Link Archives
Ads via The Deck
November 18, 2008
Bike Hero, biking a Guitar Hero level in the real world (most likely a commercial viral, and maybe even fake, but does it matter? beyond awesome)
Chuck Klosterman reviews Chinese Democracy (mostly posting this just to beat Rex to it)
The A.V. Club's 27 popular websites that became books (though they missed Belle de Jour, The Washingtonienne, Fucked Company, Fark, and ZUG)
Speed Guitar goes to the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (every hour, on the hour, for one solid minute of metal complete with gothic arch and smoke machine)
MGMT's "Kids" on the iPhone Ocarina ("the iPhone Ocarina officially replaces the recorder as the nerdiest instrument I can play")
Mena Trott responds to Valleywag article about their Disneyland vacation (my favorite was Space Mountain Snob)
LIFE Magazine photo archive hosted by Google (millions of high-res photos, most never published)
Amazon launches CloudFront, their pay-as-you-go CDN (very complementary with S3)
November 17, 2008
John Hodgman, Jonathan Coulton, and the Long Winters perform "Tonight You Belong to Me" ("Thank you, normal-sized man.")
Jerry Yang stepping down from Yahoo's CEO post (it never really fit him well, though I'll miss his e.e. cummings memos)
Woman asks Apple community about an unusual iPhone glitch (no, raunchy photos don't accidentally attach themselves to outbound email)
Greasemonkey script to pull WikiDashboard visualization into Wikipedia (I made a LazyWeb plea for this last week, and Paul Irish came through)
Lee Byron's Fireflies, anaglyph 3D game for Mac (part of Kokoromi's Gamma 3D showcase of anaglyph games)
Flickr Boundaries, tool to explore Flickr's shapefiles (read Tom Taylor's entry for more information)
Cooking Mama, the Unauthorized PETA Edition (a strangely obscure target for their attention, with a petition to write to the game's publisher) [via]
Boing Boing launches gaming blog, Offworld (good writing in a nice design from Brandon Boyer, former news editor of Gamasutra)
"Violet" wins the Interactive Fiction Comp 2008 (play it online; glancing at the charts, it looks like Buried in Shoes was the most divisive)
Trailer for J.J. Abrams' Star Trek prequel (looks surprisingly good, but I'm a sucker for origin stories; I even liked Enterprise)
What would Depression 2009 look like? (Tim sums up the thought-provoking Boston Globe article)
The Pirate Bay hits 25 million simultaneous peers (that's not unique people, but concurrent connections; Napster peaked at 26M users)
Peter Hirschberg releases Adventure as a free iPhone app (related: Chasing Ghosts will finally be released on BitTorrent Showtime in December) [via]
The Big Picture on the California wildfires (also: first-person coverage on Twitter and YouTube, like this freeway on fire and aftermath)
Tim-Tams available at Target until March, first time available in the U.S. (best chocolate cookies ever, the Tim Tam Slam is a chocolaty revelation) [via]
JS-909, a Javascript drum machine without Flash (through a hack, it even works in IE 6)
November 14, 2008
Esquire's hosting Between, the new two-player networked game by Jason Rohrer (from the creator of Passage)
"What's that buzzing noise from my BBQ?" (he thought he was killing a few bees, but ends up annihilating an entire colony) [via]
November 13, 2008
Kottke explains how to embed high-quality YouTube videos (I knew how to save, link, and change the default, but the embedding hack was new to me)
Web 2.0 Origami (lazyweb, please build a converter that creates folding patterns from an uploaded image)
Pixar's Burn-E short on YouTube (here's an interview with the director)
Valleywag folded into Gawker, all but Owen Thomas laid off (I won't miss it; they hurt a lot of good people and interesting projects in the quest for pageviews) [via]
YouTube engineer adds "Actually Good" tab when viewing Onion video (here's a screenshot in case it goes away)
November 12, 2008
MSNBC's Rachel Maddow wears pajamas on-air in solidarity with bloggers (maybe Palin was too busy reading every newspaper to actually read a blog)
Jimi Hendrix drummer Mitch Mitchell, dead at 61 (I wish more newspapers would link to YouTube videos)
Brandon Hardesty reenacts Alec Baldwin's Glengarry Glen Ross monologue (I first linked to Brandon way back in March 2006)
Videos of CNN's election-night countdown globally (the collective response was spontaneous and virtually identical around the world) [via]
Washington Post blogger shuts down company sending out two-thirds of all spam (in his investigative report, he turned over four months of data-gathering to the colo, who sut them down)
Michael Lewis revisits "Liar's Poker" and writes about the current Wall Street meltdown (a gripping look at who foresaw and acted on the mess) [via]
Japanese isometric PSA about the future of food (lovely design, this could easily be adapted to the US) [via]
QWOP Olympics, ragdoll physics running game (hard to believe, but with practice, it's possible to sprint) [via]
Sluggo ponders the fundamental question of existence
LittleBigPlanet's TV commercials, built entirely with the in-game tools (the first one seems inspired by You Suck at Photoshop, no?) [via]
What We Own and Where It's Made (Dorothy's slowly been categorizing all her possessions)
Slate on aXXo, the most popular movie distributor on BitTorrent (this comment explains the drama between aXXo and other competing groups)
The Yes Men pranksters distribute fake New York Times issue across NYC (100,000 copies with the headline "Iraq War Ends" post-dated July 4, 2009)
November 11, 2008
where the things in Cloverfield happen ("this is where things in Cloverfield happen okay") [via]
Google.org tracking flu spread using search queries (brilliant use of search data; get a flu shot before it gets to your state!) [via]
Google Groups expands to search web-based message boards (if "Sort by Date" appears to be missing, check your ad blocker)
"Dark Days" director explains how the Pentagon cancelled his followup film on the Iraq war (after two years of filming, he sold all his equipment on the same forum)
Dark Days, 2000 documentary about NYC homeless living in abandoned train tunnels (classic documentary with music by DJ Shadow)
Interview with the NASA writer behind the MarsPhoenix Twitter account (written in the first person, more than 38,000 people have followed its adventure) [via]
November 10, 2008
Touching story of Eugene Allen, a butler who served 34 years in the White House (a must-read with a sad ending) [via]
Super Mario for Busy People (You Have to Find the Princess) [via]
Google Reader adds automatic feed translation (I'm testing it out by throwing some Japanese blogs into a special non-English group)
Worst. Bug. Ever. (the Android phone executes all typed text, so don't text "rm -rf /" to a friend)
CaptionX, multiplayer photo captioning game (built on App Engine with CC-licensed photos on Flickr, with clever YouTube interstitials) [via]
WikiDashboard, Wikipedia mirror with real-time infoviz of edit history (for example, see Barack Obama or Star Wars Kid; I need a Greasemonkey script to pull this into Wikipedia proper)
November 8, 2008
How many guys in Spider-Man suits can fit inside Jamba Juice? (one customer in the store recorded the madness) [via]
Tetris recreated in LittleBigPlanet (a jetpack-powered sackboy readjusts all the falling pieces) [via]
November 7, 2008
The irRegularGame of Life (includes a history of Conway's Game of Life) [via]
Sugar Cubes (lovely Flash animation by the creator of Cursor*10) [via]
MS Paint Adventures (interactive games where the artist acts as parser, drawing the results of the community's actions) [via]
Girl Talk's "I'm A PC" testimonial for Microsoft (no mention of Apple, but still a refreshing approach) [via]
Photoshop in Real-Life (this behind-the-scenes photo gives you a sense of the scale) [via]
Get Your War On: New World Order (the earnestness of this comment made me giggle) [via]
2009 Dance Your Ph.D. Contest (science grad students do interpretive dances on their obscure thesis topics)
Stairway to Heaven played on the iPhone Ocarina app (also, the Zelda theme; surprisingly deep for a $1 app)
Spit DNA evidence leads to arrest in Craigslist/inner-tube robbery (the story keeps getting stranger)
November 6, 2008
Investigative report into the "Single?" lawn signs across America (completely OCD net research, tracing them all back to a huge Texas dating franchise) [via]
Ze Frank's From 52 to 48 With Love (help repair the damage from the election cycle with a small gesture)
Howard Stern rants on blogs, Facebook, and Myspace (Gary V. responds to the King of All Dead Media)
Factory Balls 2 (I promise to stop posting about politics soon, really) [via]
Salon rounds up the worst election predictions from political pundits (also, Nate Silver's electoral predictions were dead-on across the board; go math!)
Colbert and Stewart talk about Twitter (some people use Twitter like Colbert's SimulTube)
Jim Ray's collection of election night homepages (automated screengrabs every half-hour from 3pm-10pm Tuesday night) [via]
Channel 101's Sony commercials (unfortunately, Sony didn't bite; more product ads here) [via]
United Features' website goes free, including every Peanuts strip (and, finally, full comics in RSS feeds)
Mark Newman's 2008 election maps and cartograms (weighted by population, fun to compare to the 2004 election)
South Park's "About Last Night..." (absurd reimagining of the election as an Ocean's Eleven-like diamond heist)
November 5, 2008
Tim Schafer releases Grim Fandango's 70-page design document (tons of unreleased information; character sketches, layout, cutscenes, and every puzzle)
Newsweek's exclusive Election 2008 report, embargoed behind-the-scenes story from both campaigns (they were given major access on the condition nothing would be released until today)
Giraffes! (rare cameo by Akiva from the Lonely Island)
The Onion: Nation Finally Shitty Enough To Make Social Progress (this feels the 2008 counterpart to their unbelievably prescient 2001 article)
Sean Tevis, the xkcd candidate for Kansas state rep, discusses last night's loss (his opponent used deceptive robocalls and direct mail borrowing photos from Sean's Facebook and Flickr accounts)
November 4, 2008
Kottke's collection of election maps (interesting to see how each designer tackled the same problem so differently)
xkcd on the end of the election (don't miss the alt-text)
Video of CNN's first hologram interview (a bit glitchy, definitely different from Cisco's Telepresence)
99 Bricks, like Tetris meets World of Goo (build the tallest stable structure with 99 Tetris bricks) [via]
Voting machines elect voting machine as President (DRE 700 IS LEADER) [via]
CNN to interview 3D hologram guests on tonight's election coverage (guests will be interviewed from remote locations, Star Wars-style)
ABC News streaming raw video feed on Ustream.tv (including reporters applying their own makeup and chatting with cameramen)
Philipp rounds up every YouTube video I've ever linked to (about 20% are no longer online, proving linkrot is alive and well in YouTube)
How Nate Phelps escaped the Most Hated Family in America (inside story of living with the Phelps family, with comments from Shirley Phelps-Roper herself)
Nate Silver's guide to what to watch for on election night (a handy guide to tonight's events)
NYT's Choosing A President: A Look Back (concise video sums it up)
November 3, 2008
LittleBigPlanet as a Shmup (or: why 2009 will be the year of social, user-generated gaming) [via]
Yahoo! Live to go offline (disappointing)
Rob Manuel's I-Spot Internet Humour (illustrated Internet memes in the style of vintage I-Spy children's books)
Spot.us, crowdfunded journalism (pay journalists to dig deeper into stories; their blog's doing original reporting funded with the site)
November 1, 2008
Ras Trent, the complete lyrics (glad to know I'm not the only person in the world to find this Samberg sketch funny)
10 Years of Textfiles (Jason Scott reflects on the anniversary of one of the digital age's most important and vital archives)
October 31, 2008
The Turker's Gospel (the Bible rewritten by Mechanical Turk workers)
MTV censors names of P2P apps from Weird Al video (could be old news, and only recently noticed with the launch of MTV Music)
Lorna Mills' class on outsider net.art from 4chan to Nasty Nets (a mess of interesting links, just start from the first class and work forward)
YouTube Meta-Art (these are all great, but I think I like Moonwalk best) [via]
ReConstitution 2008, live infoviz remix of the 2008 presidential debates (three MIT grads used custom C++ code to remix the closed captioning in real-time)
Rescue Princess 2.0, ways to make web apps more game-like (exploratory learning with levels, items, inventory, quests, and scores)
Trailer for Touchgrind, multitouch skateboarding game for the iPhone (let your fingers do the grinding)
Google's Halloween robots.txt (User-agent: zombies; Disallow: /brains) [via]
Shoot the Player (musicians filmed live in Australia, inspired by La Blogotheque's Take Away Shows)
October 30, 2008
Heart made of gears (easy, I'll just whip one of these up in Ponoko) [via]
Polifics, the Election '08 Fanfiction community (Obama/Clinton, Obama/Clinton/Biden, and even Obama/McCain slashfic) [via]
A funny thing happens when you copy/paste this character... [via]
Banksy's Village Petstore & Charcoal Grill (very creepy NYC storefront with animatronic hot dogs, squirming chicken nuggets, and monkey porn)
Flickr now offering shape boundaries for 150,000 places (also, new user-created OpenStreetMap tiles for Baghdad and Kabul)
The Amazing True Story of Disaster Girl (even more remixes here, including meeting Tourist Guy)
You Can Vote However You Like (there should be one kid in the back singing about Ron Paul) [via]
CNN asks voters to say something nice about the other guy (like Greene, I find this really refreshing)
James Kochalka hits 10 years of drawing American Elf (I highly recommend the first two collections, and the third's out next month) [via]
JSSpeccy, a ZX Spectrum emulator in Javascript (double-click a game to run it) [via]
October 29, 2008
Larry Lessig on California's Proposition 8 (defend marriage by voting no, please)
Errol Morris on the history of real-people political ads (the McCain campaign also used this approach in their Joe the Plumber testimonials)
WTF, Broccoli: Part Two (more photos of little food people, though Cascadian Farms is removing them on their packaging redesign)
Free Candy!
West Virginia vote flipping caught on tape (if the interface is this flaky, can you imagine what the data store and security look like?)
Errol Morris launches People in the Middle for Obama (the individual stories are just brilliant)
October 28, 2008
Mega Man 9 stop-motion with paper (the real game even reproduces NES flaws like flickering and framerate issues) [via]
Christian Science Monitor to go web-only in April 2009 (the first national newspaper to drop the "paper," and not the last)
The Presidential Debates, Synchronized (this is masterfully done) [via]
NYT launches Movie Reviews API (22,000 reviews back to 1924; they're on a tear lately)
The Unfinished Swan, beautiful indie game in an all-white world (oddly, announced at the same time as the Whitewash tech demo in Unity)
Cursebird (people swearing on Twitter) [via]
Anil Dash on Palin's use of folksy language to subvert criticism (smoke 'em out, Anil)
Google strikes deal with book publishers, creates Book Rights Registry (reading the terms, I still don't think publishers should be able to stop people previewing their books; here's their side) [via]
François Macré's Thriller, an a cappella rendition in 64 parts (it's the season for over-the-top Thriller remakes)
October 27, 2008
Flaming Lips' Guitar Hero double-necked guitar mod ("because a lot of kids out there think this is actually the way you play guitar") [via]
MTV Music, huge music video collection with a Hulu-like interface (22,000 videos, embeddable and streaming; someone should mash the API with the 120 Minutes Playlists archive) [via]
Gunman Kills 15 Potential Voters In Crucial Swing State (it seems like all news is political these days)
Flickr's Rev. Dan Catt on RjDj for the iPhone as augmented reality (if you haven't tried it, you're really missing out)
Epic "Thriller" lipdub by French college students (140 participants, one take) [via]
Gentrify, help San Francisco urban elite find places to live (I love the individual apartment listings; another great Rails Rumble entry)
Meet Inbetween Us (handy microsite, entry in the Rails Rumble 2008)
Kevin Kelly on the evidence of a global superorganism (some great comments, though the reverse-chronological order drives me insane)
Prince of Persia creator posts first video shoot from 1985 (if you've played the game, you'll recognize the movements immediately; Jordan's posting his old development diary online) [via]
NYT writer invites 700 Facebook "friends" to a party, one shows up (rethinking the meanings of "friend," "attending," and "maybe") [via]
Using the NYT Campaign Finance Data API with Google Spreadsheets (taking advantage of Google Spreadsheets' XML import methods; related: web service to normalize candidate names)
GreenDot Project, identifying humans with body language (Obama moves vertically, McCain horizontally, and Bush a mix of both) [via]
Flight404's Processing flocking experiment turned into $235 Paul Smith shirt (Robert finds it flattering, but it's bad form to turn this into this without credit)
Generating domain names with Markov chains (test it out on Suggestly)
China Channel, Firefox extension let users browse behind China's firewall (built on top of SwitchProxy)
Fred Armisen shows off Weekend Update's new megapixel giant touch map (art imitates life; the display was created by Perceptive Pixel) [via]
CNN's Anderson Cooper experiments with "virtual pie chart" (extremely silly use of augmented reality gone mainstream) [via]
AC/DC releases ASCII music video in Microsoft Excel (created by fans to "subvert the corporate firewalls"; Windows only, sadly)
Google Earth for the iPhone (free download, adorable; also, Street View's coming any day now) [via]
Typeface.js, rendering Truetype fonts with Javascript, Canvas, and VML (awesome hack lets you deliver custom fonts on the web without Flash; works on the iPhone, too) [via]
October 25, 2008
YouTube adds linking to video timecodes (in YouTube comments, just list any time and it's automatically linked)
Tasha's Impossible Ransom of Rage (silly little Flash game from Double Fine, creators of Psychonauts) [via]
NYT on the Hitler "Downfall" remixes (I love when the Gray Lady comments on Internet memes) [via]
Ill Doctrine's "A Poem for the Youth Voter" (turning "Yes, We Can" into "Yes, We Did")
October 24, 2008
Wikipedia DVD available for free by BitTorrent (2.4GB partial snapshot reviewed for offline use by schools) [via]
Nerdy Robot Playing A Vectrex (my $2 was well-spent; be warned he's a bit backed up)
Geography of newspaper endorsements for the 2008 election (beautiful work from the Infochimps guys) [via]
Visualizing bias on political blogs linking to the Ashley Todd hoax story (left-leaning blogs only found it newsworthy when discredited)
rlax, Flash game to remove the top piece (Friday procrastination fodder)
Remote Impact, multiplayer distance shadowboxing (the sensors recognize and give extra points for "intense brute force") [via]
Wassup 2008 (reuniting the friends that created the short film that launched a nationwide catchphrase)
Little Boots' Tenori-On cover of Hot Chip's "Ready for the Floor" (the rest of her Tenori-On covers are great, too) [via]
Turn Your Name Into A Face (generates a unique avatar from your name; Philipp Lennsen's entry in the 24-Hour Application Challenge)
Jason Scott on Blu-Ray's mandatory DRM for indie filmmakers (exorbitant AACS fees make small runs impossible, doubling budgets for broken copy protection)
Garamond Powerline (gorgeous type experiment made from photos of electrical cable lines)
Trailer for "RiP: A Remix Manifesto," documentary on remix culture (the film's finally done, and much of the raw footage is available for remixing)
October 23, 2008
Matt Haughey explains how to get the nerd vote (some good suggestions in the comments, along with some idiotic strawmen)
October 22, 2008
ZIP File Quine (just keep unzipping) [via]
October 21, 2008
Derek Powazek shuts down Pixish (a promising startup killed, at least partly, by bowing to the no spec crowd)
DOTS Gloves (mittens with metal dots for use with iPhone touchscreens) [via]
Woman gets fastest time at Nike Women's Marathon, loses race (also, why are four of the top five finishers at a women's marathon male?)
WTF, Broccoli? (my sister found tiny people living in her broccoli)
Macs vs. PCs, the Musical (bonus points for gratuitous violence, points off for technical inaccuracy)
Penelope Trott's Best Baby Halloween Costume Ever (one-year-olds make surprisingly good balding comedians)
October 19, 2008
Domai.nr, find domains with wac.ky TLDs beyond .com and .net (you know, like del.icio.us and burri.to)
October 17, 2008
Interviewing the anonymous Twitterers behind FakeJohnMcCain, FakeSarahPalin and FakeJoeBiden (the parodists love Twitter because it's quick, concise, and you can grow a network quicky)
LittleBigPlanet delayed because of Qur'an verses in background music (I believe in religious tolerance, until it affects video game release schedules)
Mygazines shuts down after publisher lawsuits (as fun as these sites are, trying to build a business on copyright infringement is just dumb)
Qwitter, get alerts when people unfollow you on Twitter (software that enables hurt feelings and awkwardness) [via]
McCain and Obama do standup comedy at the Al Smith dinner (both are very, very funny; Obama starts at 11:00)
October 16, 2008
Vimeo launches paid option ($60/year removes ads, increases limits, priority uploading, and limited HD embeds)
Slate Magazine on the rise of FAIL (the writer asked me on Tuesday about the meme's origins, so I'm a little bummed I didn't get credit) [via]
Andrew Sullivan's "Why I Blog" ("for all the intense gloom surrounding the newspaper and magazine business, this is actually a golden era for journalism") [via]
The New Yorker challenges xkcd to a Cartoon-Off (Randall Munroe wins handily) [via]
Forumwarz Episode 2 is live! (the intro's interminable, but it picks up from there; and if you never played the first one, get to it!)
Barack Obama meets Joe the Plumber (I think it's worth watching the original encounter that inspired McCain's "spread the wealth" line of attack) [via]
October 15, 2008
First episode of The Daily Show with Jon Stewart from January 1999 (amazing how fully-formed it launched, with the same voice that would make it so successful) [via]
Lexical analysis of the 2008 presidential and VP debates (word usage statistics and clouds, with parts of speech and word pairs; Atom feeds available for the whole dataset) [via]
Batman debates The Penguin (no mudslinging in this campaign)
Tears for Fears' "Head Over Heels": Literal Video Version (from the same people the Take On Me video)
Newzbin preparing for litigation (if media companies attack Usenet indexing services that host no files, Usenet servers can't be far behind)
Bluegrass musician plays banjo during his brain surgery (his ability to play was used as a measure of the surgery's success) [via]
Kongregate Labs tutorial for creating a side-scrolling shooter in Flash (helping convert gamers to creators is good for everybody) [via]
Scraping Wikipedia data with Google Spreadsheets and Yahoo! Pipes (solid tutorial; for this kind of thing, I'd also consider Freebase)
RjDj, reactive generative music app for the iPhone (reacts to sensory input from the microphone and accelerometer)
Midori-san, the blogging houseplant (if you think that plant's really blogging, then I have a bridge to sell you)
Frotzophone, making music with interactive fiction (the Z-Machine object tree as musical instrument; don't miss the MP3 of him playing Zork) [via]
New York Magazine's long profile of FiveThirtyEight's Nate Silver (if you haven't, spend a little time reading about his methodology to understand how he's totally changed the game)
October 14, 2008
New York Times releases Campaign Finance API (totals for each candidate by state or ZIP code and lookup by donor name, with JSON, XML, or serialized PHP output) [via]
New York and the Panic of 1873 (the NYT digs into their archives to find some striking parallels to today's credit crisis)
Splatter art exhibit depicts Looney Tunes character murder (uncensored images from James Cauty's show are now online and prints are for sale) [via]
Doodlebuzz, typographic news explorer (draw a line to explore the news, branch lines to see related stories and excerpts) [via]
October 13, 2008
Jeremy Freese's Violet, entry for the IF Comp 2008 (best entry I've tried so far from the competition; hit enter a couple times to start playing)
Colleen Venable's connect-the-dots giraffe tattoo (culmination of three-year project trying to find a toy giraffe from her childhood)
MoneyTalks, listen to stock prices rise and fall (requires Flash 10 beta, or you can watch the sample videos instead)
iminlikewithyou launches open API for multiplayer games (the site's changed radically in the last year, from casual flirting to almost pure gaming)
Roundup of 84 knockoffs of Shepard Fairey's iconic Obama poster (and I'm fairly sure that's still a fraction of them) [via]
World of Goo is released to the public (the best game I've played this year; coming to Steam and WiiWare later today)
Simon Carless on Why LittleBigPlanet Is Web 2.0 For Games, Fulfilled (it's almost, almost worth buying a PS3 for)
Academic paper studying knowledge sharing in Yahoo! Answers (PDF) (the community's split between answer people and discussion people, and the categories can be clustered accordingly)
October 12, 2008
Halfbakery suggests naming recessions after people, like hurricanes (Recession George)
Ultima creator Richard Garriott launched into space (Lord British spending 10 days on the International Space Station for a cool $30 million)
Moral psychology testing on Amazon Mechanical Turk (Brendan O'Connor's blog is one of my new favorites; he works at Dolores Labs)
Conplot, a commandline plotter with ASCII art (for use with piping from sort|uniq -c and the like)
October 11, 2008
Preview of Gomibako, like Tetris with garbage (every object has physical properties, so trash can be crushed, burned, or toppled)
October 10, 2008
Drew on the financial crisis (see also: Woot's Google ads) [via]
Gary Vaynerchuk on recession-proof marketing and dumb advertising (don't miss the part where he queries his UStream followers in real-time)
You Fell Asleep Watching A DVD [via]
October 9, 2008
Content-aware scaling in Photoshop CS4 (from SIGGRAPH demo to product in a year) [via]
Unicode Snowman for You (☃)
October 8, 2008
Tuttuki Bako, poke virtual characters in a little box (like Tamagotchi meets Levelhead)
Kevin Mitnick on the indictment of Sarah Palin's email hacker (he also touches on his own recent encounter with U.S. customs)
Portal: Prelude, extensive fan-made Portal mod, released a day early (Gamespy loved it, but warns that it's very hard)
Inspired by xkcd comic, YouTube adds audio previews for comments (this works nicely for quick speech synthesis with simple URL hacking)
NYT to close International Herald Tribune website (I remember when their 2000 redesign blew away everyone with impressive DHTML features)
Steven Levy visits Jay Walker's insane personal library (funny, I keep all my priceless artifacts in cardboard boxes in the basement)
October 7, 2008
Yahoo! Calendar finally, finally launches redesign (ten years in the making)
Chuck Klosterman's Brief History of the 21st Century (like Kottke said, there's too much in here to like; related: Phone Sex AI) [via]
YouTube in Super HD! (after it buffers, try clicking "Restart" to get it in sync) [via]
Little Big Computer, a virtual electronic 8-bit calculator built in Little Big Planet (see also: Mechanical 5-bit Calculator in the Half-Life engine)
October 6, 2008
Mail Goggles, Gmail tries to prevent late-night drunk emails (this could also be used to keep you from answering personal email during work hours)
DJ Z-Trip's Obama Mix (very listenable pastiche of rock and hip-hop from Pink Floyd to Saul Williams with a strong political undercurrent)
This American Life's Another Frightening Show About the Economy (followup to The Giant Pool of Money episode from May)
Take on Me: The Literal Version (if songs sang what was happening in the music video) [via]
TIGSource's Bootleg Demake competition winners (best game competition ever)
Sarah Palin's evening gown entry to the 1984 Miss Alaska pageant ("In Alaska, we have mosquitoes.")
Damn It Feels Good To Be a Banksta (Banksta 4 Life)
The Big Picture on Yann Arthus-Bertrand's Earth from Above photographs (with convenient Google Maps links for each)
October 4, 2008
Keith Loutit's tilt-shifted time-lapse videos (reminds me of an ant colony) [via]
The VP Debate on Auto-Tune (it's got a beat and you can dance to it) [via]
October 3, 2008
Flickr adds rainbow-vomiting panda feature to Explore (finally, some innovation in the photo sharing space) [via]
Fring, make Skype calls for the iPhone (Truphone was the first VoIP app, but didn't support Skype calling) [via]
Sippey's idea for restaurants to help diners split the bill (very useful, though it'd require servers to enter the number in each group)
One Metafilter user's personal anecdote about Paul Newman (there are several other good stories in that thread; related: a Hole in the Wall camp counselor's tribute)
Weird Al to release songs on iTunes as soon as he's recorded them (he talks about how digital distribution makes topical parodies much easier) [via]
Slate releases Poll Tracker app for the iPhone (looks like they bought Aaron's Election '08 app and rebranded it) [via]
NYT's interactive VP debate transcript (searchable and scrollable with checkpoints and speaker coloring; it's only missing permalinks and plaintext)
October 2, 2008
Dan Aykroyd pimps vodka in a crystal skull (looks like Ray has gone bye-bye; related: his UFO "documentary") [via]
Interactive Fiction Competition 2008 entries released! (like last year, the brilliant IF luminary Emily Short will be reviewing games as she plays them)
Cave Story coming to WiiWare with exclusive new content (if you've never played the freeware masterpiece, it's available for PC, Mac, and Linux)
Laser Portraits (or make your own) [via]
Obama campaign releases official iPhone app (flawlessly designed, focused heavily on participation; grouping your address book by state is surprisingly useful) [via]
Nintendo announces new DSi with camera, web browser, downloadable games (here's video of it in action)
Dabbleboard, social whiteboard drawing tool (you can draw and share anonymously, too)
Webmonkey on the clickjacking IFRAME exploit (potentially devastating hack and relatively easy to pull off, affecting every browser)
October 1, 2008
The Money Meltdown, excellent primer to the current mess (some very good links I haven't seen before) [via]
Google Blog Search launches new Techmeme-like homepage (funny, I thought they'd abandoned the site entirely; here's the announcement)
Dexter ad campaign spoofs Wired, Esquire, New Yorker magazine covers (clever campaign, though the typefaces are slightly off throughout; the New Yorker cover was drawn by regular Edward Sorel)
Visual History of Recessions since 1949 (in other words: everything is going to be okay) [via]
Dan Rather interviews FiveThirtyEight's Nate Silver (applying knowledge learned from baseball analytics to electoral projections)
Apple lifts iPhone NDA, developers rejoice (Furbo released some source to celebrate)
Netflix launches public Javascript, Atom, REST APIs (as Kellan points out, it comes with OAuth, a developer blog, and an API explorer) [via]
Routefinder, analog mapping wristwatch from the 1920s (scroll your way through the UK) [via]
Sarah Palin plays the flute in Miss Alaska pageant (see also: Nixon on piano, Clinton on sax)
September 30, 2008
Splicd, permalink to a YouTube timecode (conveniently hackable URLs, too)
Try Google Search as it looked in January 2001 (extremely surreal flashback only available for one month; predates 9/11, YouTube, Sarah Palin, or this blog) [via]
Rososo, the peaceful newsreader (clean and minimalist approach to feedreading for newbies) [via]
September 29, 2008
Twitter's Biz Stone charts popular terms tweeted during the presidential debate (you can reconstruct the entire debate this way)
I Wish I Were the Moon (experimental gameplay with four endings, part of Daniel Benmergui's Moon Stories mini-trilogy)
SF Gate's profile on Flickr community manager Heather Champ (virtually nobody can understand the job's difficulty or the impact her work has on Flickr's culture)
Very Small Array visualizes #1 hit singles by genre, geographic origin, and song length (great stuff; see also: the Whitburn Project, part one and two)
Metafilter user tracks down the lead singer of Sonseed, the Christian ska band (sometimes, journalism is just picking up the phone)
September 28, 2008
xkcd draws the universe from top to bottom, on a logarithmic scale (in-jokes galore, inspired by this logarithmic map of the universe)
September 26, 2008
Footage from Sarah Palin's 1984 Miss Alaska swimsuit competition (video was deleted, here's my local copy on Waxy)
Twitter Elections (based on candidate-related tweets, looks like only 2% of the Twitterverse is conservative)
September 25, 2008
Shrub, proxy for Amazon S3 with RSS, JSON, and Muxtape-style output (for sharing S3 buckets with the world; more from the creator)
Cisco accidentally removes all letter "T"s from official homepage (regex gone awry) [via]
Justin Ouellette on the meteoric rise and fall of Muxtape (I'm surprised there aren't invite-only Muxtape clones, flying under the RIAA's radar) [via]
Inside a North Korean video arcade (I love the modded Aero City cabinet)
Current TV partners with Twitter to broadcast tweets on live presidential debate broadcast (the first real-time backchannel on live TV?)
Vimeo Toys, real-time interactive visualizations of Vimeo social activity (I'd love to see new comments appear as word balloons in Vimeo Land) [via]
A Car's Life, interactive game built on YouTube annotations (they claim it's the first, but this Spanish adventure game came out in July) [via]
September 24, 2008
David Letterman on John McCain's cancelled appearance tonight (leaked video, expect this one to disappear shortly; the live feed of him talking to Katie Couric is pretty damning)
Dominoes Made of Dominoes (note the one column of blue trying to hold out) [via]
Hardcore "Claymates" respond to Clay Aiken coming out of the closet (a strange mix of heartbreak, support, and disgust) [via]
Suzanne Vega talks about Tom's Diner, remix culture, and being the "mother of the MP3" (Karlheinz Brandenburg used the 1984 song to help debug the MP3 codec)
September 23, 2008
Wario Ware Inc: Doc Brown's Microgames (much better) [via]
Larry Lessig's analysis of Sarah Palin's experience (in this very important presentation, he examines every single VP in history to see how she stacks up)
Superconducting maglev toy train (needs more Doc Brown) [via]
Abe Vigoda still alive (thanks for the update, CNN; also, Twitter, Facebook, and single-serving)
Parsons students design Little Big Planet levels (the scale of the Shadow of the Colossus-inspired creature is insane)
Bernanke/Paulson FAIL (is it just me, or am I seeing more of current net culture leaking into mainstream media?) [via]
Nintendo's Wario Land meta-ad destroys YouTube UI (inspired by the HEMA ad? try dragging the UI elements around at the end)
Google Maps adds NYC public transit directions (finally! not perfect yet, but HopStop must be panicking a bit)
SweetAfton23's MyHope ("I hope your MySpace stays forever... and I hope that your kids find it")
September 22, 2008
Dragon's Lair walkthrough using YouTube annotations (impressive! now, will someone make it playable with clickable annotations?)