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Marco is doing a great job with The Magazine.
Marco is doing a great job with The Magazine.
Two of my favorite things in the world when I was a kid were video games and the illustrator Edward Gorey. Gorey’s surrealistic and gothic illustrations and books combined humor and dark subjects. If you’re not familiar with his published works, but you’re of a certain age, you may remember the opening animation he made for PBS’s “Mystery” series.
One of Gorey’s most famous works is the Gashlycrumb Tinies, an alphabet book that tells the story of how 26 children met their untimely end, in couplets. It’s ghoulish and hilarious. (“A is for Amy, who fell down the stairs. B is for Basil, assaulted by bears.”)
It’s also the inspiration for a series of illustrations created by Brentalfloss, Dan Roth and Andrew Dobson called “The Game Over Tinies.” It’s equally hilarious, but instead of children, it’s characters from video games ranging from Super Mario Bros. to Street Fighter. The entire set is available for pre-order as a poster, too.
(Special thanks to my favorite person in the world, my wife Bonnie, for finding this.)
This is the first in a series of articles Bryan Chaffin is doing looking at Apple’s board members and what they bring to the company.
Om Malik:
Apple is enamored with China — and rightfully so. However, in not paying attention to India, it has allowed world’s second-largest mobile market to become a mostly Android phenomenon, leaving upper end of the market to Samsung. Wrong strategy, if you ask me.
The difference between the first exploit and this one is how it can make the iPhone screen go black, allowing an attacker to plug the device into a computer via USB and access the user’s data without having their PIN or passcode credentials.
I don’t know how they find this stuff, but Apple has to get this fixed.
Although App.net has had only paid account tiers thus far, we initially conceived of App.net as a freemium service. It took some time to get to this point, but we are now ready to make this vision a reality.
I admit that the charm of App.net has passed me by; I’ve never subscribed, because I just didn’t see the point. But I know that price was holding some people back. So if you don’t mind living with the limitations (“free” users can only follow 40 users and have limits on storage and upload rates), now may be the time. Only one catch: You have to get an invite from a paid App.net user.
Speaking of Joy of Tech, this is priceless.
“This business has not been in a state of transition like it is right now since the video game crash of the ’80s,” Bleszinski said. “I really think we’re in a massive state of turmoil.”
Cliff Bleszinski is formerly the design director for Epic Games. He’s been influential in the design and development of the Unreal franchise as well as Gears of War.
CaptureNotes 2 for iPad is the full featured notetaking and audio recording application that provides users with the ability to write, type, Flag audio with markers and annotate PDFs during classes or meetings. Launching soon, CaptureAudio delivers more than a simple voice recording app, bringing the unique Flag marking feature of CaptureNotes to the iPhone. Notebooks are easily shared among team members. Likewise, recorded audio sessions can conveniently be shared between the two Apps, supporting both iPhone and iPad users!
CaptureNotes 2 & CaptureAudio are brought to you by G8R Software.
Another funny comic from The Joy of Tech.
Twitter says its users like the ad experience. Ben Brooks doesn’t agree.
I’ve been using Shazam since it first came out and love it. The company also said a new version for the iPad would be available in the coming weeks with an improved layout.
Harry Marks takes on John Siracusa and his recent comments about watching Netflix’s “House of Cards.”
Horace Dediu takes an interesting look at Apple’s retail openings as it relates to the company’s sales and growth.
LG now claims complete ownership of the webOS source code, its documentation and webOS websites. It has obtained HP licenses, as well as the patents that Palm transferred to its owner when it was acquired in 2010.
LG will use the OS for its smart TVs.
Good ad to release during the Oscars.
The Guardian:
The sky-high price of printer ink – measure for measure more expensive than vintage champagne – has been well documented. Less well-known is the fact that the amount of ink in the average cartridge has shrunk dramatically.A decade ago, the best-selling HP cartridge had 42ml of ink and sold for about £20. Today, the standard printer cartridges made by HP may contain as little as 5ml of ink but sell for about £13.
Cut open a HP inkjet cartridge and you’ll find what is going on.
This is a European report but there’s no reason to believe it’s not the same for cartridges sold here in North America.
ADmented Reality.
“Thank God – no backwards compatibility. Now I can exchange all of my old games at Gamestop for a total of $25 in-store credit.”
This pretty much sums it up for me. I think it’s gonna be a long time before I bother to replace the game consoles I’m currently using.
The designer of the Daleks from the BBC’s Doctor Who has died aged 84 after a short illness, his daughter has said.
Former BBC designer Ray Cusick died of heart failure in his sleep on Thursday, Claire Heawood added.
It appears that Amazon’s warehouses are the global book distribution chain’s equivalent of modern day sweatshops. Earlier this week Amazon fired its German security firm after a documentary film crew from ARD tied it to a far right wing group. The film crew revealed that seasonal workers hired by an Amazon subcontractor in Germany, many of whom were previously unemployed, were driven around Germany in buses, housed in poor conditions and kept under constant surveillance by the aforementioned security guards.
I’m guessing the mainstream media won’t see fit to make a big deal out of this like they did with Apple and Foxconn.
The Wirecutter:
Google just announced its first premium Chromebook, the Chromebook Pixel. It’s gorgeous. Unfortunately, it’s so expensive that I can’t think of a single person who should get one.If you have the money to spend on the Pixel and you need the kind of hardware it’s packing, you have so many other better options.
This may be the future of “cloud based” laptops but in the here and now, this is an extravagant machine.
Esquire:
What happened to the America that once was? What happened to the America where kids could spend their snow-days at the local sledding hill, without cell phones in their snow-pants, laughing at their friends’ face-plants, throwing snowballs, and making the same yellow-snow jokes that their grandfathers made when they too were a bunch of rapscallions running through the slush?That America exists no more in Paxton, Illinois. Because the Paxton Park District’s insurance provider ruled that its sledding hill is too risky. “The insurance would have skyrocketed if someone was hurt,” a parks board member told The Champaign News-Gazette.
One of the commenters said, “The park board ought to be able to erect a sign at the hill that says “Sled at your own risk.” How about NOT suing people because your kid got hurt horsing around, as kids will do? When I was a kid in Canada, I broke my leg playing on a local hill. There was never any discussion of a lawsuit.
I’d like to thank Bare Bones Software for sponsoring The Loop’s RSS feed this week with BBEdit.
BBEdit 10.5 from Bare Bones Software — The leading professional HTML and text editor for the Mac just keeps getting better. Now with Retina support and many other improvements — download the demo and see for yourself!
I’ve been using the app since 1994.
Good tip. I wonder how often spammers change the number they’re calling from though.
Great interview by Des Traynor.
Eddie Van Halen is one of the best there has ever been. This clip is from 1982.
The world’s largest software company said the security intrusion was “similar” to recent ones reported by Apple Inc (NSQ:AAPL) and Facebook Inc (FB.O).
The new BootCamp hits Seattle on March 6 and hits other cities throughout the year.