Twitter’s Admin Interface

[Screenshots from a hack of their admin section][link]. It makes me feel a lot better about some of the admin UIs I’ve shipped.

[link]: http://www.korben.info/twitter-vu-de-linterieur-interface-admin-piratee.html “Twitter vu de l’intérieur – Interface admin piratée !”

The Cover Project

[Hi-res scans of cover and box art for video games][link]. They carry scans of newer games, which to me is a bit unnecessary, but they have a wealth of covers for NES, SNES, 3DO, Intellivision, etc.

[link]: http://www.thecoverproject.net/ “The Cover Project > Home”

LostLevels Dumps Superman Prototype for NES

[Which means you can download it][link]. This Superman is a prototype which was [eventually renamed Sunman][sunman], with the logo changed. [Sunman was never released, but it is fully playable][sunplay]. It is not at all the same [Superman game released by KEMCO for the NES][nes]. Gameplay is very similar to another Sunsoft superhero game [Batman: Return of the Joker][bats].

[link]: http://forums.lostlevels.org/viewtopic.php?t=2015 “Lost Levels :: View topic – 24 new dumps, including 2 unreleased games”
[nes]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superman_(Atari_game)#Superman_.28Nintendo_Entertainment_System.29 “Superman for the NES”
[sunman]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunman_(video_game) “Sunman”
[sunplay]: http://www.lostlevels.org/200311/200311-sunman.shtml “Sunman on LostLevels”
[bats]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dynamite_Batman “Batman: Return of the Joker”

DreamHost’s Josh Jones on the History of WebRing, and the Fall of GeoCities

[WebRing was started by a co-founder of DreamHost][link]. Then sold to GeoCities, which was then sold to Yahoo, and, well, read the article. Josh thinks it’s a sort of micrososm of the web:

>It went from a tiny ad-free community service, to hyper-growth, to showing ads, to being acquired for an INSANE price, to being forsaken, to doing anything to survive, to “social networking”, to “web 2.0″, to today!

They’re also offering free hosting for 1000 GeoCities users, should any be found.

[link]: http://blog.dreamhost.com/2009/04/24/theyre-internet-history/ “DreamHost Blog » They’re Internet History”

Kickstarter

[Kickstarter is an attempt at modern, crowd-sourced fundraising][link]. Post a project or idea with a set timeframe, and people can pledge cash. If your fundraising goal gets reached, you get the money. If it doesn’t, then everyone gets a refund. [Check out the introduction video][vid].

I could really see using this in the future.

[link]: http://www.kickstarter.com/ “Kickstarter » Projects”
[vid]: http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/ksrstaff/welcome-to-kickstarter “Welcome to Kickstarter”

Last.fm Introduces Radio Subscriptions

[Users outside of the US, UK, and Germany will now have to pay 3 euros per month to keep streaming music][link] from the popular site. The [user backlash][back] has already begun.

As more and more VC-funded startups have to start showing balance sheets, there’s going to be a lot fewer freebies around.

[link]: http://blog.last.fm/2009/04/22/radio-subscriptions “Last.fm – the Blog · Radio Subscriptions”
[back]: http://blog.last.fm/2009/04/22/radio-subscriptions#comments “Last.fm user backlash”

How to Brew Beer in a Coffee Maker, Using Only Materials Commonly Found on a Modestly Sized Oceanographic Research Vessel

[Now that’s what I call science][link]. Ingredients include: Raisin Bran, Vegemite, Alfalfa, and baker’s or brewer’s yeast.

[link]: http://southernfriedscience.com/2009/04/26/how-to-brew-beer-in-a-coffee-maker-using-only-materials-commonly-found-on-a-modestly-sized-oceanographic-research-vessel/ “How to brew beer in a coffee maker, using only materials commonly found on a modestly sized oceanographic research vessel. « Southern Fried Science”

How moot “Won” the Time 100 Poll

[Paul Lamere’s coverage of the Time 100 hack continues with this in-depth examination of the how-they-did-it variety][link]. It includes a lot of Time-bashing, as evidenced by the following parenthetical:

>(And if you have any doubt about Time’s incompetence, take a close look at the Poll. Notice that Oprah Winfrey and Ratan Tata have the exact same number of votes. That’s because they both shared the same ID in the poll. A vote for either one was a vote for the other. Same goes for Michael Bloomberg and Gustavo Dudamel. If you vote for one, you vote for the other.)

Previously: [4chan’s precision hack of the Time 100][prev].

[link]: http://musicmachinery.com/2009/04/27/moot-wins-time-inc-loses/ “moot wins, Time Inc. loses « Music Machinery”
[prev]: http://extrafuture.com/2009/04/13/4chans-precision-hack-of-the-time-100/ “4chan’s precision hack of the Time 100”

How the Other Half Writes: In Defense of Twitter

[This is the best, serious, essay smacking down the Twitter-hate going on among the terrified old guard media][link]. It’s note-taking technology:

>Imagine a world where everyone uses typewriters: they write novels, manifestos, historical surveys, and so on, but they do it all using typewriters.
>
>Now the ball-point pen comes along. People use it to write down grocery lists and street addresses and recipes and love notes. What is this awful new technology? the literary users of typewriters say. Ball-point pens are the death of humanism.

[link]: http://bldgblog.blogspot.com/2009/04/how-other-half-writes-in-defense-of.html “BLDGBLOG: How the Other Half Writes: In Defense of Twitter”

iPhone Anthology Fiction

[Warren Ellis’s][warren] recent postings about [Papernet][papernet] and my always-on interest in Print-On-Demand gave me this idea, which I’m jotting down here in case I never get to do it.

[warren]: http://warrenellis.com “Warren Ellis”
[papernet]: http://www.warrenellis.com/?p=6670 “Warren Ellis: Papernet”

So you’ve got your iPhone, and they sell tons of old books and comics and even new eBooks. Why not magazines? I’m not talking about Better Homes and Gardens, really, but new, modern, magazine-like content.

I think there’s definitely room for, as example, a monthly sci-fi ‘zine posted on the iTunes store or available as a PDF download for the same, reasonable, price or just post the plain text for free. You could commission new work and pull from the Public Domain or Creative Commons licensed works to fill the thing out, perhaps make each issue themed, with some art for each story. I’m talking *Weird Tales* or the like. Short stories to read on the ride home. Sell it for a buck or two.

You could even give the thing away, and just sell art prints or print-on-demand copies or shirts or, every 6 months, a nice perfect-bound edition of the previous 6 issues.

All you’d really need is a cover artist and enough time to lash the thing together each month.

Yes, it seems to me like you could make some very interesting iPhone Anthology Fiction…

PBS Video on demand

[This is fantastic][link]. PBS, in honor of it’s 40th anniversary, is putting up tons of content onto it’s site, viewable on-demand. Including: American Masters, Frontline, and the biggest draw to me right now: Nova.

The problem: Like most video sites, it’s region-locked. Can’t be viewed outside the US. Shame.

[link]: http://www.pbs.org/video “PBS Video”

by way of [the blue][blue]

[blue]: http://www.metafilter.com/81063/PBS-Video-on-demand “PBS Video on demand | MetaFilter”

Maureen Dowd’s Absurd Interview With Twitter’s Founders

[Biz gives the best answers to her dismissive/hostile questions][link]. A sample:

>ME: If you were out with a girl and she started twittering about it in the middle, would that be a deal-breaker or a turn-on?
>
>BIZ (dryly): In the middle of what?

They really turned it around on her, and I love it.

[link]: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/22/opinion/22dowd.html?ref=opinion “Op-Ed Columnist – To Tweet or Not to Tweet – NYTimes.com”

Last Year’s Model

[Their tagline is “Saving the planet through sheer laziness,”][link] but I think “and not having tons of expendable cash” counts, too.

via, as it so often is, [Andy Baio][andy]

[link]: http://lastyearsmodel.org/ “Get Great Gadgets. And Keep Them. – Last Year’s Model”
[andy]: http://waxy.org “Waxy”

Amazon.com Now Selling WiiWare Game Codes

[Following the Xbox Live Arcade codes, this is no surprise, but nice to see][link]. Also of interest to me: Amazon does not allow their associates to get commissions on these cards. Profit margin must be close to zero, if not into the red.

[link]: http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B00213JM9O/ “Amazon.com: World of Goo [Online Game Code]: Wii: Video Games”

Tal Leming on Embedded Web Fonts

A rare take on embedded web fonts from someone who actually makes fonts and sells them for a living. He suggests a DRM system using a “root table” that says what fonts can be used on what domains, but then says this:

>There is nothing that can be done about this. All we can do is present a person with a fork in the road. The person can license the font to give the designer the respect he/she deserves for creating something that the person likes and wants to use. Or, they can ignore the Golden Rule and hack the font.

If that’s the case, and he knows it’s the case, then why not forget the DRM entirely? Why not trust people to do the right thing from the start, and call them out on it when they don’t?

[link]: http://talleming.com/2009/04/21/web-fonts/ “Tal Leming » Web Fonts”