50 Logos for Inspiration (24/06/08)

Usually lists like this are rubbish Digg attention whoring, this one’s no different except the selection and presentation are of a high quality. My favourites are the Zipliner, K12Reader and Core Cider logos.

Where the hell is Matt? (24/06/08)

Fantastic video. I love his dancing style, it’s very fluid. He’s even been to Brisbane, my town. Via Garrett Murray.

Simpsons Quake III Map (24/06/08)

Incredible detail. Even more detail than those crappy Simpsons themed games they sometimes make. Via Waxy.

Illustrated AIDS Posters (24/06/08)

That’s a link to a blog post on the creation process. Links to the very large originals are here and here. Probably safe to say these are not safe for work. Via Cpulv.

The Morning News’s Style Guide (23/06/08)

Follow it and you’ll be a better writer.

A Review of OmniFocus by Someone Who’s Never Used OmniFocus

20th of June, 2008

OmniFocus.pngI’m a Things user and I’ve never used OmniFocus. I’ve been happily satisfied with Things from the first day I started using it over six months ago. But even when I’m satisfied with a software solution there’s potential for something better, features I didn’t know I was missing but could make my life easier or make my enjoyment of a task greater. When you’re interested in systems for getting things done and just plain software in general, it’s impossible to ignore the hype around OmniFocus. Continue reading →

Another fantastic Letter from Paris (20/06/08)

Rosecrans Baldwin:

I asked a French co-worker what the kids were celebrating. He squinted, looking into the sun. “That it’s May,” he said. “That they’re French, that they’re young. You will not understand.”

Full of more funny and interesting anecdotes. France is so weird.

Headquarters

19th of June, 2008

Almost exactly one year ago I started a one page website at me.jimwhimpey.com (now gone) where I tried to aggregate all my online accounts into one. It aggregated the latest content from the web services I use, provided contact information and linked to all my sites whether they were aggregated or not. I thought it was a great idea, attempting reign in all my online activity, so did others. Morten and I started converting it into a web application which stagnated. Months after deleting me.jimwhimpey.com I came across Matthew Bischoff’s homepage and was instantly inspired. Continue reading →

Olympic Preparations (18/06/08)

One of my favourite posts from the fantastic new blog — The Big Picture — from boston.com. If you haven’t seen The Big Picture yet it’s an news presented in a series of large press photographs with captions. Worth checking out everything they post.

McCain is self confessed computer illiterate (14/06/08)

Incredible. Clusterflock:

[...] computers are really not that popular, and I don’t think this Internet thing has much of a future anyway.

I think this is a great representation for how old and stuck in his old fashioned ways McCain is. Firstly he should realise how massive the part that computers play in modern, Western society is and realising that, he should make the effort to learn about them. Either he doesn’t realise how important and useful they are which shows gross ignorance or he does realise but won’t learn the basics of using them which shows stubbornness and unwillingness to learn new things or move with the times.

Patience

11th of June, 2008

Yesterday Apple announced the new iPhone would be subsidised by AT&T meaning an upfront half price iPhone. A condition of this is that AT&T need to activate the phone in-store, a process that, according to AT&T, takes 10 to 12 minutes. Greg Storey finds this terrible enough to cause a “bile inducing rage against stupidity”. Like watching someone else throw up can make you react the same way, not to the original source but to their reaction, I’m sickened by Storey’s response to the atrocity of a 10 to 12 minute in-store activation. Continue reading →

Pete and Brian: Comedians (11/06/08)

A YouTube channel full of some really funny skits with high production values. They’re all definitely worth watching but some of my favourites are Showdown, Serious Actors and Pitch Meeting. Fact Checker’s Unit is another great one but it’s longer at almost 10 minutes.

Sanyo VPC-HD1010 (07/06/08)

Terrible name but this very compact, 1080i camcorder looks like the video camera I’ve been looking for. I’ve been following and reading about the new, much less expensive Flip Mino but it seems short sighted to buy anything that’s not HD right now. The VPC-HD1010 is not yet for sale which will give me time to save up. Via Uncrate.

“Sea of Love” by Cat Power (06/06/08)

Fantastic song and one of the best music videos I’ve seen.

CS4 Application Frame (06/06/08)

John Nack on the new all-in-one window option in Photoshop CS4. This makes me happy, I hate having to deal with floating panels and windows, it’s just so messy. Although the screenshot Nack provides isn’t the cleanest of UIs. Via John Siracusa.

Please Give Us Your Email Password (06/06/08)

Jeff Atwood on websites that hook into others and require their passwords, especially those that require email service passwords. My rule is simply not using sites that require my complete login for another service.

Bear Tools, Part I (06/06/08)

Great article on the tools fantastic illustrator Kevin Cornell uses to draw. I love that he uses a mechanical pencil and the lack of pretentiousness associated with that.

What Newspapers Still Don’t Understand About The Web (06/06/08)

It’s like newspapers on the web as saying: here’s all the static stuff we produced for the paper — you want all of our dynamic web innovation? Oh, that’s downstairs, in the back room. Knock twice before you enter.

It’s about the Washington Post but it applies to just about every newspaper. The blogs section is the only section I read at the NY Times. Via Waxy.

Versions Beta Finally Ships (05/06/08)

I’ve been keeping my eye on this for what seems like forever. I won’t get a good chance to play with it for a couple of weeks but I can’t wait to try it out. Beautiful website and app icon.

PSDTUTS (01/06/08)

Extensive and in depth Photoshop tutorials. They’re all very specific but following them along you get a great feel for what results different layer styles create. It’s given me new appreciation for Photoshop.

Your debut album (31/05/08)

This is it:

  1. Go to the Wikipedia random page. The first random Wikipedia article you get is the name of your band.

  2. Go to Random quotations. The last four words of the very last quote of the page is the title of your first album.

  3. Go to Flickr’s explore the last seven days. Third picture, no matter what it is, will be your album cover.

Put it all together, that’s your debut album.

Mine: Tom Van Mol “The pure scientific mind” and this is my album cover. I love it all except the album art.

Your Blockbuster movie download is just a drive away (29/05/08)

Blockbuster Video’s breakthrough idea to compete with digital downloads and NetFlix: An in-store kiosk from which you download movies onto a portable device. If it wasn’t already obvious how out of touch traditional film companies are this takes it to an insane level of misunderstanding. Via Daring Fireball.

Macbreak Weekly Episode 90 (27/05/08)

I forgot to link to this when it was released but there’s some fantastic, long and in depth discussion in this episode on the Windows vs. Mac “debate”. Starts at about 9 minutes.

A Summer I’ll Never See Again (23/05/08)

It’s some beautiful footage. I’d love to make something like that but what I’d love even more is to experience it through my own eyes, rather than through a lens. As Jeff in the comments points out:

Looks to me like you completely missed summer while hiding behind the camcorder.

Via Lachlan.

Blackboard Pro (23/05/08)

A Macbook Pro with blackboard paint on the lid. This is so stupid it hurts.

And for ages I’ve been trying to make my Mac more useful for taking notes / to dos. The problem is, that whenever you remember something to do you have to switch it on, power it up, find the application, and then the moment’s gone. And I can never find my notebook when I want it.

Here’s an idea, use a pen and paper if it’s so hard to switch on and power up your computer. There’s a reason schools switched from blackboards to whiteboards — blackboards suck. Do you really want to carry around messy chalk and an eraser? And if he can’t find his notebook when he wants it, why doesn’t he keep it with the computer which he can evidently always find. Argh, this is so stupid!