nawasaka:

fuckyeahmoleskines:

nawasaka.tumblr.com

I still don’t know how something I scribbled in a hurry at 3am got so many notes in the space of a day? Shakespeare is clearly too awesome. I spelt “bated” wrong, awk :) Someone said this looks like a serial killer’s notebook, which made me laugh a lot. They’re not wrong, I’ve been a sleep deprived zombie lately.

nawasaka:

fuckyeahmoleskines:

nawasaka.tumblr.com

I still don’t know how something I scribbled in a hurry at 3am got so many notes in the space of a day? Shakespeare is clearly too awesome. I spelt “bated” wrong, awk :) Someone said this looks like a serial killer’s notebook, which made me laugh a lot. They’re not wrong, I’ve been a sleep deprived zombie lately.

mattstiles:

I just discovered the promising Clear Congress Project today, which visualizes legislative data by political party and other other variables in real time. A mission statement from the developer:

With the expansion of the Internet and computing technologies, the amount of data generated…

nightline:

Listen to what life’s tellin’ you, man.
Today in Newark (Julio Cortez/AP Photo)
Today in Pictures

nightline:

Listen to what life’s tellin’ you, man.

Today in Newark (Julio Cortez/AP Photo)

Today in Pictures

courtenaybird:

Infographic: Charting the Death of the Printed Coupon - The Atlantic
In 1992, consumers saved $7.7 billion by using coupons. By 2006, that amount had fallen to $2.6 billion. That year, the numbers started to climb after falling for 14 years. In 2010, consumers saved $3.7 billion using coupons.
Every hour spent couponing in 2011 is worth an estimated $100.
More than 88 million adults in the United States will redeem an online coupon or code for use either online or offline at least once in 2011.
While newspaper inserts are still the primary method of coupon distribution (89%) and redemption (53%), Internet redemption has skyrocketed, rising 263% in 2009.
By 2013, 96.8 million adults in the United States will redeem an online coupon.

courtenaybird:

Infographic: Charting the Death of the Printed Coupon - The Atlantic

  • In 1992, consumers saved $7.7 billion by using coupons. By 2006, that amount had fallen to $2.6 billion. That year, the numbers started to climb after falling for 14 years. In 2010, consumers saved $3.7 billion using coupons.
  • Every hour spent couponing in 2011 is worth an estimated $100.
  • More than 88 million adults in the United States will redeem an online coupon or code for use either online or offline at least once in 2011.
  • While newspaper inserts are still the primary method of coupon distribution (89%) and redemption (53%), Internet redemption has skyrocketed, rising 263% in 2009.
  • By 2013, 96.8 million adults in the United States will redeem an online coupon.

(via courtenaybird)

9-bits:

engers:

Google’s social network, Google+ is finally live. 
A few key advantages over the current iteration of Facebook:
Huddle - Group text chat
Hangouts - Group video chat
Sparks - Tips on what to share (kind of like Google Alerts made social)
Circles - Better sharing controls than Facebook Groups


Excited to see how this develops. I’ve always been fascinated at how little the big players like Google and Apple “get” social. They certainly have all the right ingredients. Also, the website is an absolute must see. Wonderfully executed.

9-bits:

engers:

Google’s social network, Google+ is finally live

A few key advantages over the current iteration of Facebook:

  • Huddle - Group text chat
  • Hangouts - Group video chat
  • Sparks - Tips on what to share (kind of like Google Alerts made social)
  • Circles - Better sharing controls than Facebook Groups

Excited to see how this develops. I’ve always been fascinated at how little the big players like Google and Apple “get” social. They certainly have all the right ingredients. Also, the website is an absolute must see. Wonderfully executed.

(via journo-geekery)

trivition:

Lamborghini 350 GTV

trivition:

Lamborghini 350 GTV

"The buying of more books than one can read is nothing less than the soul reaching toward infinity."

— a. edward newton (via thedeadline)