Yeah.. Having a long-haired cat is really paying off.
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tcr!
· Mar 24, 2014 at 6:06 pm
What would it look like to travel through a wormhole? Maybe a little bit like this new photo series from Randy Scott Slavin. “Alternate Perspectives Two” challenges the very definition of panorama, turning simple landscapes into 360-degree spheres of beauty. You almost want to fall right into the photos, just to see where in the universe you’d emerge.
The effect makes a little more sense once you learn more about Slavin’s inspiration. “My first major art influence was M.C. Escher,” the photographer told US. “My work as a commercial and music video director always gives me reason to look for new and interesting photographic techniques, which is how I originally got into 360 degree spherical panoramas. Spherical panoramas then led me to the world of stereographic projection (which is the mapping of a spherical image onto a flat plane) and the rest is history.”
tcr!
· Mar 22, 2014 at 8:28 am
The guy down the hall who got a promotion. The friend who always gets a table at the hottest restaurant in the city. The former roommate who takes the best vacations. Sure, you’re happy for them, but with people posting only the best parts of their lives on Facebook, it’s hard not to compare yourself to others.
Facebook and Twitter bring social comparison to a whole new level. “Social media is basically social comparison on steroids,” says Ramani Durvasula, a Los Angeles-based licensed clinical psychologist and psychology professor at California State University.
People showcase the most aspirational version of themselves on social media—new houses, expensive dinners, exotic vacations. It’s human nature to compare ourselves to others in order to learn how to behave and gauge societal expectations, but this becomes problematic when it feeds low self-esteem or causes anxiety, says Durvasula.
I think showcasing the best parts of our lives is what social media is for and seeing the highlights of other’s adventures often motivates me to go have my own.
In the same breath, I also know that it’s all too easy for me to get caught up in the bad parts. Posting something on Facebook and then getting a truckload of likes can be exhilarating — it’s instant confirmation that I’m “somebody.”
Being an “adult” I can take a step back but it’s the kids and how this shapes their lives that I worry about. M. is very impressionable when it comes to her peers.
tcr!
· Mar 21, 2014 at 5:05 pm
The downside to the nice weather is that all these twerps are getting in my way as I try to get home from work. However… “Groove is in the Heart” is on the radio so I’ll let ‘em slide this time.
tcr!
· Mar 21, 2014 at 2:27 pm
In related developer news, Oracle not supporting auto increment without sequences and triggers makes me want to pull somebody’s hair out.
tcr!
· Mar 21, 2014 at 1:45 pm
Why does date math in JavaScript need to be so difficult? Dates have only been around since LIKE FOREVER.
tcr!
· Mar 19, 2014 at 1:05 pm
If we go back to the understanding of why we declared independence from Great Britain, it stemmed from worries about excessive surveillance. James Otis in 1761 was denouncing general writs of assistance, general search warrants, as being totally inimical to freedom and independence …. It empowered every petty official to go examine people’s homes and businesses, to determine whether they had any smuggled goods. There was no probable cause.
… This opposition triggered, in John Adams’s words, the spark that led to the American revolution …. The spirit of the Fourth Amendment, the spirit of the country, was captured in William Pitt the Elder’s address to the British parliament in 1763, when he was opposing excise taxes, which also would be enforced by these general writs of assistance. And what he said rang throughout the colonies: The poorest man in his cottage may bid defiance to all the forces of the crown. He may be frail. The roof may shake. The winds may blow through it. Storms may enter. Rain may enter. But the King of England cannot enter. All his forces dare not cross the threshold of the ruined tenement.”
That, ladies and gentlemen, was the spirit of the Fourth Amendment. It was later described by Justice Louis Brandeis in Olmstead v. the United States as the right to be let alone—the most cherished right among civilized people. And he understood that our right to that liberty, it applies because we’re human beings and individuals. We don’t have to justify the right to be let alone.
If you haven’t seen the John Adams miniseries, I suggest you add it to your playlist.
tcr!
· Mar 19, 2014 at 11:02 am
Kimberly Bean with Robert Half Technology said what happens on social media can easily affect a career.
“Seventy-six percent of (human resource) professionals said it affects your career,” she said of one’s social media posts. “Not only during your career, but also while trying to get a job.”
Way to take a stand.
keamoose
· Mar 19, 2014 at 2:54 pm
'This article contains words about a topic. 75% of the article contains over half of the total words. Some of the words may contain letters. Experts suggest that the alphabet used in forming words in the English language may include as many as 26 letters. Use of words, which can contain letters, in a professional setting, often leads to words being used in a professional or "un-professional" manner.'
There. Just need to quote a few tweets, add a little "such-and-such newspaper reported that…" to cover the lack of fact-checking, and I've got my own article.
tcr!
· Mar 20, 2014 at 8:48 am
Be careful.. The robots might think you're encroaching on their territory.
tcr!
· Mar 18, 2014 at 2:48 pm
This is from one of Maggie’s school papers…
“Today’s the day. Ugh! Ding! 3:15 time to get up. Can’t see anything. Pitch black. 4 hours until a space shuttle goes into the sky. Near the launchpad, we put on our suits, get information and eat breakfast…”
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