✨Unraveling The Clues✨
AnasAbdin
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸

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shark vs the universe
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

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Acquired Stardust
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izzy's playlists!
styofa doing anything

@theartofmadeline
YOU ARE THE REASON
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

Kaledo Art
cherry valley forever

Love Begins
todays bird

oozey mess
hello vonnie
Misplaced Lens Cap

seen from United States

seen from Argentina
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@askalot
✨Unraveling The Clues✨
How Diffie-Hellman Public Key Cryptography Works
/via John Gruber
(via yvettemmme-blog)
Fury Road by Francisco Leite (chicoshiko)
If you’re looking for something to wear this Halloween, these shoes designed by Kermit Tesoro are a great place to start.
I do not enlighten those who are not eager to learn, nor arouse those who are not anxious to give an explanation themselves. If I have presented one corner of the square and they cannot come back to me with the other three, I should not go over the points again.
Confucius
/via Eloquent Javascript
Maciej is so very observant and pretty funny too, definetely worth watching regardless of whether you work in tech or not.
/via Web Directions
A gorgeous looking game—by That Game Company.
I wish I owned a PS4 to play it.
How DNS works
Simple, and easy to understand explanation of How DNS works by DNSimple.
/via Sara Soueidan
Reading War and Peace on an iPhone
I used to own first a Kindle, then an iPad Mini, but I sold both devices several years ago because I simply didn’t use them enough. Nowadays, whenever I feel like reading some long-form stuff on the go, I do it on my iPhone 6. The experience is certainly incomparable to reading longer pieces in paper form. I really struggle to focus. I find my hands cramping up and my neck going stiff. I once tried reading a book on my iPhone (The Omnivore’s Dilemma, through the Kindle app) and I only got to around 20% before eventually abandoning it. I never finished the book.
Clive Thompson must have seen it as a challenge. He committed to reading – purely on his mobile phone – one of the longest and hardest books out there: Tolstoy’s War and Peace which, in its paperback form, has no less than 1296 pages. Afterwards, he summarised his experience in this lengthy and insightful article, which contains some really interesting observations around physical vs. digital books.Â
Here are some I wanted to share:
On distractions
I certainly wrestled with social distractions. Your phone is, as I’ve often joked, not really so much a “phone” as a “portal through which five or six gigantic multinational firms fight for your attention so they can sell you advertising.” For services like Facebook and Twitter, distraction is central to the business model.
To focus on Tolstoy, I had to be much more “mindful.” I had to start paying attention to my attention, to notice my own urges to peek at Twitter or email, so that I could decide to actively ignore them, instead of responding with a Pavolovian lunge for the app.
On the design/usability of real books
Bookmakers have spent hundreds of years patiently tweaking their design for maximum usability and loveliness. In the early years following the Gutenberg explosion, books were, by modern standards, surprisingly weird and unusable. They often had no paragraph breaks, no page numbers, no indexes — none of the features we typically use to navigate and orient ourselves in a book. It took a long time to arrive at their elegant modern design.
Today’s digital books do not give you the nearly-sensual, visual sense of “where” something is in a book. We remember bits of a book not just by the words, but how they looked on the page — where they were located, how our hands lay next to them.
On the seriousness of real booksÂ
Some new research into the nature of reading suggests an intriguing reason we remember more from print books than digital ones: It’s because we expect print to be intellectually engaging. We approach it with an orientation that “this is serious business,” in a way that we don’t when we read on a screen.
To be fair, he’s also highlighting some interesting benefits of reading the book in digital, so his review is not just an anthem for the good old paper format. To find out what he prefers, you should read the article.
Andrey Omelyanchuk - Matterhorn in the Morning
One for the travel wish–list :)
Dread…
parents: come here
me: okay
me thinking: oh my god they know everything i knew this would happen i should have deleted everything i knew it fuck im done for
parents: how do you send this email
Jason Friend: on not adding too many things to your products.
My takeaways: * Say NO! (As much as you can.) :) * If you are a small–business share your work, your thought process and learnings—this is more valuable marketing than throwing money at ads…
/via 37 Signals
Project Fi
Project Fi sounds awesome!
Project Fi is a program to deliver a fast, easy wireless experience in close partnership with leading carriers, hardware makers, and our users. - Project Fi website
As usual we have to wait forever for it to get to Australia, gah.
/via Signal v. Noise
IFrames in Responsive Design
How should you deal with IFrames when working on responsive sites? (Are there any non-responsive sites anymore? :P)
DON'T USE THEM—especially if you have control over all the content you own
If you absolutely must use it only for embedding 3rd party content, with fixed height
And if you really really have no choice at all, and you have said NO multiple times, and no one wants to listen to your advice that the internet would break (pun intended)…
Use the this article to help you sort out dynamic resizing of the height of the IFrame—expect other UI bugs to appear as a side–effect
If you have other suggestions or tips, please share in the comments; I'd love to learn them :)
Delve deep into stdout, stderr, and pipes plus some neat tricks that you might not know.
A really nice introduction to i/o redirection by thoughtbot. If you use or want to use the command–line, this article is a must read.
Ode to things make some really really beautiful products. I would buy all of the ones I could practically use if I had the money to spend on them.
But the website is the highlight—absolutely love the chromeless–almost–no–ui approach.
Stunning! O.o