
Can we all just agree that Big is pretty much the best thing ever and that Tom Hanks was the bomb a couple decades ago?
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Jun3008 film

Can we all just agree that Big is pretty much the best thing ever and that Tom Hanks was the bomb a couple decades ago?
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Jun2708 the internet, theory
Jack Shedd's Big Contrarian has quickly become one of my new favorite sites to check out. A recent post on what he's calling debris struck me as something I would like to say but am not nearly eloquent enough to get out effectively.
Essentially he's asking the blogging community as a whole to knock it the fuck off with all the mindless bullshit that gets attached to each and every blog post or article. Think of all the stupid, useless crap you generally see in sidebars. I agree with his assessment that social integration has just gone a bit too far, it doesn't belong everywhere.
I think Twitter is probably the worst offender. I still don't understand the positive press it gets, especially from intelligent, respected writers. I understand the use for someone that really wants to share boring mundane details of their life, and I think it's effective for open-source software to post quick bits about updates, and I even think it's cool as a lightweight liveblog. But beyond that I wish people would quit attaching their twitters to their sites. Debris.
I'm glad that someone put this out there. It was essentially what I was shooting for with my site design. While I'm not super happy with everything about it (look for an update in the coming months), I think the general concept of a debris-less internet is hunky dory.
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Jun2508 infographic
Wordle creates some infographic porn out of whatever you toss at it. The one above was generated from the tags on this here website. It'll automatically take in delicious tags if you're feeling too lazy to copy and paste. Unfortunately it split up 2 word strings, but I still think it's the hotness.
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Jun2508 food
In terms I can recall: artichoke soup, rabbit salad, alcohol prune or something, raw kobe beef with egg yolk, cow bone marrow, more artichoke, the most amazing bread ever made by man, quail in veal stock, amazing apparently expensive mushrooms, something I can't identify, some more amazing bread, about eight different kinds of fancy cheese with more different awesome bread, the best red wine I've ever had, and finally some butterscotch brownies with pecan ice cream.
I don't ever do fancy dinners, even out on business trips, but holy crap this was the best meal I have ever had I just feel it is important that you all know this.
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Jun1808 technology
There's been a lot of buzz the past couple of days about Stewart Butterfield and Caterina Fake (best last name ever) resigning from Yahoo. This married pair is responsible for the founding of Flickr, so at least partially to blame for how great Flickr is today. Stewart Butterfield's resignation letter to Yahoo executive Brad Garlinghouse has been circling the tubes.
Friday, June 13th, 2008
Dear Brad,
As you know tin, is in my blood. For generations my family has worked with the most useful of metals. When I joined Yahoo! back in '21, it was a sheet-tin concern of great momentum, growth and innovation. I knew it was the place for me.
Over the decades as the company grew and expanded, first into dyes and punches, into copper, corrugated steel, synthesized rubber, piping, milling equipment, engines, instruments, weaponry, and so on, I still felt at home, because tin was the core of the business.
After the war, as we continued to branch out in electronics, all manner of aeronautical frames, hulls and bodies, computing and tabulating machines, precision controls, and later, farther afield -- real estate, brewing, consumer finance, grain processing, lighting and salty snacks -- I took it in stride, for there was still a place for me.
Since the late 80s, as the general manufacturing, oil exploration & refining, logistics, and hotel & casino divisions rose to prominence, I have felt somewhat sidelined. By the time of the internet revolution and our expansion into Web Sites, I have been cast adrift. I tried to roll with the times, but nary a sheet of tin has rolled of our own production lines in over 30 years!
I don't know what you and the other executives have planned for this company, but I know that my ability to contribute has dwindled to near-nothing, and not entirely because of my advancing age. Therefore, with a heavy heart, I recognize that is time for me to and the company to part ways.
In my 87 years service, I've accomplished many feats, sharing in the ups and downs, made great friends, and learned a tremendous amount (who would have thought that Electronic Mail would come to supplant the nation's own great and venerable post!?) but there is a new generation now and it would be unfair not to give them a chance. Those that started in the make-work programs of the depression, on the GI programs in the late 40s, and even those young baby boomers need their own try, with out us old 'uns standing in the way.
So, please accept my resignation, effective July 12. And I don't need no fancy parties or gold watches (I still have the one from '61 and '76). I will be spending more time with my family, tending to my small but growing alpaca heard and, of course, getting back to working with tin, my first love.
Your old tin-smithing friend and colleague,
-Stewart Butterfield
I took three things from this letter of resignation:
More power to Fake and Butterfield for getting out of an environment they weren't comfortable in. I sincerely hope they're either working on, or about to start working on, some new killer product that will once again set the pace for an entire industry.
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