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A Video Post
Jesse Schell’s talk about the future of game design as it invades the real world is just astounding. If you do experience design of any kind it’ll be the most valuable (and entertaining) 20 minutes you’ll spend all week.
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How I learned to mind my own business…
I was walking past the mental hospital the other day.
All the patients were shouting, ‘13….13….13.’
The fence was too high to see over, but I saw a little gap in the planks, so I looked through to see what was going on…..
Some crazy
bastad poked me in the eye with a stick!Then they all started shouting ‘14….14….14′…
Listen Learned: “clean up your own backyard”
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A Quote
"A good plan today is better than a perfect plan tomorrow."
Danish Proverb
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Blackberry Shortcut - Mark all mails as read!
It also works with facebook too. Sometimes, it becomes very time consuming to go through every single email/notifications everyday , this trick should save you alot of time.
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Yele Haiti
Please donate $5 to the Yele Haiti Earthquake Fund (it will becharged to your cell phone bill). use your cell phone to text “Yele” to 501501, or you can goto yele.org
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A Quote
"He who establishes his argument by noise and command, shows that his reason is weak."
Michel de Montaigne
- Securely deploying cross-domain policy files XML
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A Video Post
Windows 7
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Asshole driven development
This morning, I came across this post regarding different types of management in software engineering. There are some humorous acronyms which you would really understand if you have been into the field. My favorite
Asshole Driven development (ADD): Any team where the biggest jerk makes all the big decisions is asshole driven development. All wisdom, logic or process goes out the window when Mr. Asshole is in the room, doing whatever idiotic, selfish thing he thinks is best. There may rules and processes, but Mr. A breaks them and people follow anyway.
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A Video Post
This boy by far is the cutest thing.
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Gates Was Doubtful Over Google’s Potential
The future is hard to see even for the smartest people. The reason is simple: we focus on the wrong things. We look at technology and ask ourselves how it will get faster, better, and smaller. But actually, radical change comes from somewhere else: shifts in consumer behavior.
Think about what has happened to the media industry. For the past 50 years or so, media technology has been on a steady path of improvement: bigger screens, more resolution, better sound. Then the unthinkable happened.Rather than buying super-audio CDs, consumers started listening to low-quality MP3s. Instead of upgrading their movie library to Blu-ray discs, they started watching grainy videos on YouTube. People stepped off the traditional product cycle and traded quality for convenience and connectivity.
If you looked at Google, as Microsoft did in 2003, you might have simply seen a fast-growing Web-search startup. “These Google guys, they want to be billionaires and rock stars and go to conferences and all that,” said Bill Gates that year. “Let us see if they still want to run the buiness in two to three years.” What was harder to perceive is that Google represented not just a process improvement in network technology, but the vanguard of a major shift in consumer action.
The Web might have started as a series of documents joined together by hyperlinks, but it was fast becoming something else. Consumers were creating content, storing data, sharing media, and accessing applications—and all of it was taking place in a Web browser. In five short years, the tyranny of the Wintel era had been broken. The Web, rather than Windows, had become the operating system to watch.
Link: Original Post
- A Video Post
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Photo Posts
Sunshine UFO
- How a Web Design Goes Straight to Hell
- Don't C-Walk Onto a Treadmill
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