- Google Alerts Slowing Down? Stay Informed With These Seven Information Trapping Tips
- State and Federal Campaign Contribution Data, All In One Spot
- Script Gallery for Google Spreadsheets
- Map Shows Census Compliance
- Google Launches Public Data Explorer
- Courseopedia Wants to Connect You to Classes of All Sorts
- United States National Archives, Now On Flickr
- Get Minty Fresh Government Info From the Social Web
- Vanderbilt Launches Global Music Archive With Digital Collection of East African Music
- Another Video Site — For Military Films
Suggestions to newspapers to improve their websites four years ago
Almost four years ago, Bivings Group listed 9 Ways for Newspapers to Improve Their Websites
- Use taxonomy tags to cut across traditional newspaper “section” names
- Use full-text RSS feeds (like blogs do)
- Work with “Social” websites
- Link stories to relevant blog entries (“who’s blogging about this?” links)
- Eliminate registration
- Partner with bloggers for local news coverage
- Offer readers alternative organizational schemes (most read, most blogged, etc.)
- Modernize the visual design of news sites
- Learn from Craigslist’s simplicity and efficiency
- Make sites work on PDAs and phones
It’s a good checklist to see how many have adopted the principles.
Toolmonger — favorite posts from the past
One of my favorite sites to visit on the weekends. Almost as much fun as actually building something.
- Mmmm… Cord Organizer
- Tiny Workshop For Your Tiny House
- Green Woodworking
- Inside A Master Gunsmith’s Shop
- The Passing Of A Woodworker
- Reader Question: Knife Sharpening
- Borrow Tools At The Local Library
- Infinite Attic
- Duluth Souped-up Sweatpants
- Reader Question: Tool Storage Tricks
- Home-Brew Wind Power
- Turn Your Drill Press Into a Planer
- Reader Question: Is Shopsmith Band Saw Worth It?
- Instant Driveway?
- Doh! Jackasses At Large
- Reader Project: Secret Doors, Part II
- Dealmonger: Anant Round-Face Spokeshave $10
- Simple Storage Space For The Attic
- 2,000-Year-Old Computer Brought to Life
- Folding Pocket Wrench
- The Eyeballing Game
- Brooks And Dunn Make Their Own Knives
- Shop Class: Five Echoes Of The Past
- High-Strength Solder Paste
- Flickr Pool: Boxes And More Boxes
- RMJ Tactical Tomahawk: Badass
- Folding Yard Cart Challenges The Wheelbarrow
- How To: Gas Forge Plans
- Sometimes The Accessories Make The Tool
- Its Just Cool: Custom Knife Sharpener
Miscellaneous favorites from the past
43 Folders: Eric Idle, on John Cleese’s Writing Process
Michael Hyatt: What I Have Learned in Four Years of Blogging
cnewmark: Apture – a tool for political news transparency
cnewmark: NY Times re Consumers Union: “Success Without Ads”
cnewmark: fedspending.org: new tools expose Congressional finances
How to Change the World: Take the Entrepreneurship Test
How to Change the World: The Five Most Important Lessons of Entrepreneurship
Small Business Marketing Blog from Duct Tape Marketin: Are you awakened or just an entrepreneur?
Bargaineering: Average Net Worth of an American Family
Bargaineering: How I Lost My Job, Part One
Social Media: ‘Why journalists suck at business’
Chris Pirillo: Edit Video with a Video Editor: 5 Tips
Lifehacker — favorites from the past
- Take Better Self-Portraits
- GIMP Tricks Everyone Should Know
- Why the Push-Up Belongs in Your Fitness Routine
- The Five-Minute Prison Workout Keeps You Fit in Any Space
- Supplement Your Language Learning by Using Common Sites in a Foreign Language
- Google Public DNS Aims to Speed Up Your Browsing
- Get the Most from Your Point-and-Shoot Camera
- The Best Tools for Hacking Your Next Big Conference (Like SXSW)
- Learn a New Photography Trick or Two; Entire BBC Photo Masterclasses Now Available Online
- Use Dropbox to Share and Host Your Web Site
- Clean Up Your Photo Collection with Free Tools
- Universal USB Installer Makes a Persistent Thumb Drive Version of Any Linux OS
- How to Set Up Your Writing as a Real Business
Wired News — favorites from the past
- Tai Chi Scooter One-Ups The Segway
- How Perverse Incentives Drive Bad Security Decisions
- 5 GeekDad Tips for Improving Your Pinewood Derby Car’s Speed
- Lost in Space: 8 Weird Pieces of Space Junk
- Twitter Could ‘Go for Years’ Without Earning a Dime, Investor Says
- ID Theft: Yes, It Is the Hackers
- Digital Overload Is Frying Our Brains
- TED Interview: ‘Tribes’ Author Says People, Not Ads, Build Social Networks
- A Who’s Who of Doctor Who
- Dec. 10, 1626: Measurement Man Meets the Measure of His Days
- Free GIMP 2.6 Image Editor Looks, Behaves More Like Photoshop
- Top 10 Amazing Physics Videos
- Weekend of Web Apps, Tech Talks Awaits at DjangoCon
- Zoho Docs Unites Writer, Sheet and Show
- Take Your Web Apps Offline
- New BBEdit Packed With Power Tools for Writers, Programmers
- Novelist Neal Stephenson Once Again Proves He’s the King of the Worlds
- Turn Your Ubuntu Desktop Into an IMAP Maildrop
- Yahoo Invites Bloggers to Buzz Up
- Andy Grove’s Electrifying Energy Proposal
- How to Set Up a Home Server
- Start Data Plumbing With Yahoo Pipes
- What Works, What Doesn’t, on Mobile Web
- Algorithms Are Terrific. But to Search Smarter, Find a Person
- ‘Google Slap’ Destroys Revenue, Advertisers Say
- The Life Cycle of a Blog Post, From Servers to Spiders to Suits — to You
- Wired’s How To Wiki: Run a Corporate Blog
- Over-50 Web Users Hit Big Numbers
- Armed Robots Head to Iraq for First-Ever Wartime Deployment
- How Porn and Family-Friendly Photos Coexist on Flickr
- Stock Photo Showdown: Corbis Pros vs. IStockphoto Amateurs
- Calling All MySpace Addicts: The Ad Industry Needs You
- Solar Power’s Early Adopters, the Amish
- Find a Funnybone, Craigslist Founder Tells Newspaper Publishers
- Selling Homeowners a Solar Dream
- Aussies Ban Old-Style Bulbs
- Crichton’s Closet of Tech Horrors
- Experiment: Home Network Project
- Exploring Niagara Falls’ Tunnels
- Top 10 Mistakes in Web Design
- Decoded: Antikythera Mechanism
- Hacking a 2,000-Year-Old Computer
- Orson Scott Card Builds an Empire
- Take Yahoo Bookmarks With You
Blogs I’ve enjoyed that are now quiet — July 2010
Freakonomics — favorites from the past
Boing Boing — favorites from the past
- Crash test 1959 Chevrolet Bel Air VS. 2009 Chevrolet Malibu
- Burning the library in slow motion: how copyright extension has banished millions of books to the scrapheap of history
- Backwards Beekeepers T-shirts
- FDIC sends a big F-U: completely blacked out documents in response to WaMu takeover freedom of information requests
- Some half-formed thoughts on one future for bookselling
- Notes from a news-site paywall attempt
- Why Your Idea to Save Journalism Won’t Work (a checklist)
- Dan Gillmor’s “Eleven Things I’d Do If I Ran a News Organization”
- Photos of an 1890s camping trip
- Photos of NYC in the 1940s
- WhatTheInternetKnowsAboutYou: your browser is giving away your history
- Walter Cronkite, RIP.
- Creative Commons comes to Google Image Search
- Life During Wartime video from Stop Making Sense
- The crap they built where the beautiful old train stations were
- Weegee speaks on an old LP
- Salty microbe may be world’s oldest
- How digging up expense reports led a journalist to clobber British govt
- Video explains fair use for video (video video)
- Scouts training to fight immigrants and terrorists
- Lunar junk
- End of Overeating: the science of junk-food cravings
- Notes From the Underground
- $7 solar oven design wins $75,000 prize
- Cannonball floating in mercury
- Can video games improve vision?
- Bad Times Spur Entrepreneurship, But There’s a Catch
- On the demise of books, newspapers, music and movies
- EFF updates blogger legal guide
- Dudley Moore + Peter Cook sing song about Robin Hood’s BFF in 1965
- Monty Python’s free web video increased DVD sales by 23,000 percent
- Photos of the Northern Lights
- HOWTO write in the age of distraction
- John Cleese on Sarah Palin: “Monty Python Could Have Written This.”
- Cool photoblog: elders with style
- NY Times on “beautification software”
- Old timey Halloween photos
- Martin K. Tytell, Typewriter Wizard, Dies at 94
- Neal Stephenson present Anathem – Live webcast
- Photoblog devoted to century-old piccies
- Glenn Miller Orchestra – “Do You Wanna Dance?”
- Laurie Anderson interview in Smithsonian
- Stephenson’s Anathem was inspired by Clock of the Long Now
- Neal Stephenson lecture on whether genres matter anymore
- TimesPeople, a lightweight socialnetwork for the New York Times
- Motivational Music (MP3s)
- Fifty greatest comedy sketches of all time
- How people around the world count money — video
- Life and times of a Consumer Reports secret shopper
- Wubi: Install Ubuntu on Windows like installing an app
- HOWTO Write a decent novel in two months
- SimCity goes free software
- Rules of Thumb website
- Blog future vs NYT future: none of the above!
- Profile of Getting Things Done author
- Free “CC-licensed” banjo lessons from famous banjo author
- OpenDNS.com profiled in the NYT
- Hello Muddah, Hello Fadduh. Here I am at Camp Blow-Up-a-Lotta.
- Storage staircase — genius!
- LineRider meets Super Mario
- Average walking speed increased 10% in last 10 years
- Vonnegut’s rules for short stories
- NYT on multitasking myth
- Men stare at crotches
- Steve Ballmer’s modest office
- Search-engines kill the art of clever headlines
- 93-year-old blogger: “It Bothers Me That I Have To Go”
- How The New Yorker’s media writer does his job
- Best history podcast — BBC’s “In Our Time”
- Fake beauty, video about transhuman tricks used on models
- Find It! puzzle is very difficult (at least for me)
- FreeEnigma: easy privacy for webmail
- Hidden rooms on the rise
- Spraying hot water at -29.4C
- Jean Shepherd tours Disney’s 1964 World’s Fair rides
- Psychological tricks of the retail space designer
- Ancient Roman Greek computer was used to chart the skies
- Depression peaks at age 44, according to study
- Great financial advice for writers
- Home Inspection Nightmares photo gallery, Vol. 5
- Urban bee keeper video
KK Lifestream — favorites from the past
The Man Who Wanted to Classify the World
Awesome Musical Tapes From Africa
Playing Digital Games Together
One of my biggest surprises as a parent has been to see how often video games and computer games turned into social events. I had been led by many media reports to believe that playing video games was an anti-social act. So when our kids turned player age, I was expecting to see them hide away while playing games. Sure, that does happen, but more often their choice is to play games — whether video, computer, or with balls outside — with their friends.
In a November 10, 2006 blog posting Carr postulated that blogs were headed down to further obscurity rather than up to the floodlights of fame. He wrote: “Back in October 2004, there were three blogs in the Technorati top 10. Last year, there was one. Today, there are zero. Defining the short head more broadly, as the top 100 sites, provides an even starker picture of the rapid downtailing of blogs.”
For more extreme nerdiness like this fuse-blowing, eyes-popping, brain-frying backyard craziness, check out this Australian mate’s website. Gigantic tesla coils are just the start of it. He’s got a dozen other outrageously neato basement experiments going.
Eight years ago Cool Tools started out as short email messages containing my personal recommendations for cool stuff. I occasionally emailed these quick raves to a very small circle of friends. Several of my friends asked me to add their friends to my list. Soon there were several hundred readers. In the winter of 2000 I published 90 or so of my tool reviews in an issue of Whole Earth Review. This was not much of a surprise since I used to edit the magazine, and the reviews were clearly written in Whole Earth style — short, always positive, useful. I kept reviewing a tool or book when I thought of it, but after several years of adding folks to the list (which is still going) it occurred to me that with a small amount of extra work I might as well post my recommendations on a blog. On April 17, 2003, five years ago, I posted the first review on this site. (It was the Utili-Key, a sharp blade built into a key, a tool I continue to use and get past airport security.)
For the past 30 years the conventional wisdom has been that once a person achieves a minimal standard of living, more money does not bring more happiness. If you live below a certain income threshold, increased money makes a difference, but after that, it doesn’t buy happiness. That was the conclusion of a now-classic study by Richard Easterlin in 1974.
However a recent paper disputes that conclusion and shows that worldwide, afflluence brings increased satisfaction. The New York Times produced a fine graph, along with a good article, “Maybe Money Does Buy Happiness After All,” illustrating this new thesis. Richard Easterlin would like to see better data for individual countries over time, but it does seem like affluence breeds satisfaction.
Self-Generating Money vs. Productive Wealth
Digital continuity is a real problem. Digital information is very easy to copy within short periods of time, but very difficult to copy over long periods of time. That is, it is very easy to make lots of copies now, but very difficult to get the data to copy over a century.
The Amish have the undeserved reputation of being luddites, of people who refuse to employ new technology. It’s well known the strictest of them don’t use electricity, or automobiles, but rather farm with manual tools and ride in a horse and buggy. In any debate about the merits of embracing new technology, the Amish stand out as offering an honorable alternative of refusal. Yet Amish lives are anything but anti-technological. In fact on my several visits with them, I have found them to be ingenious hackers and tinkers, the ultimate makers and do-it-yourselfers and surprisingly pro technology.
The Sudden Appearance of Technology
This cool tool graphs the frequency of words used in US State of Union address since 1790. You enter two different words and this website races them (thus speech wars) in chart form to see which term is more common.