Gillette introduces Fusion the 5-bladed razor. I guarantee you that 5 blades won’t give you a better shave than say, three. And yet here we are.
[Update] Dan points out this article over at The Onion. I love those guys, thanks Dan. Here’s a taste…
“What part of this don’t you understand? If two blades is good, and three blades is better, obviously five blades would make us the best fucking razor that ever existed.
Recently, Google was kind enough to release Gmail Notifier for OS X. This seemed like a better alternative, long-term, than what I had been using (GmailStatus), since it’s, made by y’know, Google. The only thing lacking was Growl support. It turns out that Gmail Notifier can use Plugins, and sure ‘nuff one of the first plugins available is Gmail+Growl. Marvy!
John Gruber’s hilarious dialog between Apple’s Brushed Metal (B.M.) interface and its (his?) agent.
“Brushed Metal: Calculator? I’m out of iTunes and you tell me I’ve still got Calculator? When is the Special Event scheduled for the next version of Calculator? Oh, that’s right, there is none, because no one gives a shit about Calculator.”
The ending is very funny.
If you were to ask me if I consider Aqua Teen Hunger Force to be extremely dumb or brilliantly funny I would have to answer, “Yes.” Watch two episodes before dismissing it.
Pandora creates streaming radio stations based on what you like to listen to. It uses a nifty and not terribly overwrought Flash interface and, more importantly, bases its recommendations on the Music Genome Project, which I’d never heard of, naturally…
“Together our team of thirty musician-analysts have been listening to music, one song at a time, studying and collecting literally hundreds of musical details on every song. It takes 20-30 minutes per song to capture all of the little details that give each recording its magical sound – melody, harmony, instrumentation, rhythm, vocals, lyrics … and more – close to 400 attributes”
I don’t know if vinyl records sound better than CDs. I don’t have the ear nor the equipment to know the difference. What I do know is that I enjoy listening to vinyl. It has less to do with the sound quality as it does with the experience.
There’s something about flipping through a stack of records, choosing one, pulling out the dust jacket, placing the disk on the turntable and positioning the needle that makes me feel somehow more involved with the process of listening to music.
Another Java guy, David Geary is loving Rails and suspects that Rails has reached a tipping point. He explains this in the context of Malcom Gladwell’s book, The Tipping Point. This quote stand out…
“That’s stickiness, and Rails has it in spades. Zero-second turnaround time; drop-dead simple and intuitive database access; simple, built-in testing; killer Ajax support; scaffolding; convention over configuration: those are the things that stick when you see them.
Tim Bray does a little mining for Rubies. The whole piece is good, but it’s the last line that counts…
“Conclusion It sure looks like more than a fad to me.”
Jessica’s friend Aubrey walked by while my turntable was playing (Iron Maiden’s Killers, in case you wondered) and the following exchange helped me realize how old I am…
Aubrey: What’s that?
Me: What?
Aubrey: That thing, is that a record player?
Me: Yes, why?
Aubrey: I’ve never seen one before – it’s cool.
Sigh.
From lesscode.org, Ryan Tomayko almost accidentally chooses Ruby and Ruby on Rails…
“The long and short of it is that my evaluation turned into what looks to be a long term relationship. I’m committed to my responsibilities on the Python projects I have going right now and I have a ton of existing applications and utilities written in Python that aren’t going anywhere but Rails ganked 80% of my future code somehow.
Shaving just isn’t any fun. I tend to use cheap-ass razors and even cheaper shaving cream that smells like deodorant. I can only shave every other day at a mininum or my neck turns into hamburger. Although annoying, this has never been something I’ve considered doing anything about. Then, the always valuable Lifehack posts a link to A Simple Guide to Shaving. After following a link to classicshaving.com, you just know I’m going to end up with some fancy badger hair brush, double-edge safety razor and an assortment of creams and lotions.