American blogger and designer
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Would you like to receive a daily, random quote by email from my Little Box of Quotes? https://constantine.name/lboq A long long time ago I began collecting inspirational quotes and aphorisms. I kept them on the first version of my web site, where they were displayed randomly. But as time went on, I realized I wanted them where I would see them. Eventually I copied the fledgeling collection onto 3×5 cards and put them in a small box. As I find new ones, I add cards. Today, there are more than 1,000 quotes and the collection continues to grow. Hello, I'm Craig Constantine
Would you like to receive a daily, random quote by email from my Little Box of Quotes?https://constantine.name/lboqA long long time ago I began collecting inspirational quotes and aphorisms. I kept them on the first version of my web site, where they were displayed randomly. But as time went on, I realized I wanted them where I would see them. Eventually I copied the fledgeling collection onto 3×5 cards and put them in a small box. As I find new ones, I add cards. Today, there are nearly 1,000 quotes and the collection continues to grow.My mission is creating better conversations to spread understanding and compassion. This podcast is a small part of what I do. Drop by https://constantine.name for my weekly email, podcasts, writing and more.
Over het bestrijden van online nepnieuws praten we met hoogleraar sociale psychologie Sander van der Linden. Hij adviseert grote bedrijven als Google en Meta, en schreef over de aanpak van online desinformatie het boek 'Immuun voor nepnieuws', dat eind deze maand verschijnt.Van der Linden is professor aan de Universiteit van Cambridge en doet onderzoek naar nepnieuws. Ook maakte hij er de game Bad News over. Volgens Van der Linden zijn er tactieken en technieken die ervoor zorgen dat mensen minder snel in nepnieuws trappen.Verder in het technieuws: de nieuwe AI-tools van Google en een rel rond de camerasoftware van Samsung.Tips uit deze aflevering:Video: Onze review van de ThinkPhone, de opvolger van de Blackberry als zakelijke smartphone. Docu: Der Fall des Angry German Kid over de Duitser Norman Kochanowski, ook bekend als Angry German Kid, die 17 jaar geleden als puber wereldwijd viral ging met een video. Daarin gaat hij compleet door het linkt omdat een game op zijn computer niet opstart. De video werd talloze miljoenen keren bekeken, mede omdat sommige mensen dachten dat het echt was. Maar het was geacteerd. In de jaren erna had Kochanowski heel veel last van zijn online beroemdheid. Hoe liep het met hem af?Podcast: The Talk Show van blogger John Gruber. De nieuwste aflevering is bijzonder: Gruber praat met Jason Kottke, een blogger die nu al 25 jaar actief is. Ze praten over de evolutie van internet, nieuws, bloggen en nog veel meer – een bijzonder gesprek.Podcast: De Top Alles Podcast van onze collega Rutger Middendorp. Samen met filosoof Sanne ten Wolde en Johannes Peetsma, beter bekend als zijn alter ego Tiktok Tammo maakt Rutger een ranglijst van alles. Elke aflevering wat anders: exen, huisdieren, vrienden en meer. Het nieuwe seizoen begint donderdag.Zie het privacybeleid op https://art19.com/privacy en de privacyverklaring van Californië op https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Jason Kottke returns to the show to celebrate the 25th anniversary of Kottke.org.
It's lunchtime!One of Lex's recipes for hard boiled eggs comes from Jason Kottke.James Thomson still isn't happy with how he looks.Jason Snell took a look at the Cinema Display bug fix beta.Our thanks to Microsoft Lists, a new way to track and manage work and life from start to finish, designed for small business and individual use. Filter, view and share to get other people's thoughts and work together. Go to lists.live.com and try the preview at no cost!Our thanks as well to Sunday. Sunday makes taking care of your lawn easier than ever. Made with natural ingredients, Sunday takes the guesswork out of growing a greener, more beautiful lawn this Spring. Visit getsunday.com/rebound to get $20 off your custom lawn plan at checkout!If you want to help out the show and get some great bonus content, consider becoming a Rebound Prime member! Just go to prime.reboundcast.com to check it out!You can now also support the show by buying our NEW shirt featuring our catchphrase, TECHNOLOGY! Are we right?! (Prime members, check your email for a special deal on the shirt.)
Founded in 1998, kottke.org is one of the oldest blogs on the web. It's written and produced by Jason Kottke and covers the essential people, inventions, performances, and ideas that increase the collective adjacent possible of humanity.
Emily, John and David discuss the invasion of the U.S. Capitol and Democrats’ historic win in Georgia. Here are some notes and references from this week’s show: Yuval Levin for the National Review: “Failures of Leadership in a Populist Age” Anne Applebaum for the Atlantic: “History Will Judge the Complicit” Emily Bazelon for the New York Times Magazine: “The Pandemic Election” Emily Bazelon for Slate in 2013: “Voting Rights 2.0” Steven Lance for Atavist: “The Secret Formula: Could Shrunken Heads From the Amazon Hold the Key to Curing Cancer? One Man Thought So—and Spent a Lifetime Trying to Prove It.” A Midwife's Tale: The Life of Martha Ballard, Based on Her Diary, 1785-1812,by Laurel Thatcher Ulrich Here are this week’s cocktail chatters: John: Agence France-Presse, “Exceptionally Well-Preserved Snack Bar Unearthed in Pompeii” David: David Segal for the New York Times: “It’s Mother vs. Son in Britain’s Priciest Divorce War” Emily: Tweet by Kyle Machulis @qDo of the most important competitive dog dancing video Listener chatter from Cyrus Farivar @cfarivar: Jason Kottke for Kottke.org: “The Last Documented Widow of a Civil War Veteran Has Died at the Age of 101” Slate Plus members get a bonus segment on the Gabfest each week, and access to special bonus episodes throughout the year. Sign up now to listen and support our show. For this week’s Slate Plus bonus segment David, Emily, and John consider in what time period they would first go to see a doctor, given what we know now about the history of medicine. You can tweet suggestions, links, and questions to @SlateGabfest. Tweet us your cocktail chatter using #cocktailchatter. (Messages may be quoted by name unless the writer stipulates otherwise.) The email address for the Political Gabfest is gabfest@slate.com. (Email may be quoted by name unless the writer stipulates otherwise.) Podcast production by Jocelyn Frank. Research and show notes by Bridgette Dunlap. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Emily, John and David discuss the invasion of the U.S. Capitol and Democrats’ historic win in Georgia. Here are some notes and references from this week’s show: Yuval Levin for the National Review: “Failures of Leadership in a Populist Age” Anne Applebaum for the Atlantic: “History Will Judge the Complicit” Emily Bazelon for the New York Times Magazine: “The Pandemic Election” Emily Bazelon for Slate in 2013: “Voting Rights 2.0” Steven Lance for Atavist: “The Secret Formula: Could Shrunken Heads From the Amazon Hold the Key to Curing Cancer? One Man Thought So—and Spent a Lifetime Trying to Prove It.” A Midwife's Tale: The Life of Martha Ballard, Based on Her Diary, 1785-1812,by Laurel Thatcher Ulrich Here are this week’s cocktail chatters: John: Agence France-Presse, “Exceptionally Well-Preserved Snack Bar Unearthed in Pompeii” David: David Segal for the New York Times: “It’s Mother vs. Son in Britain’s Priciest Divorce War” Emily: Tweet by Kyle Machulis @qDo of the most important competitive dog dancing video Listener chatter from Cyrus Farivar @cfarivar: Jason Kottke for Kottke.org: “The Last Documented Widow of a Civil War Veteran Has Died at the Age of 101” Slate Plus members get a bonus segment on the Gabfest each week, and access to special bonus episodes throughout the year. Sign up now to listen and support our show. For this week’s Slate Plus bonus segment David, Emily, and John consider in what time period they would first go to see a doctor, given what we know now about the history of medicine. You can tweet suggestions, links, and questions to @SlateGabfest. Tweet us your cocktail chatter using #cocktailchatter. (Messages may be quoted by name unless the writer stipulates otherwise.) The email address for the Political Gabfest is gabfest@slate.com. (Email may be quoted by name unless the writer stipulates otherwise.) Podcast production by Jocelyn Frank. Research and show notes by Bridgette Dunlap. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Jason Kottke started Kottke.org in 1998, making it one of the oldest, still maintained blogs on the web with over 26,000 posts spanning topics from art and technology to design, culture, and general knowledge. This is a peek behind the scenes of Jason's process, his philosophies, and general thoughts on the internet––where it’s been, and maybe where it’s going. We talked about what running the blog looks like now, how it’s changed over the years. The evolution of patronage models, and his current thoughts on them. We talked a bit about burn out and managing that tension between what you really want to do versus what may appear to be the path of success online. And about the increasingly challenging task of maintaining ownership over what you create online. We also compared and contrasted our experiences as an OG blogger versus an OG vlogger, and how terrible both of those words are.Links:Kottke.OrgJason Kottke on Twitter
Pojkarna är tillbaka efter Fredriks oerhört långa fiberkollaps (och tillhörande frånvaro av alla former av bredband hemma) med sitt fjärde julavsnitt. Utöver Comhems leveransförmåga ska här diskuteras julfilmer, Volvo, Mac mini som bildserver, Fredriks resa till Køpenhamn, en misslyckad svensk katastroffilm, VGA-skärmar till Amiga, boken om rollspelet Mutant som äntligen släppts, Owncloud som ersättare för iCloud Photos och huruvuda det går att använda produkter man verkligen gillar från ett företag man inte tycker om?. Bland annat. En synnerligen god jul tillönskas våra välartade lyssnare! Länkar Avkopplande youtube-kanal Ørestad Marriot Bella sky Mutantboken Scandoubler Dell 2001FP Benqskärmar som klarar 15 KHz Hjälp archive.org arkivera! Ecstacy of order - dokumentären om Tetris Unixskägg Owncloud Jockes laddplatta Nextcloud Reconcilable differences Kapitalet Road work Internet history podcast Napster Jason Kottke Upgrade The daily Liftoff Ungeniused Myke at the movies JS party Roderick on the line Welcome to Macintosh Slate Slow burn Standoff Unjustly maligned Jupiter ascending Die hard Love actually Nightmare before Christmas Gremlins Elf Grinchen Ett päron till farsa Sagan om Karl-Bertil Jonssons julafton Ensam hemma Livet är underbart Tomten är far till alla barnen Achtung Xmas Adolphson-Falk Den blomstertid nu kommer Crazy pictures The shipping news Mitt liv som hund Den makalösa-avsnittet om spoilers Jolla lever än Soylent green Två nördar - en podcast. Fredrik Björeman och Joacim Melin diskuterar allt som gör livet värt att leva. Fullständig avsnittsinformation finns här: https://www.bjoremanmelin.se/podcast/avsnitt-149-sauron-var-en-stjarngosse.html.
Kottke.org is a website. It is not an app. It is not a product. It is simply a static website, updated daily, running some rickety old blogging software. As of March of 2018 it's been consistently updated for twenty years. It is largely the product of a single mind: Jason Kottke. Kottke.org has shaped the way many of us have thought about news, blogging, and linking. On Margins talks with Jason about his two decades of blogging, influences in his life that shaped how he works today, and what kottke.org would look like were it a book. Show Links: kottke.org kottke.org — 10 years old kottke.org — 20 years of gratitude and acknowledgements kottke.org — twenty Nieman Labs: How Jason Kottke is thinking about kottke.org at 20 Noticing — the kottke.org newsletter written by Tim Carmondy kottke.org memberships Full transcript and audio online at: https://craigmod.com/onmargins/005/
Jason Kottke, of kottke.org fame, was one of the early bloggers, one of the first bloggers to go pro, and one of the few solo bloggers still going. If you know Kottke.org, then you love it. How could you not? If you’ve never heard of it, you can thank me later. This episode examines what it means to be a publisher on the web for 20 years as well as the discipline required to find cool stuff on the web every single day (almost). See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
I play Alto's Odyssey and love it, but Jason Kottke really loves the game, so much so he's got one of the highest scores in the world. We go deep on the game for 45 minutes, talking about he got into it, what sets his playing apart, and what role games play in our lives.
Finally. Jason Kottke is on the show to talk about 20 years of writing his eponymous website.
We were thrilled to have Jason Kottke join us on the podcast this week. Jason has been honored by Wired as one of the people who “have shaped the future we live in today,” was the designer of the long-lasting Gawker logo, helped create Buzzfeed, and is currently continuing to blog at the same site he's been maintaining since 1998, Kottke.org.
Jason Kottke, purveyor of Fine Hypertext Products, joins Scott to discuss TNG’s “Q Who” (S2E16). Another Q episode! Topics include Sonya Gomez, Guinan’s super powers, and if the Borg are truly happy. Host Scott McNulty with Jason Kottke.
This week my guest is Jason Kottke, and we discuss The Twilight Zone Season 2 Episode 2 - "The Man in the Bottle".
Through the magic of pre-recording this episode of SlightlySauced continues on where we left off from last time! NASA plans to mine an asteroid - better call Bruce Willis! Jason Kottke writes a blog about things you should probably know - and we talk about some of them! Mennonites are getting a bad rap again - and Weird Al isn’t to blame this time! And more! !!Download: Direct LinkLinks:NASA’s Asteroid Redirect MissionThe Asteroid Could be Worth $10,000 QuadrillionJason Kottke: Lessons LearnedD'Amato: Nothing pure in CBC’s Mennonite seriesPure CBC Season 1 TrailerWEIRD AL IS RELEASING A BOX SET INSIDE AN ACCORDIONLetterkenny (TV)Both Sides of the Argument Plain Cigarette Packaging DebateCheck this thing out!:SchnitzelJon’s YouTube ChannelHearts of Iron 4Sherlock (TV Show)Let us know what you think:Review and rate us on iTunesSubscribe to us on Google Play MusicEmail: contact@slightlysauced.comSkype: Call us at SlightlySauced and leave a message!Twitter: @SlightlySaucedLike us on FacebookContinue the discussion on RedditListen to this episode on YouTubeRate us on StitcherLeave us a comment on Digital PodcastMusic:Blue Circles by unreal_dm © copyright 2011Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license.http://dig.ccmixter.org/files/unreal_dm/33850 Ft: CSoul
Shaun Usher joins me to talk about beautiful notes and letters penned by authors such as Abraham Lincoln, Dr. Seuss, Jane Austen, Mozart, Beatrix Potter, and more! An entirely new set of letters to observe and explore, for a fun new conversation about the art of letter writing, our communication styles, and how we can dwell in the past in our digital future. ABOUT SHAUN USHER AND LETTERS OF NOTE "A fascinating blog..." - Andrew Sullivan, The Atlantic "...a fantastic blog..." - Mark Frauenfelder, Boing Boing "The internet's cultural magpie" - GQ Magazine "Fantastic idea [...] and well done too" - Jason Kottke, kottke.org "...a wonderful collection..." - Scott Beale, Laughing Squid Welcome. Letters of Note is a blog-based archive of fascinating correspondence, complete with scans and transcripts of the original missives where available. I have a seemingly endless supply of correspondence to plough through, but your input is always welcome. Get in touch via shaun@lettersofnote.com. If you wish to send images, please forward high quality versions where possible, don't attempt to compress them to the point of illegibility, and please don't crop them to death. If you happen to have an original you wish to post to me using regular mail, let me know via email. If you already know it's fake, don't send it. You have four choices when it comes to receiving updates — RSS, Twitter, Facebook, and Tumblr — and unless my fingers crumble away, there will be at least one new post every weekday. I predict you will also enjoy visiting Letterheady, another blog I run which is dedicated to showcasing interesting letterheads — it's like Letters of Note, but with less reading — and Lists of Note, which, predictably, features notable lists. Please note that whenever I link to a book on Amazon (typically when highlighting the source of a particular letter) I use an affiliate link — this essentially means that, should you click that link and then purchase said book, I receive, from Amazon, a small percentage of the book's price. If you have any more questions, please get in touch. Yours, Shaun Usher
Do you have a right to film the police? Should people film the police? A lot of attention has been given to the use by police officers of body cameras (and dash cameras), but what about citizens’ filming arrests on the street? With Jocelyn Simonson, we explore the ways that the use of cameras both facilitates and is expression. This show’s links: Jocelyn Simonson’s facult profile and writing Oral Argument 64: Protect and Serve (guest Seth Stoughton) Jocelyn Simonson, Beyond Body Cameras: Defending a Robust Right to Record the Police Timothy Williams, James Thomas, Samuel Jacoby, and Damien Cave, Police Body Cameras: What Do You See? (an interactive NY Times feature using videos created by Seth Stoughton); see also Jason Kottke’s link to this piece, which also features links to related ideas in film direction The Chicago Police Accountability Task Force (with links to the report); see also Monica Davey and Mitch Smith, Chicago Police Dept. Plagued by Systemic Racism, Task Force Finds ACLU of Illinois v. Alvarez (featuring a dissent by Judge Posner) Floyd v. City of New York (the stop and frisk case); see also p.597 of the same case for the judge’s quotations of police, some used in Jocelyn’s paper, evincing a “contempt and hostility . . . toward the local population”) This American Life 414: The Right to Remain Silent, Act Two (“For 17 months, New York police officer Adrian Schoolcraft recorded himself and his fellow officers on the job, including their supervisors ordering them to do all sorts of things that police aren't supposed to do.”) Jocelyn Simonson, Copwatching About the panopticon Seth Stoughton, Law Enforcement’s ‘Warrior’ Problem (read online here if you don’t want the PDF) About Stephen Colbert’s performance at the 2006 White House Correspondents’ Dinner (Here’s the video.) City of Houston v. Hill (“Why don’t you pick on somebody your own size?”) Fields v. City of Philadelphia (finding no First Amendment right to film police officers) Samuel Warren and and Louis Brandeis, The Right to Privacy Oral Argument 1: Send Joe to Prison (guest Sonja West) Sonja West, First Amendment Neighbors Sonja West, The Monster in the Courtroom Special Guest: Jocelyn Simonson.
[r] Who is Lemmy? Well he’s the singer for Motörhead and he’s revered by metal fans around the globe. Jesse talked to Lemmy in person a couple of years ago at SxSW and you’ll hear that amazing conversation later in the show. But first we revisit Jesse’s conversation with Jackson Publick, the co-creator of The Venture Bros. The show has just returned for a fifth season after a long hiatus. Plus, a couple of Jason Kottke’s all time picks for the best stuff on the web, and the hosts of My Brother My Brother and Me offer up answers to listeners’ pop culture quandaries.
[r] Who is Lemmy? Well he's the singer for Motörhead and he's revered by metal fans around the globe. Jesse talked to Lemmy in person a couple of years ago at SxSW and you'll hear that amazing conversation later in the show. But first we revisit Jesse's conversation with Jackson Publick, the co-creator of The Venture Bros. The show has just returned for a fifth season after a long hiatus. Plus, a couple of Jason Kottke's all time picks for the best stuff on the web, and the hosts of My Brother My Brother and Me offer up answers to listeners' pop culture quandaries.
The Internet’s Jason Kottke joined Lex and Dave to talk digital friendships, the future of keeping in touch, and what life would be like without connectivity.
In this audio interview with Debbie Millman, Jason Kottke talks about blogging for over fourteen years and what it means to be "old" online.
Jesse talks to Ben and Christopher Wagner about America's most beloved broadcaster — Mister Fred Rogers — and they all hold back tears. Plus, Jesse sits down with another beloved, cardigan-wearing American – Mr. Bob Newhart! And did you know God calls into sports talk radio programs? Bullseye features another chapter of God's memoir, as written by comedy scribe David Javerbaum. Plus, Jason Kottke shares the best of the web.