1 week ago
Hosts adds a preference pane to your system preferences which lets you toggle your host file entries on and off, as well as add and remove them.
Thanks, @rcarmo
via onethingwell
1 week ago
Journalism magnet school … for first-graders
I’m so in love with this concept I could die. Why shouldn’t we start teaching journalism in first grade? It’s the linchpin of our democracy.
I’m not a parent but first grade may be too young for kids to start drinking.
via sasquatchmedia
2 weeks ago
via the-overlook-hotel
2 weeks ago
2 weeks ago
3 weeks ago
1 month ago
The Shining trading card #224 (1980).
Artist: Man is the Warmest Place to Hide
Want
via the-overlook-hotel
1 month ago
Roger: Fine. How much do you want?
Peggy: How much you got?
Roger: $400.
Peggy: Give me all of it.
Roger: Jesus. (Hands $$ to her) This better be good.
Peggy: You want me to take your watch?
1 month ago
“Helps”
Seal helps turtle to get in the water!
Animal GIFs and Friday afternoons: A match made in heaven.
(Source: ray-moro)
via theatlantic
2 months ago
Something I wrote back in June 2009 about Birdfeed’s (new to me) “pull to refresh” feature. I was sure it shipped but Buzz and Neven say it didn’t. [confused-face]
via mrgan
Obit of the Day: Wrote WKRP in Cincinnati Theme
Tommy Wells was a graduate of Vanderbilt University with a degree in philosophy, who dreamed of becoming an Army pilot. Unfortunately, a heart defect prevented him from flying. But for the good of 70s pop culture Wells found a second calling: writing theme songs and commercial jingles.
Although much of his work was best-known in the Atlanta area, Wells moved to Los Angeles in 1974 and while there he was asked to write the theme song for a sit-com that focused on the exploits of the staff at a struggling rock station in Ohio’s third largest city. WKRP in Cincinnati would run for four seasons on CBS and earned ten Emmy nominations.
Mr. Wells wrote the music for the theme, while series creator Hugh Wilson (who also had an Atlanta connection, basing WKRP on his own experiences in Atlanta radio) wrote the lyrics. The song was sung by Steve Carlisle. It was as successful as the show and was released as a single hitting #65 on the Billboard charts in 1978 and hitting #29 in 1982 on the Adult Contemporary charts.
Tommy Wells returned to Atlanta after a few years in L.A. He died at the age of 70.
(Video copyright of CBS and courtesy of FoxConnect on YouTube.com)
(Source: ajc.com)
via obitoftheday
2 months ago
via incorrigiblerobot
2 months ago
2 months ago
Buzz Andersen, my pal and Director of Mobile Development at Tumblr
Couldn’t possibly agree more.
(via edp)
via edp









