Year: 2011

  • Add yourself to LinkedIn’s \”Do Not Contact List\”

    I’ve tried to delete my LinkedIn account on several occasions. But finally there is a way to remove your email account from their contact list (which is different from simply deleting your account apparently). /via Dave Semon on Twitter.

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  • Add yourself to LinkedIn’s \”Do Not Contact List\”

    I’ve tried to delete my LinkedIn account on several occasions. But finally there is a way to remove your email account from their contact list (which is different from simply deleting your account apparently). /via Dave Semon on Twitter.

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  • Add yourself to LinkedIn’s \”Do Not Contact List\”

    I’ve tried to delete my LinkedIn account on several occasions. But finally there is a way to remove your email account from their contact list (which is different from simply deleting your account apparently). /via Dave Semon on Twitter.

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  • Add yourself to LinkedIn’s \”Do Not Contact List\”

    I’ve tried to delete my LinkedIn account on several occasions. But finally there is a way to remove your email account from their contact list (which is different from simply deleting your account apparently). /via Dave Semon on Twitter.

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  • Add yourself to LinkedIn’s \”Do Not Contact List\”

    I’ve tried to delete my LinkedIn account on several occasions. But finally there is a way to remove your email account from their contact list (which is different from simply deleting your account apparently). /via Dave Semon on Twitter.

    Continue >

  • Add yourself to LinkedIn’s \”Do Not Contact List\”

    I’ve tried to delete my LinkedIn account on several occasions. But finally there is a way to remove your email account from their contact list (which is different from simply deleting your account apparently). /via Dave Semon on Twitter.

    Continue >

  • Add yourself to LinkedIn’s \”Do Not Contact List\”

    I’ve tried to delete my LinkedIn account on several occasions. But finally there is a way to remove your email account from their contact list (which is different from simply deleting your account apparently). /via Dave Semon on Twitter.

    Continue >

  • Do sanity checks on your reporting

    In my extremely limited experience Board meetings are generally prepared for hours or minutes before they’re held. The vast majority of the information may be collected a few days prior but a lot of little tweaks are done just before game time. This is usually for good reason. The leadership team of the company that…

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  • Please leave your name after the post. Beep.

    I run into this problem every single day. Every. Single. Day. Brent Simmons simply reminded me that I need to yell a little more about it. He asks: "Take a look at your weblog. How easy is it to find your name?" You’d be very surprised how hard it is to find someone’s name in…

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  • The Path menu in pure CSS3 and using CoreAnimation

    As I mentioned last week the new Path application for iPhone is arguably the best designed application on the iPhone currently. And when there is a great design, there are going to be those that begin to pick it apart and do neat things with it. The Path app is no different. People have begun…

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  • 10 steps to better blogging by Dan Frommer

    I know, list posts get all the links, but this list by Dan Frommer is worthy. I’ve been blogging for a very long time and, although I don’t do it professionally, these are all good goals.

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  • Facebook buys Gowalla

    The news is spreading that Facebook has acquired Gowalla. Many of the reports are focusing on the team being acq-hired to help with the Timeline or perhaps with Facebook’s mobile apps. But I think these angles are missing something – the fact that Gowalla’s experience could really enhance Facebook’s stickiness. Here is something I wrote…

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  • Goodbye chronological. Hello realtime. Sad face.

    In the good old days of the web I was able to subscribe to any site and receive updates via my feed reader for every post that the site made in the order that they were published.Even though RSS feeds typically only held a finite number of items in them the feed reader I used…

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  • Path 2.0

    Path is a private social networking application that allows you to create a path (comments, photos, location, etc.) and share it with a select number of people. Their most recent update is absolutely stunning. Arguably the best looking application on the iPhone at the moment. Here is a good look at their application from Geoff…

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  • Reasons why you should drink on the job

    I’ve always been a proponent of allowing beer or wine in the workplace. I’ve never really needed to articulate why I thought it was a good idea but I think this one reason from Liz over at KegWorks nails it: "Working late isn’t so bad – with salaried employees there’s no overtime pay as incentive…

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  • Redesigning Viddler by cutting features

    As I said, we’re cutting some seldom-used features over on Viddler soon. We created a quick video to show the thinking behind these changes and the upcoming redesign.

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  • This site makes, at most, 39 connections

    In a recent tirade against what some are calling Shit-ass Websites (pardon my french I try to keep it clean ’round here) there has been a bit of a backlash towards websites that make an overwhelming number of connections. Also, the size of the entire page load. This site makes, at most, 39 connections and…

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  • Tweetbot’s plus button

    Regarding my last and Tweetbot only loading 50 tweets even in Lists. It turns out the little plus button will load the tweets in between the tweets you loaded before and the new tweets. Excellent. Though it is still limited by Twitter’s API. /tip Kyle Slattery.

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  • Inside the mind of the octopus

    An incredibly interesting read about the mind of the octopus. "The moment the lid was off, we reached for each other. She had already oozed from the far corner of her lair, where she had been hiding, to the top of the tank to investigate her visitor. Her eight arms boiled up, twisting, slippery, to…

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  • Isaac Newton

    On the next rainy day do yourself a favor and dive deep into the world of Isaac Newton.

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  • Apophis

    I’ll be in my mid-50s when Apophis becomes a really, really important page on Wikipedia.

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  • \”Progress isn’t always additive.\”

    [John Gruber](http://daringfireball.net/linked/2011/11/09/progress) on the progression of web technologies. > "Sometimes the next thing does less, and is better for it — not in every way, but overall. If we never let go of old technology, we’d be buried in complexity and crushed by outdated crap." Keep this quote in mind when the next version of…

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  • \”Progress isn’t always additive.\”

    [John Gruber](http://daringfireball.net/linked/2011/11/09/progress) on the progression of web technologies. > "Sometimes the next thing does less, and is better for it — not in every way, but overall. If we never let go of old technology, we’d be buried in complexity and crushed by outdated crap." Keep this quote in mind when the next version of…

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  • \”Progress isn’t always additive.\”

    [John Gruber](http://daringfireball.net/linked/2011/11/09/progress) on the progression of web technologies. > "Sometimes the next thing does less, and is better for it — not in every way, but overall. If we never let go of old technology, we’d be buried in complexity and crushed by outdated crap." Keep this quote in mind when the next version of…

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  • \”Progress isn’t always additive.\”

    [John Gruber](http://daringfireball.net/linked/2011/11/09/progress) on the progression of web technologies. > "Sometimes the next thing does less, and is better for it — not in every way, but overall. If we never let go of old technology, we’d be buried in complexity and crushed by outdated crap." Keep this quote in mind when the next version of…

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  • \”Progress isn’t always additive.\”

    [John Gruber](http://daringfireball.net/linked/2011/11/09/progress) on the progression of web technologies. > "Sometimes the next thing does less, and is better for it — not in every way, but overall. If we never let go of old technology, we’d be buried in complexity and crushed by outdated crap." Keep this quote in mind when the next version of…

    Continue >

  • \”Progress isn’t always additive.\”

    [John Gruber](http://daringfireball.net/linked/2011/11/09/progress) on the progression of web technologies. > "Sometimes the next thing does less, and is better for it — not in every way, but overall. If we never let go of old technology, we’d be buried in complexity and crushed by outdated crap." Keep this quote in mind when the next version of…

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  • Om on writing

    Happy Anniversary (sort of) to Om Malik of Gigaom for a decade of blogging. I haven’t shared much about Om on this blog save this experience from Wordcamp 2007 in San Francisco when I wasn’t feeling very well at all (travel often makes me sick). When lunch break hit, I was hurting pretty badly. So…

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  • \”Progress isn’t always additive.\”

    [John Gruber](http://daringfireball.net/linked/2011/11/09/progress) on the progression of web technologies. > "Sometimes the next thing does less, and is better for it — not in every way, but overall. If we never let go of old technology, we’d be buried in complexity and crushed by outdated crap." Keep this quote in mind when the next version of…

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  • A breakthrough in batteries

    Interesting report over on the BBC on a breakthrough in batteries: "Batteries for phones and laptops could soon recharge ten times faster and hold a charge ten times larger than current technology allows." Yes, please.

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  • Shawn Blanc on the Kindle Touch

    Shawn Blanc on the Kindle Touch: "For the past year and a half I’ve been reading books on my iPad and never felt a need for a Kindle. However, after now using the Kindle Touch for several hours a day over the past few days, I feel as if all the accolades I ever heard…

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  • The Albatross

    Some light reading over on Wikipedia’s albatross entry. Sporting the largest wing span in the current-living animal kingdom the albatross can live into its sixties and have the same mate its entire life.

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  • This happens to me all the time

    xkcd strikes again. This time they’ve hit a nerve (at least for me). I can’t stand finding forum threads that would address the exact issue I’m facing only to see that it went unanswered. Ugh.

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  • The price is wrong

    I don’t understand reviews like this one about the Kindle Fire from Amazon by Peter Ha at The Daily: "Like most convergence devices before it, the Kindle Fire doesn’t do anything exceptionally well (except for buying things via Amazon) but the price is right at $200." How in the world is the price right when…

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  • Map projections

    xkcd explores what type of person you might be based on the type of map you prefer. Me? Globe or Gall-Peters all the way.

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  • Apple Retail Stores now offer self-checkout via the Apple Store app

    Now when you’re visiting an Apple Retail Store and you already have an iOS device (iPhone, iPad, iPod touch) in your pocket with [the Apple Store app](http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/apple-store/id375380948?mt=8) installed you can scan the barcodes of the items you want to purchase, pay with a credit card, and walk right out of the store. This is excellent.

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  • Hidden iOS 5 feature: Panoramas.

    For those of you that jailbreak your phones there is [a hidden feature in iOS 5 that allows Camera.app to create panoramic images](http://www.idownloadblog.com/2011/11/07/hidden-panorama-mode-uncovered-in-the-ios-camera-app/). This isn’t worth jailbreaking for. There are plenty of affordable and good panoramic applications in the App Store and obviously Apple wasn’t happy enough with this feature to include it. So it…

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  • Lookwork

    [Lookwork](http://lookwork.com/) is a very interesting take on a RSS reader. It is a little too Tumblr-esque for me. By that I mean that it is a very passive way to browse a ton of entries without ever slowing down and viewing each photo or post by itself for any length of time. It is one…

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  • I may never get journalists

    Sam Jones after [quoting nearly every word](http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2011/oct/31/steve-jobs-last-words?newsfeed=true) of [Mona Simpson’s touching eulogy](http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/30/opinion/mona-simpsons-eulogy-for-steve-jobs.html?\_r=1&pagewanted=all) for her brother Steve Jobs: >"His biography, written by Walter Isaacson, is topping many book charts and is even tipped to become the bestselling book on Amazon this year. >The company’s latest offering, the iPhone 4S, is faring less well, however, with many…

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  • Silicon Valley has its drawbacks

    I’ve been saying this for years but sometimes it takes someone deep in the thick of Silicon Valley, who has succeeded, to come out and make it plain. Mark Zuckerberg, and no one will argue this, has found huge success in Silicon Valley yet even he says that if he could do it all over…

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  • Codify – Build games for iPad on iPad

    How in the world is [Codify](http://twolivesleft.com/Codify/) only $7.99? Watch the video demo. Trs impressive. /via [John Gruber](http://daringfireball.net/linked/2011/10/26/codify).

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  • Day-O

    Shaun Inman, the guy that has seemingly limitless energy, time, ideas and the ability to execute, has released Day-O a menubar clock/calendar replacement application. I just installed it. Its free and its perfect. My theory; Shaun has a twin and we’ve been fooled for years.

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  • Interviews with watercolor artists

    Now would be a great time to catch up on the artist interview series I’ve been doing for over a year on The Watercolor Gallery. Here is a full list of the interviews I’ve conducted to date. I’m nearing the end of the first batch of interviews. The next batch will be much different. Kannika…

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  • Restore recently closed tabs on iPad

    [Great tip](http://lifehacker.com/5853873/reopen-closed-tabs-in-safari-on-the-ipad). To restore a recently closed tab on iPad just hold down the new tab button to see a list. iOS 5 and up only. /via [Shawn Blanc](http://shawnblanc.net/2011/10/reopen-tabs-ipad/).

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  • Richard Stallman’s rider

    Everyone and their mother’s dog is linking to Richard Stallman’s rider but it is simply too good to pass up. It is laugh-out-loud funny and so incredibly detailed that I highly recommend, if you haven’t already read it, that you grab your favorite evening beverage and read the entire thing. I recommend a Jameson and…

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  • Roz Savage – First female to row three oceans

    You’ve all been following Roz’s adventures since [I recommended that you do a few years ago](http://cdevroe.com/links/rozsavage/), right? If you haven’t you should know that [earlier this month she became the first woman to row three oceans](http://www.rozsavage.com/2011/10/04/ive-done-it/). >"I’ve done it! After 5 months and 0 days at sea, I am absolutely over the moon to be…

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  • WordPress Post formats Admin UI

    WordPress 3.1 exhibited an underlying feature that didn’t reveal itself in the UI in much of any way. Post formats. Post formats are sort of like categories of posts but are used to "handle" different post types in different ways. You can [read more about Post formats over on the WordPress Codex](http://codex.wordpress.org/Post\_Formats). [Crowd Favorite](http://crowdfavorite.com/) has…

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  • Coda 2 going private beta

    Good news! [Panic has just published a blog post](http://www.panic.com/blog/2011/10/panic-state-of-the-union-11/) confirming that Coda 2 is going private beta. As a Coda user I am super happy that they’ve gotten to this milestone. I found a few things mentioned in the post interesting. "Coda 2 has now been in development for about a year and a half."…

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  • Short clips from Ireland

    An arrangement of short clips from our trip to Ireland.

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  • Helen Mirren on funding films

    Interesting bit from [this interview with Helen Mirren](http://the-talks.com/interviews/helen-mirren/) on the always great The Talks: >"Well from my perspective, a film costs a lot of money. You could build three hospitals with the cost of one film and I take that very seriously. I take the responsibility of being a person involved in a piece of…

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