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

Helvetica Moleskine

Helvetica Moleskine

This Limited Edition Helvetica Moleskine is fast becoming a much desired item amongst many people, not just designers. Seems to create a lot of passion in people, especially the red version.

I have one to giveaway.

The Helvetica Moleskins have Arrived

How do I win

There are a few small things you need to do.

  1. Follow me on Twitter @imjustcreative & @lovehelvetica
  2. Consider Signing up to this Posterous Blog and my own site (ImJustCreative) RSS feed.
  3. Ensure you leave your Twitter Username in the comment so I can contact you.

Duplicate entries will be voided.

Deadline

Will aim to pick a name in a week's time, give or take.

Helvetica Moleskine in Black & Red

Swiftly re-engineered by ImJustCreative - Freelance Logo Designer & Brand Identity Designer


  
(download)

Recebi um newsletter com essa foto.
Reparem no Michael Jackson ao fundo...

E ouçam a música. Ainda não ouvi.
Ouvirei junto com vocês quando postar.

Filed under: forró, Michael jackson, tosco

Steve says...

Jakob Nielsen studies the usability of RSS feeds and social network streams for professionals and finds that ...

"Users like the simplicity of messages that pass into oblivion over time, but were frequently frustrated by unscannable writing, overly frequent postings, and their inability to locate companies on social networks."

Some of this is easily fixable, however ...

"As the satisfaction ratings indicate, we have a long way to go to improve the usability of social network messaging and RSS feeds.

The problems start with something as simple as the choice of username. For example, the United States Department of Education's Twitter ID was 'usedgov,' which sounded to users like 'used government' and was off-putting. Logos were often bad as well, particularly in the small rendering that some services offer. Users depend on the ability to scan down a stream to pick out logos and user names, but this basic need was often thwarted."

This is why email in business isn't dying anytime soon. For consumers, however, things might be different.

Filed under: RSS, social networking, streams, usability

fmafra says...


Battlestar Galactica Girls - Interview by Richard Prince, May 2008


 
 
via That Obscure Object & @laconics

Filed under: bsg, galactica, girls, hot, picture, series, sexy, tv, women

fmafra says...

 
 

via The Great Geek Manual by PipedreamerGrey on 7/16/09

 

 

This ode to female programmers was shot by Nick Gaglia and features rapper Dale Chase and actress Kether Donohue. You can download the song as an MP3 or ringtones at Chase’s website.

This is the true meaning of computer lovin’
She’s got a data stack that’s straight stunning
No mismatch, exceptions, or debuggin’
Invariably, how would I pass this,
when my coder girl grants me root access?

Source: Dale Chase via Geeks are Sexxy

Filed under: clip, coding, geek, music, rap, video

marcogomes says...

Monitorar a comunicação na Internet é muito mais fácil, alerta Hugh Pickens.

Além de monitorar as conexões domiciliares, um sistema construído por Siemens e Nokia está analisando todo o tráfego mobile do Iran, ajudando a monitorar e identificar rebeldes.

'Who said that only the good guys get to use the power of the Web to their advantage?
Quem disse que apenas os caras legais usam o poder da Web em seu benefício?

The Iranian regime has developed, with the assistance of European telecommunications companies, one of the world's most sophisticated mechanisms for controlling and censoring the Internet, allowing it to examine the content of individual online communications on a massive scale.

The Iranian government appears to be engaging in a practice often called deep packet inspection, which enables authorities to not only block communication but to monitor it to gather information about individuals, as well as alter it for disinformation purposes, according to these experts.

The monitoring capability was provided, at least in part, by a joint venture of SiemensAG, the German conglomerate, and NokiaCorp., the Finnish cellphone company, in the second half of 2008, Ben Roome, a spokesman for the joint venture, confirmed.


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Filed under: business, corporation, freedom, internet, iran, iranelection, technology