Blog: Dilbert.com Blog: Les Miserables – Movie Review
My Faith: A Confession – Justin Erik Halldór Smith
“So I get sin, but I don’t get what it means to say that Christ died for my sins. I just don’t get it.”
21 Emotions For Which There Are No English Words
Blog: Dan Ariely: Facing the truth is a terrible way to be happy.
Blog: Ben Casnocha: Book Notes: Religion for Atheists
Comment From Kathy Sierra: The Why-Who Cares-So What rule
“When I taught programming at Sun, we called it the Why-Who Cares-So What? rule (a variation on the Five Why’s). You imagine the most skeptical coder challenging you after you describe a feature, approach, API , etc. but they don’t just stop with the first “why”. You answer it, and then they ask, “Who Cares?”, and when you answer THAT, they ask, “so what?”. When you have finished imagining this chain, you usually have a much more powerful and motivating reason (or, you realize there IS no compelling reason or use case because you could not come up with answers for all three challenges). We now suggest that technical authors constantly run through the who-who cares-so what when writing, and it works quite powerfully for those writing marketing copy as well. Way too often, people stop at the first why (or sooner), but that thing they finally say in exasperation with the final “so?” yeah, THAT’s where you get to the meaty core of the why, and usually it’s more motivating and powerful.”
Blog: Science: The Oldest Rock In The World Tells Us A Story
The Technium: Pain of the New
48fps film makes makeup seem clearly fake instead of tricking us like it does at 24 fps.
Improving Twitter search with real-time human computation
Sudden events pose several challenges:
1. The queries have probably never before been seen 2. these spikes are so short-lived, there’s only a small window of opportunity to learn what they mean.