The last month’s been pretty quiet here at TNF. I’m blaming part of that on the bump, but in all honesty, making ice cream and gatorade runs for your wife doesn’t take up too terribly much of one’s time. But learning a new web development framework does.
Nov. 9, 2008
Nov. 6, 2008
Boston.com's Big Picture is hands down my favorite photo blog out there. Here they've assembled the best Obama photos taken in the past few months. I'm particularly enamored with this one. (#)
Nov. 1, 2008
4:06 pm
While luck may be more appealing than effort, you don’t get to choose luck. Effort, on the other hand, is totally available, all the time.
Seth Godin. It's self-help Saturday, everyone! (#)
Oct. 30, 2008
I don't know much I'd enjoy listening to a whole album of Kaki King beating these melodies out of her guitar, but it sure is something to watch. (#)
Oct. 29, 2008
This variation of A-ha's video for "Take On Me," with crazy-making special effects translated into easy-to-follow lyrics, confirms a long held suspicion: music videos really are more interesting than the songs they represent. I wish all music videos were like this. (#)
Oct. 23, 2008
2:05 pm
He’s working now to represent more people, to be more broadly inclusive in his representation. He can’t really afford to think, “Who am I?” Now, it’s more like, “Who are we as a nation? Or who do we want to be? And how can I help facilitate a stronger, broader, unified identity?”
Maya Soetoro-Ng, on the evolution of her brother Barack's political focus. (#)
Oct. 17, 2008
I'd heard talk about the bang-up job Obama did of roasting McCain – and most of Washington – at the Alfred E. Smith Dinner. But seeing it was something else altogether. His performance did more to calm my nerves about this election than anything else ever could have. Truly remarkable stuff. (#)
Oct. 14, 2008
5:53 pm
Of course, building only one part creates its own set of challenges. When you have multiple parts that are fastened together, tolerances don’t need to be perfect. You have wiggle room, both literally and figuratively. But when one part is responsible for many functions, it’s critical to manufacture that part with absolute precision, down to the micron. Every time. Millions of times over. There was only one way to achieve this level of precision: mill the unibody from a solid block of aluminum using computer numerical control, or CNC, machines – the kind used by the aerospace industry to build mission-critical spacecraft components.
Apple's design page for the new MacBook. DO WANT. (#)
Oct. 12, 2008
Mozilla seems to be doing a pretty good job of keeping the Firefox nightlies within striking distance of feature parity with Webkit. CSS Transforms are such a simple concept, it's hard to believe they're just becoming available. Apply various Photoshop-like transformations on HTML elements. By my estimation, rotate will be the most used option here. Also: the "translate" option sounds like an interesting alternative to CSS positioning. I'm excited for this feature to make it into Firefox proper. (Via FABW.) (#)
Oct. 10, 2008
4:27 pm
Describing a world in which wholesale money markets were now refusing to lend to banks, even overnight, the UK authorities warned that the world was on the edge of a collapse of the financial system.
Chris Giles, Financial Times editor, clearly trying to scare me outta my britches. (#)
2:31 pm
A “perfectionist” and a “purist” are not the same person. The perfectionist seeks to do everything to the best of their ability against standards that are often set higher than average. The purist, on the other hand, seeks to adhere to some set of rules that are written for conditions in a world wherein Tom Cruise is taller and a lot less creepy, and every morning the box of Trix is full and fresh without all those lame crumb particles at the bottom of the box … Clients, supervisors, vice presidents, and so forth—they don’t want the purist. Purists freak them out. While they might make for interesting subjects on the Discovery Channel, purists aren’t the best fit in the business world. Purity costs money and dedication to a path that often leads to even more unwanted or unnecessary expenditures.
Greg Storey, on lessons learned from a recent run-in he and Cederholm had with an asshat xhtml fundamentalist. (#)
Oct. 8, 2008
Me and a couple colleagues found ourselves in a pickle when Muxtape shut down. All those great playlists lost! We'd buy all the songs if only we could only remember their names. I was the only one in the group that never copied down any of those playlists for posterity. Lucky for me, Muxtape has made a frozen copy of the system available, just sans music. Amazon MP3 store, here I come. (#)
Oct. 6, 2008
When I made the big jump from WordPress to ExpressionEngine this past spring, I dumped all my old posts. There were many reasons for the decision, and one of them was that I couldn’t figure out an easy way to migrate the URLs for existing articles over to the new system. Granted, it wasn’t the biggest of reasons, but it didn’t help. While ExpressionEngine doesn’t serve up nice date based URLs by default, it turns out it can be done. In fact, it’s quite easily accomplished.
Oct. 3, 2008
Stack Overflow users post some of their favorite programming funnies. Do you write code – any kind of code at all? I can't promise belly laughs, but a couple might bring you close. (#)
Oct. 1, 2008
Pragmatic Programmers have released some killer screencasts. I was a huge fan of Ryan Irelan's ExpressionEngine series. Now the group's turning their attention to iPhone development. Given the scarcity of good iPhone development tutorials (mostly because of Apple's NDA), these screencasts are bound to be a big hit with aspiring XCode ninjas the world over. (#)
I could play with this junk all day. In honor of their 10th birthday, Google's gone and fetched their oldest available archived index and made it available via a retro search page. Added bonus: most pages are available as they were then via a link to The Internet Archive. Oh, nostalgia. (Via Gruber.) (#)
Sep. 30, 2008
9:18 am
Thus, the Treasury plan is a disgrace: a bailout of reckless bankers, lenders and investors that provides little direct debt relief to borrowers and financially stressed households and that will come at a very high cost to the US taxpayer. And the plan does nothing to resolve the severe stress in money markets and interbank markets that are now close to a systemic meltdown … This is again a case of privatizing the gains and socializing the losses; a bailout and socialism for the rich, the well-connected and Wall Street. And it is a scandal that even Congressional Democrats have fallen for this Treasury scam that does little to resolve the debt burden of millions of distressed home owners.
Professor Nouriel Roubini, on the still imminent Wall Street bailout. (Via Glen Greenwald.) (#)
Sep. 29, 2008
12:17 am
Older people are definitely sillier and more open to admitting things they like that they may not have admitted before. We are so much more bored than young people, and I think we yearn for high-school-style communication.
Linda Keenan, offering up one explanation for the online exhibitionism of so many post-30-year-olds. (#)
Sep. 28, 2008
Just brilliant. Antique photos, most from before the 1920s, each one altered so its copy appears to have been taken from a slightly different perspective. The original and the copy are toggled quickly back and forth on a loop, producing depth. There's this brief explanation, but I can't find any notes on workflow. Anyone know how the photographer is doing this? (#)





