See the face?! Ooh, see the cute little baby face, and the other face on top of it?!

Why babies like electrical outlets.
See the face?! Ooh, see the cute little baby face, and the other face on top of it?!

Why babies like electrical outlets.
pneu·mo·co·coa ('nū.mə'koʊ.koʊ): A condition wherein the presence of the patient in a room vacuums all the chocolate out of it.
For years now, I’ve been a great fan of TinyURL.com. That web site allows you to create a short representation of a longer URL, for use in email.
One of the problems with those URLs, though, and with URLs in general, is that they’re misleadingly short. A particular web page may have a lot of significance, but if it doesn’t take up much of your message, there’s just no way for the recipient to see this at a glance.
WideURL.com fixes this. It creates an URL with more visual impact.
For example, here’s the WideURL for this post: http://wideurl.com/aitch-tee-tee-pea-colon-double-slash-oh-ess-tee-double-ee-ell-ee-dot-see-oh-em-slash-aye-are-see-aitch-eye-vee-ee-ess-slash-two-double-zero-six-slash-zero-four-slash-doubleyou-eye-dee-ee-you-are-ell. read more »
Even my friends who aren’t into functional programming find something curously relaxing about this. (And the companion site here.)
I bought foldr.com a year ago when I thought I might do something like Flickr for other types of information. I didn’t realize until last week what I was sitting on. :-)
Update: The use of the infinity symbol sparked a lively discussion on LtU.
Jim Grandy wrote:
From: jgrandy
Subject: stupid Google game
Date: January 7, 2006 6:17:58 PM EST
Google for "unfortunately, yournamehere":
Lots of fun hits for "unfortunately, jim":
read more »
- unfortunately Jim’s orange dry suit made him look like a carrot
- Unfortunately Jim is no longer with us as he died of a brain tumor in 1993.
- Unfortunately, Jim did not respond. He disbelieved that it was an angel.
- Unfortunately, Jim is only one person with a limited amount of time available to
“Aargh!” But how do you spell it?
(Click here to skip straight to the visualization.)
In the late nineties, I tried using internet search as a spelling corrector. (I think I was using AltaVista at the time. It was the latest and greatest search engine, supplanting —- was it Lycos?)
At the time, for the words I tried, there were about two orders of magnitude between a misspelling and the correct word. A spelling variant, such as “color” and “colour”, were typically less than one order of magnitude. read more »
If everyone in America makes an extra-large Thanksgiving dinner so that they can feed guests the next day, isn’t this a pyramid scheme?

Miles told me about the computers at his elementary school:
They’re running anti-virus software, but they’ve installed a virus! It’s called Novell. It makes the computer boot slowly, it does a lot of stuff while it’s booting, and then you can’t log on.