Wow.
Andrew Johnson shares how his deep brain stimulation surgery has dramatically improved on he deals with his early on-set Parkinson's disease.
He blogs about it at youngandshaky.com
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ellievsbear
occasionally subtle
DEAR READER
styofa doing anything
$LAYYYTER

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NASA
hello vonnie

@theartofmadeline

shark vs the universe
Cosimo Galluzzi
Xuebing Du

JVL
cherry valley forever
KIROKAZE

pixel skylines
Jules of Nature
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

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@elbertbakker
Wow.
Andrew Johnson shares how his deep brain stimulation surgery has dramatically improved on he deals with his early on-set Parkinson's disease.
He blogs about it at youngandshaky.com
You should take some time to watch The Making of John Mayer's 'Born & Raised' Artwork https://vimeo.com/60647216
John Mayer cover art by David Smith http://davidadriansmith.com
He's posted a step-by-step walk through the project here http://davidadriansmith.com/2012/05/17/born-raised-album-cover-john-mayer/
The film is by Danny Cooke. His work is always inspiring. https://vimeo.com/dannycooke
He's also created another film as a portrait of the artist David A Smith - Reverse Glass, Gold Leaf Sign Artist http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_cPJO9njZBs
Beauty
To thank the Sequel Pro team for their help with Coda 2, we promised to make them an icon.
Database icons are boring — always a stack of metal cylinders. Since Sequel Pro makes editing databases more delicious, we thought the database could be more delicious as well!
Icon by Kenichi Yoshida / Panic http://dribbble.com/shots/821803-Sequel-Pro
Philip Roth has decided to stop writing fiction
“I sat around for a month or two trying to think of something else and I thought, ‘Maybe it’s over, maybe it’s over,’ ” he said. “I gave myself a dose of fictional juice by rereading writers I hadn’t read in 50 years and who had meant quite a lot when I read them. I read Dostoevsky, I read Conrad — two or three books by each. I read Turgenev, two of the greatest short stories ever written, ‘First Love’ and ‘The Torrents of Spring.’ ” He also reread Faulkner and Hemingway.
“And then I decided to reread my own books,” Mr. Roth went on, “and I began from the last book forward, casting a cold eye. And I thought, ‘You did all right.’ But when I got to ‘Portnoy’ ” — “Portnoy’s Complaint,” published in 1969 — “I had lost interest, and I didn’t read the first four books.”
This surprised me:
Nearby was an iPhone he had bought recently. “Why?” he said. “Because I’m free. Every morning I study a chapter in ‘iPhone for Dummies,’ and now I’m proficient. I haven’t read a word for two months. I pull this thing out and play with it.” Then he corrected himself: “I haven’t read during the day. At night I read. I read for two hours. I just finished a marvelous book by Louise Erdrich, ‘The Round House.’ But mostly I read 20th-century history and biography. I lived then. I was either a child or at school or at work. It’s time I caught up.”
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/18/books/struggle-over-philip-roth-reflects-on-putting-down-his-pen.html
Wow, I'd never seen these photos from Vietnam.
Photos by Horst Faas, Henri Huet, Sal Veder, Rick Merron, Bill Ingraham, John Nance, Nick Ut http://everyday-i-show.livejournal.com/82994.html
Seems odd to find this on livejournal.
(via kottke)
Syria in Ruins
While much recent media attention has been focused on Hurricane Sandy and America's presidential election, Syria's horrific civil war continues. In some places, it has worsened. Aerial bombardment of civilian neighborhoods, deadly sniper fire, brutal street fighting, assassinations, and summary executions have become the norm in Syria. Cease-fire agreements have collapsed, rebel forces remain disorganized, foreign intervention is still hamstrung, and no path to peace appears to be forming yet. Britain is now reportedly looking for options to circumvent an arms embargo in order to supply rebels with weaponry. Syrian President Bashar al-Assad remains defiant, stating in an interview with Russia Today that he planned "live and die in Syria," adding, "I am tougher than Gaddafi." Collected here are images of this bloody conflict from just the past few weeks.
http://www.theatlantic.com/infocus/2012/11/syria-in-ruins/100402/
100,000 Stars is an interactive visualization of the stellar neighborhood. It shows the real location of over 100,000 nearby stars. Zooming in reveals 87 major named stars and our solar system. The galaxy view is an artist's rendition.
Data visualization from the Google Data Arts Team Requires Google Chrome web browser
Paper is alive with color.
Color looks like a great update to FiftyThree's Paper app.
http://vimeo.com/52316073
How Google Builds Its Maps—and What It Means for the Future of Everything
By ALEXIS C. MADRIGAL | SEP 6 2012, 3:27 PM ET
An exclusive look inside Ground Truth, the secretive program to build the world's best accurate maps.
ANIMAL FARM aka THE MAKING OF 'ANIMAL FARM' CARTOON
Bret Victor - Inventing on Principle
worrydream.com
Gaiman on Copyright Piracy and the Web
Gaiman talked about how he was initially incensed about people pirating his work, but eventually came to the realization that they were actually promoting his work, and he was selling more in countries where his books were pirated.
More at Gaiman: SOPA and PIPA are on the wrong side of history
The King Rides By catpowermusic.com
On Boredom
Of all the tributes to Steve Jobs today, alongside the Standford speech ("Stay young. Stay foolish."), the grass-stained tennis shoes and others, this thought on the value of boredom seems like it should be highlighted more:
Jobs usually had little interest in public self-analysis, but every so often he'd drop a clue to what made him tick. Once he recalled for me some of the long summers of his youth. I'm a big believer in boredom," he told me. Boredom allows one to indulge in curiosity, he explained, and "out of curiosity comes everything." The man who popularized personal computers and smartphones -- machines that would draw our attention like a flame attracts gnats -- worried about the future of boredom. "All the [technology] stuff is wonderful, but having nothing to do can be wonderful, too." – Steve Jobs, 1955 – 2011, by Steven Levy, WIRED October 5, 2011
Radiohead - The King of Limbs (Live From The Basement)
Great set of ideas from David Cole for Kind of Bloop
irondavy:
Reading @waxpancake’s story today, my biggest question was: what will the new cover be? I certainly have no association with Mr. Baio or the project, but it seemed like a nice opportunity to play with pixels in a totally different aesthetic than I normally do. So: here’s a set of exercises.
(Edit: and just to be clear the top right one is a wholly original drawing! Based on around 6 photos, none from that angle.)
kragtbakker:
Dear Friends
This will be a slightly longer letter than common for the internet age—it’s serious stuff.
The short version is we want you to consider doing something hard: coming to Washington in the hottest and stickiest weeks of the summer and engaging in civil disobedience that will quite possibly get you arrested.
The full version is here.