
The full article is a heck of a read.
Monday, November 22, 2010
Doomsday
The Doomsday Rule is a formula that let's you calculate the day of the week of any date in past or future history based on a (relatively) easy math formula plus some simple memorization.
We already know from experience that St. Patrick's Day and Cinco de Mayo always fall on the same weekday. This uses the same general concept.
In a nutshell:
1. Doomsday
By coincidence of the calendar, 4/4, 6/6, 8/8, 10/10 and 12/12 are always on the exact same day of the week each year. This is called "Doomsday." (And to get a touch fancier, the July 4th and Halloween also always fall on doomsday, as do the palindromic pairs of 7/11 & 11/7 and 9/5 & 5/9). If you know the day of the week the doomsday is for a given year, you can use that as an easy reference points to compare to other days.
2. Anchor Days
Every century has an "anchor day" to use as a starting point. The anchor for the 1900s is Wednesday and for the 2000s is Tuesday. For all practical uses that's all you have to memorize, though history buffs and time travelers may want to learn a few more.
Once you know the anchor, this formula will give you doomsday for a given year:
Last 2 digits of year + last 2 digits divided by 4 (you can discard the remainder) = # of days to add to the anchor.
So if we take November 5, 1955 as an example:
Anchor for the 1900s is Wednesday
55 + 55/4 = 55 + 13 = 68 days after Wednesday.
68/7 is 9 with a remainder of 5 (or to user fancier math: 68 mod 7 = 5)
So Doomsday is 5 days after Wednesday, aka Monday.
11/7 is a doomsday, so 11/5 is two days earlier on Saturday.
Pretty cool, eh?
Even better: The inventor is guy named John Conway.
Wikipedia - Doomsday Rule
Saturday, November 13, 2010
Wednesday, September 29, 2010
Gmail is Like Cilantro
Google's Wiltse Carpenter compared the frustration with threaded Gmail to the backlash over cilantro. "And just as an outspoken minority has banded together in unison to declare their distaste of one of nature's most delicious herbs, some of you have been very vocal about your dislike of conversation threading," he wrote in a blog post.
(via cnet)
Saturday, September 11, 2010
Friday, September 03, 2010
The Wilderness Downtown
http://www.thewildernessdowntown.com/
(And don't skip the address part, even if it says it doesn't have enough info.)
Saturday, August 28, 2010
Thursday, August 12, 2010
Google Wave: Cancelled, and it's Your Fault
Sunday, July 25, 2010
Surfing
Boycott Bill Murray for a Better America
2. Based on the website the above article was from, I had a hunch that led to another search. My hunch proved false, but indirectly allowed me to naturally discover a Googlewhack without even trying!
3. And linked from the page the Googlewhack uncovered is yet another awesome (albeit old) headline, especially given the context/content:
When Cracked Objects Collide
Thursday, July 08, 2010
What Would Happen If The Earth Stopped Spinning?
Saturday, July 03, 2010
Lost Cat Poster
Missing Missy
(via FYLost)
Saturday, June 26, 2010
Friday, June 18, 2010
Dogs and Apples
Excerpt:
There’s an odd sentiment among nerds that Steve Jobs (and the fine people at Apple) hate buttons. I have a different theory: they absolutely love buttons.
Would you say to someone, 'Wow, you must hate dogs. You only have one. You enjoy his company and playing with him, but seriously, only one? What do you have against dogs?'.
Perhaps a towform design checkpoint should be asking the question, "How would Arlo feel if he had xx more dogs sleeping in his favorite spot?"
Sunday, June 13, 2010
Shameless Skin
http://laughingsquid.com/the-ghost-inside-by-broken-bells/
And the girl doesn't make things any worse...
Thursday, June 10, 2010
Five things Old Media Still Don't Get About the Web
Here's an excerpt from "Five Things Old Media Still Don't Get About the Web." Read the full article here.
"Earlier this week, the New York Times company forced the iPad Pulse News Reader app to be pulled from the App Store. The reason? It took the Times’ RSS feed and put it inside its own app.
To be clear, the RSS feed in question was a headline, a one-sentence introduction and a link to the full story on the NYT site. That’s it. Worse? Steve Jobs highlighted the app earlier during his WWDC keynote – and the NYT itself wrote a glowing review of the app just a few days before.
As mystifying as the move seems from the outside, it’s yet another sign that established old media entities are still really struggling to understand the web. Time and time again, it feels as if old media companies, rather than embracing the massive potential of the web, seem to shoot themselves in the foot.
So consider this a public service. For all those people out there working in established media, here are five things you still don’t seem to get about the web"Creativity and Generosity in the Internet Age
Shirky's hypothesis is that a lot of the 20th century stuff we used to take for granted -- most people didn't want to create media, people didn't value homemade and amateur productions, no one would pitch in to create something for others to enjoy unless they were being paid -- weren't immutable laws of nature, but accidents of history. The Internet has undone those accidents, by making it possible for more people to make and do cool stuff, especially together."
Towform, of course, an example of the scope of this insight. :) More, here.
Tuesday, June 01, 2010
Flash
Uproar over Anti-Flash Intro Survey Results
Quote from Macromedia employee (pre-Adobe buyout) on website Flash intros:
"When we have clients who are thinking about Flash splash pages, we tell them to go to their local supermarket and bring a mime with them. Have the mime stand in front of the supermarket, and, as each customer tries to enter, do a little show that lasts two minutes, welcoming them to the supermarket and trying to explain the bread is on aisle six and milk is on sale today.
"Then stand back and count how many people watch the mime, how many people get past the mime as quickly as possible, and how many people punch the mime out.
"That should give you a good idea as to how well their splash page will be received. That's the crux of it."

