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Stop pretendingI’ve recently recognized a nasty coding habit I seem to be developing. It’s been developing for a few months now, and while I kick myself every time I discover myself doing it, the habit itself is remarkably hard to kick. I’ve been working on enhancing our internal Queen B... |
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PHOTO: Pizza pie charts from The Economist's "GetPizza pie charts from The Economist’s “Get a World View” campaign. Philly pizzerias distributed the boxes which display pie charts with statistics related to world food distribution, emphasizing those used in pizza production (e.g. global wheat consumption, world cheese impor... |
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QUOTE: A complex system that works is invariablyA complex system that works is invariably found to have evolved from a simple system that worked. A complex system designed from scratch never works and cannot be patched up to make it work. You have to start over, beginning with a working simple system. —John Gall ... |
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PHOTO: Who doesn't want to play with this? TotallyWho doesn’t want to play with this? Totally lickable UI. FourTrack. ... |
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Etymology: OneEtymology is fascinating to me. Most recently I was reading about the history of the word “one”. Have you ever wondered why it’s pronounced wun instead of rhyming with own? According to the sources I’ve read (including the awesome Online Etymology Dictionary), it originall... |
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Defensive design: Magnetic zones on the unibody MacBookTo access the RAM slots in a unibody MacBook you must first remove the back plate—a thin piece of aluminum attached by eight tiny screws. Half of the screws are hidden beneath the battery cover, and each one is surrounded by a recessed magnetic zone. The purpose of these zones is ostensibly... |
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