On having an inflated sense of self-worth.
Indefensible nails it.
Some day I’m going to fly to Australia and buy this man a drink.
Indefensible nails it.
Some day I’m going to fly to Australia and buy this man a drink.
Parents: the appropriate response for such instances is to softly chuckle and then sip your gin & tonic approvingly.
Samhey gets my vote for spokes-father of the year
But Dottie had a heart condition and she died [I got it from Gruber]
The new msnbc.com design concept aims to thread these elements together into one cohesive story by featuring interactive journalism in ways not previously possible.
—My pal and colleague Craig Saila on the story page redesign experiment we launched yesterday.
That’s a lot of pressure in 140 characters
—Pete Housley’s response to whether people are having sex on Twitter. Thankfully, there’s a Twitter pornstar movie in the works so that this vitally important question doesn’t go unanswered. I’ve never been more thankful for the block button.
100 days of Fair and Balanced
I have no immediate use for Hatchet but I adore how it handles OpenID
Yeah, a nerdy thing to love about a site, but hot damn does it work well
I tweeted this already but then I remembered the tumblr question bit and, well, no I won’t delete it, no YOU SUCK.
I came across Hanlon’s Razor somewhere today, a very succinct summation of one of my favorite adages. I realized this is the only other time I’ve ever seen something described as a “razor” that wasn’t preceded by either “four blades and an aloe soothing pad” or “Occam’s”.
Thus my query: what makes one thing a ‘law’ (see: Murphy’s) and another thing a ‘razor’ (Hanlon’s)? Is there a semantic difference? Is there math?
Answered! Jason answered first and wins a coveted gold star. But The Lady’s answer shows just why it is she has my heart.
A few months after a devastating defeat at Fredericksburg, before Gettysburg would be won, before Richmond would fall, before the fate of the Union would be at all certain, President Abraham Lincoln signed into law an act creating the National Academy of Sciences – in the midst of civil war.
Lincoln refused to accept that our nation’s sole purpose was mere survival. He created this academy, founded the land grant colleges, and began the work of the transcontinental railroad, believing that we must add – and I quote – “the fuel of interest to the fire of genius in the discovery… of new and useful things.”
This is America’s story. Even in the hardest times, against the toughest odds, we’ve never given in to pessimism; we’ve never surrendered our fates to chance; we have endured; we have worked hard; we sought out new frontiers.
—President Obama, in remarks to the National Academy of Sciences where he announced, among other things, a renewed dedication to science and a commitment of 3% of the nation’s GDP to research and development. [via Ben Fry]
In a sense, we seem to be returning to the days of the party press, where news outlets reflected viewpoints of specific wings of political thought.
—David Carr, lamenting that cable news seems to be killing objectivity. I’d argue that cable news has never been terribly objective or, for that matter, all that good.