-
Think helps you to selectively focus on one application at once. Not sure I’d use it all the time, but it works pretty well.
-
Like Pyro for Basecamp: a product-specific client as a browser.
-
“GreaseKit is successor of Creammonkey. This software adds Greasemonkey-like user scripting to Safari, Mailplane, Diet Pibb.app and all WebKit applications.” Looks good.
-
“Sup is a console-based email client for people with a lot of email. It supports tagging, very fast full-text search, automatic contact- list management, custom code insertion via a hook system, and more.” It’s a bit like Mutt-meets-Gmail.
-
Mailtrap helps you test ActionMailer: “Yesterday I mocked up the simplest, dumbest, Ruby SMTP server you can imagine. It speaks just enough SMTP to allow ActionMailer to make a connection and send it a message.”
-
Rex Sorgatz on his essay in Wired, where he suggests that “gaming has become the prevailing narrative of our time.”
-
“Why would I ever want to use Facebook as the UI for blogs? One simple reason: people as tags, tags as people.”
-
“A man with only a PictoChat session has to convince the authorities that a major international incident is unfolding. Spies, diplomats, terrorists, SAS-style rescues. And a DS in almost every shot.” Any way you look at it: genius!
-
“Dear Lazyweb, and also a certain you-know-who-you-are who should certainly know better by now, I am here to tell you about backups. It’s very simple.”
-
Vitruvius is most famous for asserting in his book De architectura that a structure must exhibit the three qualities of firmitas, utilitas, venustas – that is, it must be strong or durable, useful, and beautiful.