Here's some stuff djsteen has liked. To find more cool stuff, check out Explore »

wiibart says...

Comment 35 by bart.burkhardt, Today (moments ago)
I'm also in the process of launching a URL shortening service.

I really would like to use GAE and I'm really am shocked to see that GAE does not support naked domains!

How can a company like Google just ignore the fact that loads of startups want short URL's to be used in Twitter messages.
It's just totally insane!! A bunch of people must be sleeping, really.

Everyone knows that redirecting from your own provider is not an option, and again it's really bizar to see Google mentioning this as an option, shame on you Google.

The strange thing is that there are already some url shortening services that run on GAE,  like http://ur.ly   
Read about this great opensource project here: http://adamstiles.com/2008/07/urly-dang-short-urls-powered-by-google-app-engine/

Please also read this great article: No nudity please, we’re Google (or why you shouldn’t mix naked domains and www on Google App Engine)
http://aralbalkan.com/1425/comment-page-1#comment-258336

Then there's  http://urlborg.com  another short url service on GAE

All these services probably just added a couple of A-records that point to servers that service ghs.google.com 
I could do that do, but as this is not officially supported I find it a bit scary. 

Also because ghs.google.com are servers that are load balanced and so, so adding a couple of ip addresses is not what I had in mind to put my short url service in the App Engine cloud.


SO PLEASE GOOGLE, YOU'RE MY FRIEND FOR SO MANY YEARS, WHAT'S GOING ON ? ? ?

HELP  !!!!!


iBoughtAMac says...


rYnoweb says...

Took me a few ignored posts before I actually watched this... It's actually pretty fucking interesting and I'll be using this technique next time I have wings... just sayin


rYnoweb says...

I learned at an early age not to expect things and not to assume something was going to go a certain way.  I learned that I was setting myself up for disappointment because, and I learned this over time, that nothing ever goes as it's planned or supposed to.  In the military it's called a SNAFU (Situation Normal: All Fucked Up) - everybody else just calls it life.  I learned that if I really really wanted something and thought I was getting that cool expensive toy for Christmas, and come morning on Dec 25th it wasn't under the tree - I was really upset and discouraged. Things hadn't gone my way and it pissed me off.  I felt entitled and cheated and it ruined my day/week/month whatever... bottom line is I neglected to see the good things that happened and the other cool stuff I got and the thought that went into all that stuff from Santa and my parents... I focused on the bad... and I let it destroy me.

This same thing came up but in different circumstances but I, as most people, learn slowly and continued to hit this pitfall along the road of life.  Over time I began to realize that if I assumed something was going to happen, and it didn't, it would screw things up for me on a personal level.  So eventually I just stopped expecting things; I stopped assuming certain things were going to happen.  Granted I still wanted that stuff to happen, but I got to a point where, if things didn't go as planned in my head and I didn't get what I want, it just didn't matter to me anymore.  I didn't let it destroy me because I started to see the other things outside of the tunnel vision that were good and saw that no matter what I didn't get, things could be worse.  There's always something worse.  As a kid I didn't get that cool big toy I wanted, but I got like 6 other things that were just as good and meaningful - hell at least I got something, lot of people don't.  As an adult and in the business world it's, "I didn't get that big fun contract I wanted", but look at it this way - I'm still busy working and there's other jobs out there and I'm not broke and I can still pay rent and eat.... shit just isn't that bad enough to worry about the one thing you focused on that went away or changed.  It could always be worse, remember that.

Having goals is good but don't let them dominate your reality with tunnel vision.  The truth is, there are plenty of things outside of the tunnel that can make you happy.  Life changes, plans change, jobs change, people change, the ecosystem changes.  The secret is to not be narrow minded and too blindly focused on something that may not be there in your future, or may be altered... the secret is to adapt and overcome and be happy with what you have.  Make your goal happen regardless of what changes because you can see all around and have the ability to adapt and overcome.

These days... I'm very nonchalant, I live day by day with a loose goal set in mind... I have a good idea where I want to go but the path is uncertain and I'm fine with that.  I have my own morals and standards which fit fine and well with society but don't follow any religion or external mindset from my own.  I feel very dynamic, almost to a point where I don't like rigidity in my life because it clashes - it starts to bring back that assumption of "it'll go a certain way" sort of thing.  I'm happy with a free-flowing reality and am willing to address conflict and change as it comes.  I know that which does not kill me will make me stronger - and so I thrive.  And to quote Nietzsche again "He who has a why to live can bear almost any how."

I got a little philosophical but for good reason.  People complain about dumb shit and they're never happy no matter if you try and help them or not - the fact is they need to help themselves, you can't do it for them.  When that sort of third party thing begins to effect my life I can't help but to reject it.  And so begins the quest to figure out how to work with that set of circumstances, but only because I choose to.


Kahlil says...

Filed under: business, video

Don't know if any of you picked this up but I've had a massive influx of followers that seem legit with the exception of a few new anomalies.


Here's how to pick up this new type of spam:
  • They never follow more than 180-odd people
  • They always post the same shortened URL in their tweets with varying messages
So, just look for the URL xurl.jp/elt and you can be sure they're a spammer.



iBoughtAMac says...

Sent from my iPhone


iBoughtAMac says...

Sent from my iPhone


marchorowitz says...

hand_accident

LOS ANGELES, Wednesday – After years and years of Research & Development in an underground Stanford laboratory, scientists have finally unveiled what has been hailed as “the best” solution for the ever-growing Los Angeles traffic problem: “The Not-So-Invisible Giant Hand,” or simply, “Big Hand.”

Over 200 years after Adam Smith’s economic theory of an “Invisible Hand,” Governor Schwarzenegger’s traffic theory of a “Not-So-Invisible Hand” is finally realized, bringing past and present together once again.

“The time was right,” Schwarzenegger proclaimed. “After all, these hands have something we want – a firm grip on traffic control. And we also as well have also something that they want – cars. Who are we to keep these big hands from their desires?”

Scientists describe the Big Hand propulsion system as “A combination of an advanced sub-atomic jet and good ol’ fashioned black magic.” This supernatural speed allows the Big Hands to arrive at the scene of an accident up to 3,501 times faster than law enforcement, tow trucks, or emergency services. The Big Hands are also equipped with a 360-degree digital camera and were given temporary CPR licenses.

When asked if the Big Hands would be given the ability to administer mouth-to-mouth resuscitation, one scientist replied, “That’d just be weird.”

Seventy-five "Not-So-Invisible Giant Hands" were deployed today in Los Angeles. Witnesses on I-5 describe the Big Hands as “really Goddamn scary giant hands.” This morning, one car’s highway collision with a guardrail served as the first Big Hands traffic assistance.

The driver, 75-year-old Max Melmo, describes the scene:

“I was just resting my head on the airbag when a Big Hand peeled back my roof and carried me away in its fist. Once I arrived at the impound lot, several hours had passed and there was snow on the ground. When I asked where I was, the Big Hand stuck out its middle finger and flew away. It turns out this was definitely not the right impound lot and, to make matters worse, I believe the Big Hand stole my wallet. I have the strange feeling that soon these Big Hands will put us under their thumbs and will destroy the human race.”

The Los Angeles Police Department is looking into these accusations.

Giant HandNuke Magazine - Endurance Issue - Giant Hand article