Archive for the 'Tumblelog' Category

MySpace: No Gays for a Day

MySpace has no love for man love. Users can no longer set their sexual orientation to “gay” on the site, leading to an outcry from some members of the gay community

Tasty news from Apple!

Greenpeace replays to Apple:”We are cheering! Steve Jobs has decided to bring us closer to the greener apple that Mac users all over the world have been asking for. Today we saw something we’ve all been waiting for: the words “A Greener Apple” on the front page of Apple’s site”

Wikipedia Locks Out “the numbers”

wikipedia too! freedom of speech is dead.

[PICTURE] Best Venn Diagram

I too truly feel this way.

PICTURE : 100 Kilometers Above the Earth at the “Top of the Atmosphere.”

A beautiful high resolution image of [insert title here].

Google launches Authors@Google site

“Just this year, we’ve hosted a great variety of authors, including Martin Amis, Strobe Talbott, Bob & Lee Woodruff, Jonathan Lethem, Don Tapscott, Senator Hillary Clinton, and Carly Fiorina. The subjects of their talks range from literary fiction to science fiction, sociology to technology, politics to business.” Goto: google.com/talks/authors

OS X User Challenges Others To See If People Can Hack His Server

Well here an OS X user has setup apache on and is running it allowing full access to it from the internet. In case you can’t get to it from the cnet comment, here’s the link: http://24.8.244.176/ Will this mac user be proven wrong?

MacHeist Heist 6 finally online

MacHeist’s Heist 6, after months of waiting, is finally here and its live right now.

Google creates Google Cocoa data API

To make it simpler for us to write Mac software that interacts with Google services, I created a framework to use Google data APIs directly in Objective-C programs. We are using the framework for our application development, and today we are making the framework available to all developers.

IO-HD adds real time HD encoding for professionals

The overlooked IO-HD announced today at NAB is a great tool for video professionals, with realtime HD encoding and upconverting from SD with great file sizes (1TB of HD video compressed to 172GB with almost no loss in quality) via Apple’s ProRes 422 format, and portability for a relatively cheap $3,495.