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Custom T-Shirts - T-Shirt Printing - Design Your T-Shirt For Less! Ledjam Radio - La Radio Eclectique // The Eclectic French Radio stixta.com – Rebrand your MacBook AlloCiné : Cinéma, Séries TV, Stars, Vidéos, DVD et VOD Reporter app, for self-discovery through data Nicholas Felton, Drew Breunig, and Friends of the Web released Reporter for iPhone. The app—$3.99 on the app store—prompts you with quizzes, such as who you're with or what you're doing, sparsely throughout the day to help you collect data about yourself and surroundings. You can also create your own survey questions to collect data on what interests you and use your phone's existing capabilities to record location, sound levels, weather, and photo counts automatically. Those who are familiar with Felton's annual reports will recognize the design of the app, as it has a familiar look and feel, and it works almost how you'd expect an interactive version of his printed reports would. The charts are straightforward. But back to the survey collection process. When collection is all automatic, it's easy to forget about and oftentimes we lose context, whereas when collection is all manual, you have to remember to log things and collection grows to be a chore.

PPC Management & SEO | Integrated Online Marketing Firm | Wpromote babbel by Ed M Wood As I settled into the barber’s chair and once again attempted to allay my long-held fear of a man with a sharp implement in his hand and questionable politics, I readied my mind. I had been coming to this barber ever since my follicles first demanded it, but had never satisfactorily fielded his cutting remarks, which, just like his politics, had not become blunted with time. I knew it would be particularly difficult on this occasion. I was visiting family in England having just moved from Spain to Germany. In his eyes this was like swapping a paradise life of perennial sunshine and booze for teutonic dreariness and the ignominious fate of being surrounded by the old enemy following their efficiently inevitable defeats of the England football team. So young man, what are you doing with yourself these days? Teaching is a virtuous occupation, I thought. A terrible entry point. The meaning of cool has changed since my day, if clunky is the new cool. He didn’t use the word clunky.

Reporter: Nicholas Felton Releases Self-Logging iPhone App Nicholas Felton, the person behind the infographic-style setting Feltron annual reports (see 2012, 2011, 2010, 2009, 2008, 2007, 2006, 2005) has released a self-logging app for the iPhone, called Reporter [reporter-app.com]. The app presents the user with a few randomly timed surveys each day that aim to capture what today's sensors still cannot, such as emotions, 'real' friends, food habits, and much more. The slick interface design with smart auto-fill functionality should allow the survey to be completed within 10 seconds or less. See also mem:o - iPad App Provides Infographic Interface for the Quantified Self. Via FastCoDesign.

Element Creative Mobile and Website Development Historical Software Collection : Free Software : Download & Streaming E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (also referred to simply as E.T.) is a 1982 adventure video game developed and published by Atari, Inc. for the Atari 2600 video game console. It is based on the film of the same name, and was designed by Howard Scott Warshaw. The objective of the game is to guide the eponymous character through various screens to collect three pieces of an interplanetary telephone that will allow him to contact his home planet. Warshaw intended the game to be an innovative adaptation... favorite ( 1 reviews ) Topics: Atari 2600, E.T., Howard Scott Warshaw, Atari Akalabeth: World of Doom /əˈkæləbɛθ/ is a role-playing video game that had a limited release in 1979 and was then published by California Pacific Computer Company for the Apple II in 1980. Richard Garriott designed the game as a hobbyist project, which is now recognized as one of the earliest known examples of a role-playing video game and as a predecessor of the Ultima series of games that started Garriott's career.

Rove App A recent trip to Beijing proved the perfect opportunity to test the newly released Rove application for iPhone. Rove runs in the background—without draining too much battery—and functions as a private but shareable log of your travel activity. Rove doesn't check you in, but figures out where you are and associates venues, mode of transportation and even the photos you take with each location. It's an automatic back-up of each day's memories. According to Edouard Tabet, founder of Rove app's developer ZeTrip, Inc., "After mining millions of trips from Facebook, I realized that most people share very little about their trips, a few photos out of context and sometime a few check-ins but not nearly enough to remember and relive a great trip." With that as the impetus, Tabet continues that "the two things that make Rove unique are the level of automation and the level of privacy—both 100%." But Rove ultimately aims to do more than keep track of travel. Screenshots from Rove app

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