I recently discovered a neat little "trick" on my iPad (and iPhone): I've stumbled upon a way to listen to music streaming from Internet radio stations while I do "other things," like check my email, take photos, or write text messages.
Category: Check it out
Take this sucker with huge grains of salt.
A summary from Web Worker Daily's 10 Golden Rules of Social Media:
The Wall Street Journal ran a story on 30 May, titled <span class="title">On the Street and On Facebook: The Homeless Stay Wired</span>.
A new website, Microsyntax.org is opening its doors. It aims at an attempt to offer some canonization to emergent linguistic conventions that grow organically on Twitter.
CNN has posted an article about a new zombie movie, called Colin, that is causing a stir at this year's Cannes festival.
The Symfony project has recently launched the Symfony Components sub-project and website. Its goal is to produce a collection of standalone libraries for PHP.
I'm so excited about this, I couldn't wait to post about it before diving in. I present proudly to you Data.gov.
One of the amazing things about Twitter's simplicity is how well it lends itself to utilization in a variety of ways that weren't explicitly intended when it was initially designed.
A quick heads-up for those of you that find yourself using whiteboards a lot. Whiteboard Capture is a $1.99 iPhone app designed to help you make those whiteboard photos you take significantly more readable (and, therefore, more useful as reference).
John Gruber of Daring Fireball yesterday wrote about the incredible variety of UI solutions to be found in the various Twitter client apps.
A bunch of Silicon Valley execs are in Iraq, apparently "explore new opportunities to support Iraqi government and non-government stakeholders in Iraq’s emerging new media industry.
Another painfully insightful piece by John Gruber.
The developers of the iPhone app Convertbot offer a glimpse into their design process.
That's what the iPhone Dev-Team are promising. Let's see.
Wallet is a neat little utility that — like Keychain.app, which comes bundled with Mac OS X — lets you store all sorts of tidbits like notes, account numbers, PINs, etc. in a safely-encrypted little repository (or, wallet).