I recently had a chat with a couple of friends about style; it inspired me to take a project off the back-burner and turn it into code.
Directed by Terry McDonough. Badger is caught by the DEA. Walt and Jesse hire the best criminal lawyer in town, Saul Goodman.
Directed by Félix Enríquez Alcalá. Rumor is spreading that Jesse killed the man that ripped Skinny Pete off. Walt uses this to his advantage on expanding their territory. Meanwhile, Hank has been promoted to the El Paso office. But it's not all he hoped it would be.
While sexting, video-sexing, and Zoom dating are all well and good, sometimes you wanna inject some flirtiness into your everyday text banter without having to get camera-ready, ya feel? Enter the humble emoji. While they’ve always been great for zuzzhing up your convos, we must call upon them now more than ever to communicate our horniness from afar.
How did Anne Hathaway become Catwoman? To portray Batman’s purring nemesis in Christopher Nolan’s 2012 movie “The Dark Knight Rises,” the actress realized that she needed to…
Hathaway also recalled a specific detail from Nolan’s movie sets. “He doesn’t allow chairs, and his reasoning is, if you have chairs, people will sit, and if they’re sitting, they’re not working,” Hathaway said. “I mean, he has these incredible movies in terms of scope and ambition and technical prowess and emotion. It always arrives at the end under schedule and under budget. I think he’s onto something with the chair thing.”
I can't find the tweet, but I saw someone say recently "if the CMS gave me a few likes every few sentences I'd probably use it more"
— EJ Fox (@mrejfox) June 30, 2020
Writers will have writers block for an article but tweet a whole 800 word twitter thread.
— Serena Sonoma (@SerenaSonoma) June 29, 2020
Being a huge fan of @reddit & @apolloreddit client, I love being part of many amazing communities.
— Nikita Voloboev (@nikitavoloboev) June 30, 2020
Was surprised to find that no one created a Digital Gardens group so I decided to change it.
Hope to see you there. https://t.co/TMQPaCdoGE
Another year down, another update on Bridgy‘s usage stats! We first announced these during State of the Indieweb at IndieWebCamp West 2020, then posted them here for posterity. https://snarfed.org/bridgy_stats/2020/accounts_st...
What a weekend! Attended the IndieWebCamp West 2020 and met some great people.
Thanks to Chris Aldrich, David Shanske, Tantek Çelik, Aaron Parecki, gRegor Morrill, Marty McGuire, kongaloosh and all the participants for the warm welcome.
This year IndieWeb Summit was canceled, and some pretty good conversations took place. As usual my biggest interest was in doing authenticated, secure sharing of private posts, which has been a huge focus in how I’ve been building Publ.
I had a great time in the sessions at IndieWebCamp West yesterday! Today is project day, so I started the morning off listening to some chill tunes with other folks on the Zoom "hallway track" deciding what to work on. My blog post permalinks have been bothering me for a while, I feel like they are...
I am reaching out because the Concepts for Adaptive Learning (CfAL) at the Farnam Center (formerly Farnam Neighborhood House) 5 Science Park is launching a virtual summer program (Tech4Teens) for teens.
This is an experiment, an alternative way to represent blog posts, as a graph. Click this if you want to get back to the plain list.
The idea is that if you encounter a blog, it's often unclear how to start reading it: typically it's an overwhelming linear list of posts, ordered by date. (thanks Jonathan for bringing my attention to it!)
Representing as a graph allows to relax this linear structure by introducing a partial order (shown by edges). You can start reading from a title that seems most interesting to you, and keep exploring the related posts.
- clicking on a post title brings you to the post
- clicking on a tag will bring you to the description of the tag
- clicking on a date will highlight all connections to the corresponding post, to make the navigation easier
- clusters correspond to 'themes' (although it's pretty fuzzy)
If you have any ideas on improving this page, or notice any problems, please let me know! You can find the source here.
This is the sort of thing that Maggie Appleton and the digital gardens gang would appreciate.