Tweet: Made a sandwich by my...

Aug 24

Made a sandwich by my own free will.

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Tweet: RT @cmdrkeene: Protip: No one...

Aug 24

RT @cmdrkeene: Protip: No one else wants your dog in the office

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Tweet: @tylerschultz good guess: roof leaks,...

Aug 24

@tylerschultz good guess: roof leaks, bugs, and a list of things far, far longer than 140 chars.

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Tweet: I just earned the Created...

Aug 24

I just earned the Created 10 Spots Pin on @gowalla! http://t.co/UcfxQ3B

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Tweet: @ATDC In an email: "...looking...

Aug 24

@ATDC In an email: "...looking for an overseas partner into whose account we would transfer the sum of US$20,500,000.00" :-P

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Tweet: It's official: the house-renting experiment...

Aug 24

It's official: the house-renting experiment is a failure. We're moving again, but 1 or 2 miles rather than 5000.

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Tweet: Hi, my name is Joe,...

Aug 24

Hi, my name is Joe, and I'm addicted to Honey Bunches of Oats.

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Hummingbirds: Up close and personal

Aug 23

It takes a filming speed of 200-to-500 frames per second to capture the fast-moving world of the hummingbird at a level where we can really see what's going on. So what are hummingbirds up to? Videographers for a Nature documentary caught hummingbirds foraging for insects, bonking each other on the head in order to get access to a tasty flower, and living happily in high mountains where they hop along the ground to feed off plants growing close to the soil.

Filmmaker Ann Prum explains the nifty technical nitty gritty behind making a movie about hummingbirds and how new ways of observing the birds are teaching us new things about their lives.

Via mentalfloss



‐ Posted via Joseph's shared items in Google Reader

Hummingbirds: Up close and personal

Aug 23

It takes a filming speed of 200-to-500 frames per second to capture the fast-moving world of the hummingbird at a level where we can really see what's going on. So what are hummingbirds up to? Videographers for a Nature documentary caught hummingbirds foraging for insects, bonking each other on the head in order to get access to a tasty flower, and living happily in high mountains where they hop along the ground to feed off plants growing close to the soil.

Filmmaker Ann Prum explains the nifty technical nitty gritty behind making a movie about hummingbirds and how new ways of observing the birds are teaching us new things about their lives.

Via mentalfloss



‐ Posted via Joseph's shared items in Google Reader

Tweet: RT @pivotaltracker great blog post...

Aug 23

RT @pivotaltracker great blog post on trusting your tools and the importance of prioritizing: http://t.co/vVBOTxT (cc: @highgroove)

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