Some interesting stats about Mozilla over the last year
WebTwenny.com – Where the pages turn themselves! (see on Digg too)
Crater impact sites on Google Maps – very cool, I stumbled across the one in Quebec earlier this year
A movie of people being asked if they prefer IE or Firefox (embedded quicktime, or download directly) – not scientific, of course, but interesting. Mike Shaver points out that people don’t know why they like Firefox, they just do.
Acts of Volition Radio: Session 23
My last session of Acts of Volition Radio was recorded in the waning days of my bachelorhood. Though this session now features a married host, the music continues to rock (though sometimes gently). I’m as excited about sharing these great songs as I was when recording the first session. This session is the first available in Ogg Vorbis format (info and rational, though the MP3 version is still available if you prefer.
Session Twenty Three Playlist:
- Fountains of Wayne – Mexican Wine
- The New Pornographers – The Bleeding Heart Show
- Denison Witmer – Little Flowers
- Starflyer 59 – Good Sons
- Sum 41 – Pieces
- Nada Surf – Always Love
- Without Gravity – Beautiful Son
- Death Cab For Cutie – I Will Follow You Into The Dark
For more, see the previous Acts of Volition Radio sessions or subscribe to the Acts of Volition Radio RSS feed.
Copy Goes Here, a great short film from Coudal Partners (requires QuickTime)
Beautiful visualizations of flight patterns (found via Digg)
Live From the Formosa Session #5 and Zap Your PRAM 3
Good friends Peter, Dan and I have recorded another session of Live from the Formosa Tea House. Basically, we record our lunch time conversation and put it online.
We got off to a rough start, but once things got rolling, we had a great conversation. This time we discussed the upcoming Zap Your PRAM 3 conference (don’t worry, you didn’t miss Zap 2, it didn’t happen).
Peter put together shockingly good show notes for our fifth episode of Live From the Formosa Tea House. I laughed out loud at several points during the showing – that must be a good thing.
Apple gets all the credit for slick computer design, but damn, IBM knows how to make a bad-ass-lookin’ super-computer
The Long Now Foundation website has had a nice re-design
