background image by Aaron Straup Cope, made with prettymaps

April 29th, 2008,
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Johnny Bunko


Johnny Bunko trailer from Daniel Pink on Vimeo.
(via Creative Generalist)

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April 29th, 2008,
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“We’re thrilled to announce that we have a deal with Apple to bring the iPhone to Canada later this year,” Rogers chief executive officer Ted Rogers said on Tuesday in a statement. “We can’t tell you any more about it right now, but stay tuned.”—Rogers bringing iPhone to Canada

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April 29th, 2008,
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We’ve plunged into a world food crisis—soaring crop prices sowing inflation and squeezing households round the world, 100 million more facing starvation and food riots flaring from Egypt to Bangladesh. In Sierra Leone alone rice prices have doubled, leaving 90% of the country unable to provide food for their family—so we’re joining with their foreign minister Zainab Bangura (right) to press world leaders to act.—World Leaders: stop the food crisis

April 24th, 2008,
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Hour Job Special

A couple of friends have been interviewed for the Hour Job Special, Julien :

You have to catch trends to raise your profile and develop yourself into something that works financially. Become an expert in a field. For instance, I have a colleague who works in financial aid and started a student loan podcast which is remarkably popular – he’s found a way to combine two areas and make himself the expert of that combination.—Navigating the web with Julien Smith

And Evan :

The exciting advantage about wiki is working on projects that help increase the free knowledge available to everyone in the whole world. The wikis I’ve started now have tens of thousands of users, who are creating tens of thousands of times more information than I could possibly do on my own.—Navigating the web with wiki advocate Evan Prodromou

Good stuff and thanks for the mentions of Station C guys (and the photo!).

April 21st, 2008,
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Sachs on Rose

Great interview; Jeffrey Sachs on Charlie Rose.

Damned Google Video won’t load the whole thing so I’m not sure how it ends but lots of good stuff in there still.

(via Jon)

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April 21st, 2008,
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But the drop-in-the-bucket issue is not the only problem lurking behind the “why bother” question. Let’s say I do bother, big time. I turn my life upside-down, start biking to work, plant a big garden, turn down the thermostat so low I need the Jimmy Carter signature cardigan, forsake the clothes dryer for a laundry line across the yard, trade in the station wagon for a hybrid, get off the beef, go completely local. I could theoretically do all that, but what would be the point when I know full well that halfway around the world there lives my evil twin, some carbon-footprint doppelgänger in Shanghai or Chongqing who has just bought his first car (Chinese car ownership is where ours was back in 1918), is eager to swallow every bite of meat I forswear and who’s positively itching to replace every last pound of CO2 I’m struggling no longer to emit. So what exactly would I have to show for all my trouble?—Why Bother?

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April 14th, 2008,
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What this means for us as bloggers and new media creators is that the very technologies that we have grown to love are the same forces that are turning our efforts, be them our words, our videos, our music, our photos, or anything we create, into a commodity – something that has little monetary value on its own, but in aggregate, can become something of value.—Content Is Becoming a Commodity

April 12th, 2008,
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FiFA Street 3 Kicks Foot

Via Ze

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April 12th, 2008,
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Most people assume that the Internet is a democratic free-for-all by nature — that it could be no other way. But the openness of the Internet as we know it is a byproduct of the fact that the network was started on phone lines. The phone system is subject to “common carriage” laws, which require phone companies to treat all calls and customers equally. They can’t offer tiered service in which higher-paying customers get their calls through faster or clearer, or calls originating on a competitor’s network are blocked or slowed.—Beware the New New Thing

April 10th, 2008,
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Simple Niftyness

Three small simple things that pundits, “specialists” and commentators keep bitching about but are loved by their users:

  • Twitter (“but it’s only 140 characters”, “what does it do?”).
  • Macbook Air (“you can’t replace the battery”, “there are only 3 ports”, “there’s no optical drive”).
  • And now Flickr Video (“it’s only 90 seconds”, “too late, they can’t beat Youtube”). And aside from simplicity, the 90 sec. is exactly like the 140 characters and will prove an interesting / creative challenge.

Simple and well executed is the new black.

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