Here's some stuff d2s has liked. To find more cool stuff, check out Explore »

clementine says...

This is Greg's version of doing it, simply by printing anamorphic images on paper, of from his computer. Off course, he did a chalk drawings of them first. Can you tell which of these objects are the REAL thing?

                   
Click here to download:
How_to_do_3D_Anamorphic_Artwor.zip (611 KB)


clementine says...

Creative houses and unusual building designs from all over the world.

         
Click here to download:
Unusual_and_Creative_Buildings.zip (388 KB)


Zee M Kane says...




Scheduled for release in 2010, this will be about the 20th film version of Alice in Wonderland, but this time the story will be reworked to have Alice "return" to Wonderland as an older girl, so it will not adhere to the traditional plot.

An "unknown actress" (Mia Wasikowska) has been selected as Alice;


DazMSmith says...

A butterfly in the hand, is worth two ...?

Sometimes ... the extraordinary simplicity of life is lost on us, as the busyness of business steals our time.


DazMSmith says...

Mini Television, 1966
"British inventor Clive Sinclair shows off his mini television. Please note the thickness of his glasses."

Photo: Terry Disney/Getty Images
Jul 22, 1966

Wait a minute. Aren't tech companies extolling the virtues of us watching TV on our cellphone handsets these days?

So who's the dumb one. Them, or us?


garry says...

Preach on, brother.


garry says...

You can now login to your Posterous using Facebook account, so it's easier than ever to get started or get rolling. If you haven't linked your Facebook to your Posterous account yet, you can do so by clicking Autopost to Everywhere and clicking Add a Service, and then "Enable autopost".

Anyone can now comment on any Posterous blog using Facebook too. We also make it super easy to post blog comments back to your Facebook wall -- just click "Post comment to Facebook" at the bottom of the comment form. (Custom domains don't work yet, but we've got requests out to Facebook to figure out how to support it.)

Posterous and Facebook, better together. Thanks for using posterous, and contact us at help@posterous.com anytime if you have suggestions, problems or ideas.

Filed under: facebook, New Features

garry says...


Isn't it about time you set up Posterous to autopost to Twitter? Now your readers can leave comments for you and tweet back through Twitter using our new commenting system. It's easier than ever for people to get involved and have a conversation on your blog.

Posterous now also fully supports Twitter's oAuth API for both Posterous users setting up autopost AND your readers who might want to tweet back right from your Posterous blog. For users who are already logged into Twitter, it's a trivial 2 clicks to get connected with Twitter. Click Allow and you're all set.


For users who were using the old way (by giving us your twitter login) -- things will still work just fine and you don't have to lift a finger. But if you'd like, you can delete your old Twitter autopost account at http://posterous.com/autopost and create a new one again. If you happen to change your Twitter password, you'll want to do this too. 

In addition to Twitter, Facebook users can easily comment and share back using Facebook Connect. Twitter/Facebook commenters can also now enter their email address to sign up for comment updates.

As always, email us at help@posterous.com if you're having problems getting things working, and we'll get right back to you ASAP. Thanks for using posterous!

Filed under: autopost, New Features, Twitter

sachin says...

Gmail just added support for inline images, so you can place photos anywhere in the text of your post. You need to first enable this in your GMail settings.

Once enabled, you'll get a new image icon in the compose window which will let you insert an image anywhere.

More info can be found on the Official Gmail Blog.


sachin says...

Posterous is now the easiest way to create an email list for your family or group. Creating a group blog is easy, just enter the email addresses of your friends and family intro the contributors section of Site Settings. Those contributors don't even need to create accounts in order to post or comment.
 
When any contributor posts to the site, we'll send that entire post, including all the images, to the contributors. They can then reply to that email to add a comment to the post. And as before, those comments get emailed to all contributors.

Want to send something out to your group but not have it published to your public site? Easy. Just email private@sitename.posterous.com. We'll still send it out the contributors, but it will remain private.
 
Dead simple email lists for your group or family. Create one today!