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kottke.org posts about kottke.org

The Store You Made

Whenever I link to something at Amazon on kottke.org, there’s an affiliate code associated with the link. When I log into my account, I can access a listing of what people bought1. The interesting bit is that everything someone buys after clicking through to Amazon counts and is listed, even items I didn’t link to directly. These purchased-but-unlinked-to items form a sort of store created by kottke.org readers of their own accord.

Let’s call it The Store You Made. In the first installment of what may become a semi-regular feature, I’m highlighting some of the more interesting items sold in The Store You Made this week. You might be interested in what your fellow readers are buying.

Mini Weapons of Mass Destruction: Build Implements of Spitball Warfare

Pattern Recognition by William Gibson.

Bill Simmons’ The Book of Basketball is getting difficult to find, except at Amazon.

DJ Hero with turntable. I really want to get this. Is it any good? Or should I just get a set of real turntables?

All seven volumes of Grant Morrison’s The Invisibles. Here’s volume one.

VHS isn’t dead yet…someone bought a copy of From Star Wars to Jedi - Making of a Saga on videotape. Dad?

Uncharted 2: Among Thieves for PS3. My brother-in-law worked on this game. It is getting great reviews.

The Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs: How to Be Insanely Great in Front of Any Audience.

Alfred Hitchcock - The Masterpiece Collection is a DVD box set of fourteen of Hitchcock’s films. And ooh, North By Northwest on Blu-ray.

The Chris Farley Show: A Biography in Three Acts. Someone wrote a biography of Chris Farley?

Three people bought Apple’s new Magic Mouse.

Two 1 TB Seagate external hard drives were purchased for just over $100 each. Memory is so cheap these days; there’s no excuse not to get yourself a backup drive.

A 61-key electronic keyboard.

A 4-port Tardis USB hub. Awesome. Oh and:

When you connect or disconnect a device, the blue light on top flashes and the dematerialization vworp, vworp sound starts sawing away at your lugholes.

Yes!

Note: kottke.org recieves a small percentage of the purchase price for each item purchased through the Amazon links above. If you’re not into that, you may search for the item on Amazon directly or find it elsewhere using Google.

[1] Amazon does not reveal which customers purchased what items to their associates…just that a purchase was made. So I have absolutely no idea who bought that diamond engagement ring last year (congratulations!) or that 3-pack of underwear last week (congratulations!). ↩


Most read and liked posts for the week

Here’s what everyone has been most interested in on kottke.org this week:

The best flag in the world (#1 by a wide margin)
From sketch to photo instantly (this is insanely awesome)
Bullets are slow
The Rape Tunnel: FAKE
The most beautiful suicide
Beyonce’s Single Ladies covered by Pomplamoose
Cool cats
Carl Sagan Auto-Tune (feat. Stephen Hawking)
Parkour on a bicycle
From the desk of Mr. Jagger
Inventing the past
Minna Kottke
Dogfighting vs. football in moral calculus
The no control cafe
Drinking like Mad Men
George Saunders plays house(less)
Airlines nickel and diming themselves to death
Are you moving to San Francisco?
Wooden skyscraper
Huge Pepsi Throwback news
Flat-earthers
Rare hour-long Alfred Hitchcock interview
Popes, they don’t make ‘em like they used to
The most famous unkindness
Pizza pi

Again, the data is from Google Analytics and only includes URLs that were directly accessed…no search or referral traffic. Compare those to the most liked posts in the kottke.org RSS feed from roughly the same period of time, data courtesy of Google Reader:

The best flag in the world (174 likes)
From sketch to photo instantly (this is insanely awesome) (150 likes)
The no control cafe (98 likes)
Beyonce’s Single Ladies covered by Pomplamoose (84 likes)
Carl Sagan Auto-Tune (feat. Stephen Hawking) (81 likes)
Bullets are slow (71 likes)
Michael Pollan’s food rules (43 likes)
From the desk of Mr. Jagger (38 likes)
Pizza pi (37 likes)
Vivian Maier, recently discovered street photographer (37 likes)
The most famous unkindness (35 likes)
Airlines nickel and diming themselves to death (30 likes)
The vomitorium myth (29 likes)
Totally not burying the lede (29 likes)
Drinking like Mad Men (25 likes)
Thirty dumb inventions (25 likes)
Rare hour-long Alfred Hitchcock interview (24 likes)
Complaining about the inevitable (23 likes)
Glaciers from space (23 likes)
Cool cats (22 likes)

This only includes posts from the past week so the older stuff isn’t represented. Interesting differences. The stuff with images or videos tends to do better with likes on Google Reader than just text. If Google Reader had an API, you could use that and the Analytics API to make a pretty decent “here’s what’s popular on the site” sidebar thingie a la the NY Times and most other publications.


Ainsley, etc.

A quick but big-time thanks to Ainsley Drew for helping me out here for the past couple of weeks. Again, you can find Ainsley at Jerk Ethic personally and Ministry of Imagery professionally.

Me? I’m still operating at half speed due to the new little one. But hopefully things won’t be too sporadic around here for too much longer.


kottke.org visitor trends and statistics

Daring Fireball, Talking Points Memo, Technologizer, and Macworld recently posted some information about what operating systems and browsers their readers are using. Here’s the report for kottke.org.

OS statistics

OSNow6 mo1 yr1.5 yr2 yr2.5 yrAll-time
Windows54.1%56.5%63.4%63.3%65.6%70.1%62.5%
Mac40.2%38.2%31.7%32.2%29.9%27.2%32.9%
Linux2.5%2.9%3.2%3.4%4.2%2.4%3.1%
iPhone2.3%1.6%1.2%0.6%--0.9%

The general trends are obvious here. Mac usage among kottke.org readers has risen β€” over the past year in particular β€” while Windows usage has fallen by the same amount. Forty percent of all kottke.org readers now use a Mac.

The adoption rate of Snow Leopard (OS X 10.6) by kottke.org readers is less than that of Daring Fireball readers. Of Mac users who visit kottke.org, 47.4% are on 10.5, 34.4% are on 10.6, 8.1% on 10.4, 4.0% on 10.4 (PPC) and 3.7% on 10.5 (PPC). Among Windows visitors, 61.9% are still using XP compared to 32.6% on Vista.

Browser statistics

BrowserNow6 mo1 yr1.5 yr2 yr2.5 yrAll-time
Firefox44.6%46.1%50.4%48.9%47.0%50.1%47.9%
Safari27.9%25.4%17.3%17.7%15.9%13.7%19.1%
IE18.5%21.3%25.9%28.7%31.1%32.2%27.0%
Chrome5.6%3.7%2.8%---1.8%

The numbers for Firefox and IE are falling while Safari and Chrome usage are surging. The Safari nummbers are surprising to me…Safari is not a new browser but its usage by kottke.org readers has increased by more than 60% in the past year. I predict Chrome will surge in the next 12 months to overtake IE.

Two miscellaneous things

1. Google is ruling the search space more than ever. 93.2% of the incoming search traffic to kottke.org comes from Google. That’s up from 91.2% a year ago and 83.7% two years ago (!!). Bing is second with 3.4% (MSN and Live combined for 5% two years ago) and Yahoo is a very sad third at 1.5% (they were at 6.9% two years ago).

2. Twitter now accounts for 2.9% of all traffic to kottke.org while Facebook is 0.9%. That’s understandable considering I invest a lot of time on Twitter and almost none on Facebook. For reference, StumbleUpon is at 6.5% and incoming Google search traffic is 25.5%.


Yo, Ainsley’s back

As you may have already noticed, Ainsley Drew is back and will be helping me out here for the next couple of weeks on a part time editorial basis as my wife and I deal with our new houseguest. (I’ll be posting stuff as well…just at odd hours.) Welcome, Ainsley!


Minna Kottke

Hello everyone. I’d like you to meet Ollie’s little sister, Minna Kottke.

Minna's first day

Big yawn! She was born at home (on purpose!) early this morning; mother and baby are resting comfortably. I am weakened by an unrelated sickness but proud and happy. Ollie can’t stop talking about her. “Minna! Minna!” He’s going to be a great big brother.

So, things are going to be a little slow around here for a bit, especially the rest of this week. Starting next Monday, I’ll be joined by a part-time guest editor for a couple weeks. But more on that later. Now: sleep.


kottke.org on Twitter

The new official Twitter account for kottke.org is now @kottke. If you want kottke.org updates to appear in your Twitter stream, just follow:

http://twitter.com/kottke

The old account, @kottkedotorg, will continue to post updates for a few more days and then will go silent. HUGE 72 pt. thanks to John Resig (@jeresig), who scooped up @kottke some time ago to protect it from a spammer takeover and generously handed the keys over to me this morning. So many people have wrongly referenced @kottke in the past few months that it’s a relief to have it.

Two other things.

1. I have also been posting little extra links to Twitter β€” like this and this β€” stuff that doesn’t really fit on the site for whatever reason. I’ll eventually pull those links back into the flow here, but the only way to get them for now is to follow @kottke.

2. You may have noticed that at the end of each kottke.org post, there is now a “Post to Twitter” link. I have long resisted adding Digg This or Tumblr That or Stumble What or Jam This In Your Facebook links to posts, but increasingly people are sharing links and information on Twitter instead of on their blogs so I’m going where the action is. At least as an experiment. So, if you like something, click the link and tell your followers about it.


This week’s most read posts

Who knows if this will become a regular thing or not (it seems like a perfect candidate for a special weekly RSS feed or email), but here are the top 25 most read posts on kottke.org in the past week.

Vol Libre, an amazing CG film from 1980
The Apple upgrade problem
Parkour on a bicycle
The Hot Waitress Index
13 things that science doesn’t have the answers for
Museum of Animal Perspectives
Did Texas execute an innocent man?
The sling shot man
The most beautiful suicide
What does “being an adult” mean?
Some are for you, some are for me, but more are for me
Early color photography
Ecological apple
Independent infographic
The speed of information travel, 1798 - 2009
Quentin Tarantino’s top 20 movies
Guitar Hero 5 playlist
Single Serving Sites
RunPee
Auto-Tune the News (feat. T-Pain)
New Super Mario Bros. Wii
100 years of special effects
Sergei Mikhailovich Prokudin-Gorskii
1984, a fine year for movies
1965 Ikea catalog

The data is from Google Analytics and includes posts with lots of search and referral traffic…filtering those out would probably be a more accurate indication of what regular readers found interesting.


Dust and shifting

I’ve made some little tweaks to kottke.org here and there. One little tweak was to the RSS feed…I’ve shored it up and moved to an Atom format. Aside from 40 unread duplicate entries flooding your feed reader (sorry, it’s a one time thing1), you shouldn’t notice a thing. Bug reports and feedback welcome.

[1] Oddly, Google Reader hiccuped this morning and spit out 40 unread duplicate entries for the kottke.org feed…before I even modified anything (i.e. not my fault). So a double apology to GR users. I hope this is the end of our Long National Unread Duplicate Entries Nightmare. ↩


Feet up on cushion

Things will be significantly slower than usual around here this week…I am on vacation. Aside from some sporadic updates, I’ll see you next week.


Google’s search dominance

After I heard Microsoft’s announcement of yet-another-interation of their search engine (named Bing), I went to look at the stats for kottke.org for the past month to see how many visitors each search engine sent to the site. I couldn’t believe how dominant Google was.

Google | 262,946 | 93.8%
MS Live | 4,307 | 1.5%
Yahoo | 4,036 | 1.4%
MSN | 2,796 | 1.0%

It’s a small sample and doesn’t match up with Comscore’s numbers (Google: 64.2%, Yahoo: 20.4%, MS: 8.2%), but wow. As a comparison, the numbers for a year ago for kottke.org had Google at 91%, Yahoo at 4.9%, and Live at 0.7%.


The Deck Ad Network Readership Survey

Usually when you belong to some kind of ad network, you’re eventually asked to pester your readers with some sort of survey that attempts to gauge what sorts of eyeballs are reading your site. The Deck has never asked me to do this and still hasn’t…but I ran across The Deck Ad Network Readership Survey on SimpleBits this morning and if I were you, I completely wouldn’t mind taking it. The survey questions include:

7. If you were to become romantically involved with a typeface, which one would it be?
15. Where are you, emotionally speaking?
24. What would you say is your greatest weakness?


An update on updates

Unless you’re an especially careful reader of kottke.org, you probably don’t realize that I update old posts on a regular basis with material (mostly) contributed by readers. Here are several recent examples:

30 Rock
Julie and Julia trailer
Bendy map of Manhattan
Media packaging mashups
Oceans

But they’re a pain in the ass to read…and you have to scroll down the front page looking for the boldface “Update:”. Updates also don’t show up in RSS properly. In order to make these valuable contributions more visible (and to encourage myself to update posts more often), I’ll be making a daily post to the site that collects these updates in one place. Expect to see them on the site and in the feed later in the week.


Spark interview

There’s a short interview with me about what I do on kottke.org on this week’s Spark radio show on CBC. There’s also an uncut version of the interview that runs about 20 minutes which includes many delightful false starts and ahs and ums. What can I say, I’ve got a face for radio and a voice for print.


Recession special: kottke.org RSS sponsorships

For the next round of kottke.org RSS weekly sponsorships, I’ve lowered the price by 25%, making an excellent value even better.

Sponsorships are exclusive text ads that run in kottke.org’s RSS feed and are an ideal way for you to tell the site’s 110,000+ RSS readers a little something about you, your company, or your company’s products. Read on for details or get in touch to schedule a sponsorship today.


Guest editor: Ainsley Drew

I’ll be putting in overtime on some other projects for the next week, so I’ve arranged for Ms. Ainsley Drew to edit the site while I’m away. You may know Ainsley from her entertaining Twitter account β€” she’s AinsleyofAttack, or her Jerk Ethic blog. She is also a partner in a two-person copywriting company called Ministry of Imagery and the assistant editor at The Rumpus, where she’s interviewed Mary Roach, Andrew W.K., and some schlub named Jason Kottke and failed to interview Susannah Breslin.

Welcome, Ainsley!


Last 100 posts, part 10

This is the tenth installment in an occasional series of updates to recent kottke.org posts. The previous installment was posted last April. I should do this more often.

Several scholars contacted me to say that Dr John Casson’s “discovery” of six new works by William Shakespeare is not really all that notable, the consensus being that Casson is a hack with little credibility among serious researchers. Wikipedia has a good page on the Shakespeare Apocrypha, “a group of plays that have sometimes been attributed to William Shakespeare, but whose attribution is questionable for various reasons”. (thx, jeffrey & nick)

Obviously the walking tour map of some of NYC’s independent bookstores was incomplete. A more comprehensive list is available here. (thx, margaret)

More on Detroit and visuals of the recession. The Big Picture collects some Scenes from the Recession (this cluster of unused newspaper racks is the best metaphor for the current state of the print media industry I’ve seen). Vice has a slideshow of photos of abandoned schools in Detroit. Sweet Juniper’s thoughts on and photographs of Detroit (also at Flickr). Can Detroit wean itself away from the car as a method of urban transportation? Daily oil paintings of Detroit. (thx, kathy, linda, jennifer, cathy & er, jennifer)

And Iceland, seemingly the Detroit of the North Atlantic these days. In addition to Michael Lewis’ piece in Vanity Fair, there’s Ian Parker’s for the New Yorker (full piece, reg. req.), and Joshua Hammer in Portfolio. And from August 2007, this piece by Max Keiser on Al Jazeera highlights the kind of trade that got Iceland into trouble. (thx, oliver, jennifer & david)

Getting into character discussed how people in different professions (athletics, business, acting) become different people when they are at work. Here are three more examples: Kobe Bryant, Brian Dawkins (as a player, he models himself after the X-men’s Wolverine and speaks in tongues before games…the first five minutes of the video are amazing), and Jonathan Papelbon. See also: The Inner Game of Golf. (thx chris, noah, david, and unlikely words)

kottke.org has a mobile site at m.kottke.org.

HD Tetris. It took 42 minutes for someone to complete four lines and they received only 160 points. And every once in awhile, the game throws out a piece that’s 8 units tall. (thx, jared)

Regarding 50 reasons why Jedi totally sucks, at the bottom of this copy is also 10 reasons why Jedi doesn’t totally suck. (thx, marcus)

Growing Sentences with David Foster Wallace was a popular post this week.

Lots of good ideas in the things needing a redesign thread.

Hidden in a late paragraph of the WSJ piece on Reagan’s possible attempt to convert Gorbachev to Christianity is that Jimmy Carter did the same thing with South Korea’s leader Park Chung Hee. (thx, martin)

Nine years earlier, Reagan’s predecessor Jimmy Carter had stunned his aides when he asked the South Korean dictator Park Chung Hee about his religious beliefs and then told Park, “I would like you to know about Christ.”

If you’re interested in the goings-on in the global economy, kottke.org’s 2008recession tag is shaping up quite nicely.

Stuff I’m still thinking a lot about: amortality, how originality and innovation might be a dead end, the ecosystem metaphor, saving my childish things for my child, if I need to develop a character, nightclub hand signals, and The Pale King.


kottke.org for the iPhone

I built a stripped down version of kottke.org for mobile devices. It’s located at:

http://m.kottke.org

It’s optimized for the iPhone but will work with Blackberrys, etc. as well. Here’s the icon on the iPhone home screen and what it looks like in MobileSafari:

kottke.org mobile

The mobile site is just the front page for now (the last 30 posts or so). Should make reading the site fast and convenient when you’re out and about.


Seeking RSS sponsors

Week-long exclusive sponsorships of kottke.org’s RSS feed are available through the end of March.

In sponsoring the feed, you get the chance to promote your company or product in a short post that will appear in the feed. A sponsor “thank you” note will also be posted to the front page of the site. Your message will reach an estimated 110,000+ RSS subscribers.

If you’re interested, check out the sponsorship page for details and get in touch. Thanks!


Live updating

I added a new feature to kottke.org over the weekend: live updating on the home page. If you leave kottke.org open in your browser (with JavaScript on) and I post a new link, the page will display a message urging you to refresh to view some new posts. The page title changes too, so if you have it up in a tab, you can tell at a glance if something’s new. Right now the page checks for new posts every ten minutes, but that could change depending on server load, etc. Thanks to Twitter Search and Tumblr for the inspiration.


Quick design tweaks

As promised, the redesign of this site started last week is still in motion. I’ve just made a bunch of small tweaks that should make the site more readable for some readers.

- Fonts. In response to a number of font issues (many reports of Whitney acting up, the larger type looking like absolute crap on Windows), I’ve changed how the stylesheets work. Sadly, that means no more lovely Whitney. :( Mac users will see Myriad Pro Regular backed up by Helvetica and Arial while PC users will see Arial (at a different font-size). In each case, the type is slightly smaller than it was previously. I’m frustrated that these changes need to be made…the state of typography on the web is still horrible.

- Blue zoom border. Oh, it’s staying, but it’ll work a bit differently. The blue sides will still appear on the screen at all times but the top and bottom bars will scroll with the content. I liked the omnipresent border, but the new scheme will fix the problems with hidden anchor links and hidden in-page search results and allow for more of the screen to be used for reading/scanning. It breaks on short pages (see: the 404 page) and still doesn’t work quite right on the iPhone, but those are problems for another day.

- Icons. Updated the favicon and the icon on the iPhone to match the new look/feel.

- Misc. Rounded off the corners on the red title box. Increased the space between the sidebar and the main content column.

Thanks to everyone who offered their suggestions and critiques of the new design, especially those who took the time to send in screenshots of the problems they were having. Feedback is always appreciated.


Regarding the new design

The design of kottke.org has been mostly the same since 2000…a garish yellow/green bar across the top and small black text on a white background everywhere else. (See the progression of designs since 1998.) People absolutely hated that color when I first introduced it1, but it stuck around β€” mostly out of laziness β€” and that pukey yellow became the most visible brand element of the site.

Two days ago, I refreshed the design of the site and, as you may have noticed, no more yellow/green. The other big changes are: bigger text set in a new font, a blue “zoom” border around the page, and the addition of titles to the short posts.

(A brief nuts and bolts interlude… For most of you, the site will look like this. If you’ve got Myriad Pro on your machine β€” it comes free with Acrobat Reader and Adobe CS β€” it’ll look like this…this is the “intended” look. And if you’re a fancypants designer with Whitney installed, you’ll get this rarified view, which I did mostly for me. On IE6, the site will be legible and usable but somewhat unstyled. If you’re not seeing something that looks like one of the above screenshots β€” if the text is in all caps, for instance β€” please drop me a line with a link to a screenshot and your browser information. Thanks!)

The blue “zoom” border is the biggest visual change, and it’s an homage to what is still my favorite kottke.org design, the yellow zoom from 1999. I like that kottke.org is one of the few weblogs out there that can reach back almost ten years for a past design element; the site has history. In a way, that border is saying “kottke.org has been around for ten years and it’s gonna be around for twenty more”. At least that’s how I think about it.

I’ve already gotten lots of feedback from readers, mostly via Twitter and email. There were a few technical issues that I’ve hopefully ironed out β€” e.g. it should work better on the iPhone now β€” and a couple which might take a bit longer, like the border messing with the page-at-a-time scrolling method. Some people like the changes, but mostly people don’t like the new design, really dislike the blue, and generally want the old site back. This is exactly the reaction I expected, and it’s heartening to learn that the old design struck such a chord with people. All I’m asking is that you give it a little time.

My suspicion is that as you get used to it, the new text size won’t seem so weird and that blue border will likely disappear into the background of your attention, just as that hideous yellow/green did. A month from now, your conscious mind won’t even see the blue β€” chalk it up to something akin to banner blindness…brand blindness maybe? β€” but your subconscious will register it and you’ll just know where you are, safe and sound right here at good ol’ kottke.org. And if that doesn’t work, we’ll tweak and move some things around. Design is a process, not a result, and we’ll get it to a good place eventually, even if it takes twenty years.

[1] I wish I had access to my email from back then…everyone hated it and wanted the old design back. Before landing on the yellow/green color, I tried the golden yellow from the previous design, a blue very much like the blue in the current border, and then red. I think each color was live on the site for a few days and my intention was to just keep switching it around. But then I got bored and just left the yellow/green. Gold star to anyone who remembers that short phase of the site. ↩


The Best Links 2008

This is the fifth annual selection of my favorite things I’ve linked to on kottke.org. This year’s list includes games, photography, top-notch journalism, time-related material, architecture, design, and even politics, about 100 links in all. The format of the list is a bit different this year. Sprinkled amongst the usual high quality links are collections of links which fit into accidental categories that sprang up while going over the material, including my picks for the sites/blogs of the year. Enjoy.

Passage is a game that takes 5-minutes to play which possesses a poignancy that you wouldn’t expect from such a simple game.

Beautiful slow-motion skateboarding with explosions. Directed by Spike Jonze. See also this video of slow-mo skateboarding tricks filmed with an ultra high resolution camera.

An extensive history of visual communication, from cave paintings on up to the present-day computer.

The NY Times published a stacked graph of movie box office receipts from 1986 to Feb 2008. More about stacked graphs.

Sites/blogs of the year: The growing cache of vintage photos from museums and other public institutions on The Commons project on Flickr barely edges out excellently edited superb photography of The Big Picture for the site of the year.

On the final episode of St. Elsewhere, it was revealed that an autistic child named Tommy Westphall had dreamt the whole show. Since St. Elsewhere had a number of connections to other shows, it turns out that a surprising number of other popular TV programs all took place in Tommy’s mind too.

Philip Gourevitch and Errol Morris article on Sabrina Harmon, one of the camera-wielding US soldiers at Abu Ghraib.

From The Onion: Pornography-Desensitized Populace Demands New Orifice To Look At and Researchers Discover Massive Asshole In Blogosphere.

Big Dog is a large robotic dog that can walk in snow and cannot be knocked down, even when kicked.

A 2104 messageboard about time travel reveals that you can’t just go and kill Hitler whenever you’d like.

Maps of the Apollo 11 moon walks superimposed on a soccer pitch and a baseball diamond. They sure didn’t walk very far.

This peeping shrubbery photo taken at a wedding by Mindy Meyers still makes me laugh.

David Attenborough narrates while two leopard slugs mate while hanging off of a tree branch.

An obituary recounting the almost unbelievable life of Charles Fawcett, actor, filmmaker, and adventurer.

Sites/blogs of the year, cont.: Backed by two huge and clueless media conglomerates, Hulu was never supposed to succeed but NBC and Fox managed to create a simple and compelling site for watching TV and movies online.

Matthew Dent’s awesome designs for the new UK coinage.

Sentence Drawings and other literary visualizations from Stefanie Posavec.

2008 video for Something Good by The Utah Saints. Don’t know why, but this makes me smile.

Elevators and stories about elevators, including an account of Nicholas White, who was trapped in an elevator for 41 hours. Includes security camera footage of White’s ordeal.

The interesting and extensively documented story behind that famous photo of Elvis Presley with Richard Nixon.

A map of all the streets in the lower 48 United States by Ben Fry.

An account of when Dateline NBC’s To Catch a Predator segment goes wrong and someone dies.

The financial mess of 2008: Early in the year before the full extent of the chaos was known, n+1 had a lengthy interview with a hedge fund manager and followed up with him a couple months later. This American Life aired two radio programs that did an excellent job of explaining what caused the crisis: The Giant Pool of Money and Another Frightening Show about the Economy. After much of the smoke had cleared, former bond salesman and current bestselling author Michael Lewis sums up what happened in The End of Wall Street’s Boom.

City of Shadows, timelapse photos of people in St. Petersburg taken by Alexey Titarenko. Particularly this one.

Stunning photos of the electrified plume of the ChaitΓ©n volcano in Chile. Some bigger photos at The Big Picture.

John Resig ported the Processing visual programming language to JavaScript.

Photos of a wedding and then an earthquake in Sichuan, China.

A retrospective of the NYC restaurant Florent by Frank Bruni for the NY Times doubles as a history of Manhattan’s ebbs and flows over the past 20 years.

US political election logos from 1960 to 2008.

Sites/blogs of the year, cont.: It technically launched in 2007, but this was the year that many people realized that Amazon’s MP3 store finally made it easier and more convenient to search for and buy DRM-free music than getting it for free and illegally elsewhere (Bittorrent, etc.). And I haven’t bought a single mp3 on iTunes since Amazon’s MP3 store opened.

Unbeknownst to the family who hired him to renovate their house, architect Eric Clough hid a puzzle in their apartment that remained unsolved for more than a year.

Atul Gawande writes about itching in the New Yorker. Really, really interesting.

Urban prankster Remi Gaillard kicks soccer balls into all sorts of unlikely goals, such as garbage cans, drive-thru windows, and police station entrances. The AC/DC soundtrack makes it perfect.

The covers for the books in Volume III of Penguin’s Great Ideas series, most notably the brilliant cover for The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction.

A classic text on the economics of POW camps in Europe during WWII.

A 1985 BBC documentary about the painter Francis Bacon. Entertaining and enlightening even if you don’t care about painting.

Sports: Three 2008 sports happenings stick out for me. 1. The epic Federer/Nadal final at Wimbledon. It was almost 5 hours long (not including the rain delay) and I was on the edge of my seat the whole time. 2. Usain Bolt winning both the 100m and 200m in world record time at the Beijing Olympics. Bolt celebrating so early before crossing the finish in the 100m was impressive but the margin of victory in the 200m was an astounding athletic feat. 3. The Michael Phelps / Milorad Cavic photo finish in the men’s 100m butterfly final provoked much discussion and some of the only excitement on the way to Phelps winning a record eight golds at the Beijing games.

Christopher Hitchens writes about being waterboarded. Here’s the video of his experience.

This Lego version of Stephen Hawking is uncanny.

A selection of thirty stunning satellite photos of the Earth that appear abstract.

David Carr recounts his time as a single parent and crackhead in Minneapolis.

Dorothy Gambrell documents a trip around the world, part of which happened aboard a cargo ship. Read from the bottom and keep clicking “Next Entries”.

Things which aren’t so much links as products:The Apple keyboard is the best keyboard ever made. RjDj is an iPhone app that samples sounds from your immediate environment and plays them back to you with music.

On June 19th, the Mars Phoenix Lander twittered that it had discovered evidence of ice on Mars.

Sites/blogs of the year, cont.: If Charlie Parker Was a Gunslinger, There’d Be a Whole Lot of Dead Copycats showcases vintage photography in categories such as The Cool Hall of Fame, The Heretofore Unmentioned, and When Legends Gather.

FrΓ©dΓ©ric Bourdin is a French con man who made his way to the United States posing as an abducted teenager even though he was in his mid-20s at the time.

Brain researcher Jill Boyte Taylor tells the audience at TED about the time she had a massive stroke and how the experience informed her later research.

Bill Sizemore, a long-time observer of Pat Robertson’s activities, pens a lengthy profile of the fundamentalist Christian for VQR.

Lenny “Nails” Dykstra, former Met and Philly, is faring well in the business world and remains highly entertaining.

Fantastic Contraption, an incredibly addictive Flash game where you build machines out of seemingly simple parts to solve increasingly difficult puzzles.

Switched at Birth tells the tale of two girls who were swapped for one another at the hospital and didn’t find out more than 40 years later even though one of the mothers knew the whole time. See also The Ghost of Bobby Dunbar.

Sites/blogs of the year, cont.: Roger Ebert’s blog demonstrates that he might be a better cultural commentator than film critic. Either way, he’s never been better.

Some well-meaning kids show off their unintentionally hilarious science project posters.

Dyna Moe’s excellent illustrated moments from Mad Men.

Merlin Mann wants to do Better.

Improv Everywhere used a Jumbotron, dozens of crazy fans, color programs, mascots, NBC sportscaster Jim Gray, and the Goodyear blimp to make a typical Little League game between the Lugnuts and Mudcats into The Best Game Ever.

Dan Hill explains extensively about the process for designing the web site for Monocle magazine.

Footage from a 1975 CBS News report about the final flight out of Da Nang near the end of the Vietnam War.

The literal version of A Ha’s Take On Me video.

R.I.P. David Foster Wallace: Wallace gave what I think is his final interview to the WSJ’s Christopher Farley about Wallace’s book about John McCain’s 2000 presidential campaign. After Wallace died, I collected a number of online remembrances. David Lipsky’s The Lost Years & Last Days of David Foster Wallace for Rolling Stone and McSweeney’s reprint of a 1987 profile of Wallace both capture who Wallace was and how much he gave of himself to his family, friends, and the world.

Test your visual geometric accuracy with the eyeballing game.

Michael Pollan’s letter to the next President of the United States: “we need to wean the American food system off its heavy 20th-century diet of fossil fuel and put it back on a diet of contemporary sunshine”.

Filip Dujardin stitches together parts of different photographs of buildings to make pictures of new and sometimes crazy & impossible buildings. This one of those “I wish I’d thought of that” projects.

A segment from the This American Life TV show about a Chicago restaurant called The Wieners Circle which turns into a sexually and racially charged free-for-all on weekend nights, much to the delight of the patrons, the heavily tipped workers, and the owners.

Sites/blogs of the year, cont.: The Art of the Title blog obsesses over the increasingly elaborate and celebrated craft of movie title sequences.

Steward Brand posted the entirety of How Buildings Learn online. The 1997 BBC documentary was based on Brand’s excellent book of the same name.

Charles Mann on the Earth’s soil for National Geographic Magazine.

Google’s archive of millions of photographs from Life magazine.

Barack Obama (and the other guy): Since meeting him more than four years ago, photojournalist Callie Shell has taken a number of great photos of Obama. Just after the election, Newsweek posted an epic seven-part series about the Obama, McCain, and Clinton campaigns resulting from a year of behind-the-scenes reporting. David Remnick weighed in on Obama and race in America. And a March 2008 interview with rapper DMX reveals that he has no idea who Barack Obama is. “The n***a’s name is Barack. Barack? N***a named Barack Obama. What the fuck, man?! Is he serious? That ain’t his fuckin’ name.”

An exploration of the link between the 2008 Presidential election results and the rich loamy soils left by the shallow seas of the late Cretaceous period some 85 million years ago.

The (Mostly) True Story of Helvetica and the New York City Subway.

Video showing how to build an igloo, a must-see for those interested in architecture.

William Langewiesche tells the story of the midair collision in Brazil that resulted in the deaths of 154 people on Gol Flight 1907 in September 2006.

Sites/blogs of the year, cont.: I couldn’t leave this one off. Christoph Niemann doesn’t post to his NY Times blog very often, but each entry is a gem. I love his kids’ obsession with the NYC subway.

Vanity Fair constructs several menus for George W. Bush’s final days in the White House. Includes such dishes as Gored hearts of Palm Beach, with hanging chad; Deep-fried Halliburton, in Saddam Hoisin Sauce; and New Orleans flounder.

If you’re still information deprived after all that, you can check out the lists from 2007, 2006, 2005, and 2004.


Favorite posts of 2008

As an appetizer before my annual best links of the year post (coming Monday, I hope), I put together a list of kottke.org posts from 2008 that I liked the most and that may be worth a look if you missed them the first time around.

In January, I liveblogged the Mythbusters episode about the airplane on the conveyor belt. I still get email telling me that the plane won’t take off.

Time merge media is a collection of video and photographic works which display multiple time periods at once.

A collection of single serving sites, single-page sites like Barack Obama Is My New Bicycle, Khaaan!, and Is Lost A Repeat?

A liveblog of the Oscars written without actually watching them.

A post about the end of The Wire.

In March, kottke.org turned 10 years old and I collected a bunch of the previous designs together.

One of my all-time favorite threads on kottke.org: saying words wrong on purpose.

My favorite graph which doubles as a picture of my son.

Stanley Kubrick, Pablo Ferro, and Arthur Lipsett.

A photo of Ollie attempting to walk in Turbine Hall in the Tate Modern.

A collection of early movie reviews, including one by Maxim Gorky from 1896.

Survival tips for the Middle Ages, another great thread about how a contemporary person might fend for themselves in 1000 AD.

Hypnerotomachia Poliphili is a book printed in 1499 but which looks quite contemporary.

The most beautiful suicide, a photo of Evelyn Hale taken by Robert Wiles a few minutes after she jumped from the Empire State Building

A pair of posts about the Metropolitan Life Tower: the tower’s past and future and an unusual death that occurred in the building shortly after it opened.

A collection of election maps from the 2008 US Presidential election.

Timeline twins.

And finally, the opening space scene in 2001: A Space Odyssey with chickens from The Muppet Show clucking the Blue Danube waltz.


Admin notes

For the next two weeks or so, kottke.org will relax into a slower holiday publishing schedule, so slow that at times it may seem stationary. I’ll be full force again at the beginning of January. Thanks for reading this year, I really appreciate it.

Also, I’ve opened up some more slots for RSS sponsorships for the first two months of the year. Details and pricing are available here; get in touch if you’re interested. Thanks!


My embarrassing web past

Late last week Jason Santa Maria posted the first web site that he’d ever made and asked others to do the same. The earliest web page of mine still online is a parody of Suck that I did in March 1996 called Suck for Dummies. (It’s now called Suck for Dimwits because I received a C&D from the X for Dummies people threatening to sue.) In June of 96, I made this over-the-top home page, Jason’s Awesome WWW Home Page. (Warning, tag usage!! Sign my guestbook! Top 5% of All Web Sites!!) I posted a bunch of old kottke.org designs back in March but missed that the first few months of posts are still live in their original design.

My earlier sites are lost, I think. (I have a few Zip and Jaz disks that might have some older stuff on them but I don’t have the capability to read them anymore.) Before 0sil8, there were three or four efforts that I must have deleted from my hard drive at some point, including some embarrassing efforts involving fractals. The very first thing I did in HTML was a personal home page around Nov/Dec 1994 that lived on a 3.5” floppy. I coded it on the computer in my dorm room (using an early version of HTML Assistant and Aldus PhotoStyler) and then put it on a floppy to use on the computer in the physics lab, the only computer I had access to on campus that had internet access. The page was little more than a gussied up list of links that I liked to visit online, but I loved building, rebuilding, and redesigning it over and over, even though I was the only one who ever saw it. The handcrafted/DIY nature of building that page hooked me on web design. I would give almost anything to see that little page again.


Rough seas ahead

This page on kottke.org is the #1 result when you Google “obama wins”. Servers may get a little melty around here in the next couple of days. That’s ok…this is what Twitter’s servers are going to look like tomorrow night:

Fail bomb

Imagine this video, but with the fail whale instead of a real whale and a nuclear device instead of dynamite.


kottke.org on Facebook

kottke.org now has a Facebook page. I don’t know what this is good for exactly, but there it is. Become a fan! (kottke.org also has a Twitter account if you’d like to read the site that way.)


Seeking kottke.org RSS feed sponsors

Hear ye! I’m trying something new on kottke.org. Sponsorships of kottke.org’s RSS feed are now available on a weekly basis. Sponsorships are exclusive and begin next week. If you’re interested, check out the sponsorship page for details and get in touch.

P.S. The feed sponsorship idea was borrowed from John Gruber’s Daring Fireball. I’d urge you to head on over to check out his sponsorship opportunities, but the DF feed is fully booked through the end of the year. (!!)

P.S.2. Advertising on the site proper continues to be handled expertly by The Deck. If you’d like to advertise on the site, read up on your options there.


2001, a search odyssey

Google has released a search engine that only searches their index from 2001. kottke.org is in there. (via waxy)