Ice Cream Guy Refuses To Share Ice Cream With Girlfriend
Insightful analysis of an unfolding drama during an NBA game. It’s time to pick a side, folks. Ice Cream Guy, or his girlfriend?
Insightful analysis of an unfolding drama during an NBA game. It’s time to pick a side, folks. Ice Cream Guy, or his girlfriend?
Sharing links through email has fallen off a cliff since the beginning of the year, new data from the BuzzFeed network shows.
Everyone hates automatic sharing, unless there’s a playlist involved.
Most app stores just give you apps. Facebook’s gives me a panic attack.
Six years ago Facebook was just a “social utility” — you couldn’t even share. Now, well, here we are.
I guess this is one way to get people to share your stories.
Because sharing isn’t always caring. Sometimes it’s straight-up selfish. (via pleated-jeans.com)
Nine months in, how are things going for Google’s social network? This picture pretty much says it all.
Part of the MoMA’s Talk To Me exhibit, British artist David McCandless’ The Hierarchy of Digital Distractions shows the order in which we’ll let technology bother us. Very accurate stuff. (via informationisbeautiful.net) Read More ›
Part of the MoMA’s Talk To Me exhibit, British artist David McCandless’ The Hierarchy of Digital Distractions shows the order in which we’ll let technology bother us. Very accurate stuff. (via informationisbeautiful.net) View Image ›
Teaching children how to get along will require much more than legislation, but a deeper rethinking of what schools should do for their students.
OExchange is something average end users may never hear, see or talk about. But to open web advocates and people involved in web standards, it’s an important step in connecting the services, content, people and actions around the Internet. Some big-name web companies (Google and Microsoft, for example) and some well-known web luminaries (Chris Messina and Chris Saad, for example) are involved in the push to make OExchange the standard link-sharing protocol across thousands and thousands of websites and communities.
The underground fruit economy is growing, based on two principles: one, it’s a shame to let fruit go to waste. And two, neighborhood fruit tastes best when it’s free.