Bookmarks for March 3, 2012

  • Start Developing iOS Apps Today: Introduction
    Any once again, I mutter "I'll get round to it one of these days" to myself… (In case you're wondering, I've been largely away from the t'internet for a week, being either parked in front of the Xbox or out doing museums and galleries, and I'm catching up on what I've missed.)
  • In the Future Everything Will Be A Coffee Shop
    I find the sort of future he's describing here quite pleasing, as he's essentially saying that the one aspect of modern life that cannot be reduced away is the idea of a social hub. The practical reality of the matter is that someone with an internet connect does not need to go to the shops, the office, or really anywhere, except places where they can be among other humans.
  • CERN | booktwo.org
    Here's a nice, easy to understand, and very readable bit of writing about CERN, what they do there, and why it's important.
  • Olloclip vs iPro Lens review | The TechBlock
    Been vaguely wondering about getting one of these. On the strength of this, it looks like the iPro is the one to get.
  • Verisign seizes .com domain registered via foreign Registrar on behalf of US Authorities. » blog2.easydns.org – Happenings and observations
    The US government have just demonstrated that they will sieze the internet based assets of foreign entities, even though no transaction related to those assets took place on US soil, and the crimes it thinks the company may have committed are not illegal in the places they may have committed them. This is (very) roughly like the US government marching into someone's home in London, and taking away their TV (that was purchased in London), on the grounds that it can be used to watch programs made in the US, because the owner, while living in London, drank alcohol at the age of 19. (I pick a trivial offence only because it's the first thing I can think of as an easy and everyday difference between US law and the law elsewhere.)

    To quote the article: "This is no longer a doom-and-gloom theory by some guy in a tin foil hat. It just happened."

    Tags: internet, dns
  • 15+ Google Chrome extensions for better privacy control
    Every time I need to set up a new install of Chrome, I have to hunt this page out. I'm bookmarking it so as to save myself a little time next time. Some of you may find a lot of it useful, too.

Bookmarks for November 16, 2010

Bookmarks for July 28, 2010

  • aardvarkonsea.com/letterpress
    My boss turned this up on a routine vanity search for our company name (Aardvark Media), and immediately ordered a couple of the posters, from of all this, a Tea room in St Leonards-on-Sea. I am quite tempted to order one of them for myself for home as well. Any manifesto which begins "Kill your TV" and includes "Make Stuff", "Drink Tea", "Bake Cake", "Grow You Community" and "Champion the Underdog" is kind of tailor made for me, and, I would imagine, a number of other people reading this.
    Tags: posters
  • Daring Fireball: An Improved Liberal, Accurate Regex Pattern for Matching URLs
    I bookmarked Gruber's previous efforts on this front, and I will move to using this improved pattern in the future.
  • Fish in a barrel – Neven Mrgan's tumbl
    A comparison of Apple's iMac website with the websites for Dell and HP's primary desktop machines. I'm genuinely not posting this to cheerlead for Apple, I'm actually posting it as a reminder to self in a "what not to do" kind of way, because I suspect a lot og my work falls closer to HP and Dell than Apple.
  • Quantum time machine 'allows paradox-free time travel' – Telegraph
    My brain hurts. Of possibly it will hurt in the future, and the quantum-level changes have moved back in time. In any event, I eagerly await being given a quantum supercomputer to play with.