Displaying post 1 to 50 of 99
"A detective does his job in the only possible way. He follows the requirements of the law to the letter -- or close enough so as not to jeopardize his case. Just as carefully, he ignores that law's spirit and intent. He becomes a salesman, a huckster as thieving and silver-tongued as any man who ever moved used cars or aluminum siding -- more so, in fact, when you consider that he's
selling long prison terms to customers who have no genuine need for the product."
posted to MetaFilter by dhammond
at 12:06 AM on November 29, 2007
(96 comments)
The black backs by and on which the fortunes of the New South were built:
On March 30, 1908, Green Cottenham was arrested by the sheriff of Shelby County, Alabama, and charged with “vagrancy.”... Cottenham’s offense was blackness.... [After a brief trial] Cottenham... was sold. Under a standing arrangement between the county and a vast subsidiary of the industrial titan of the North — U.S. Steel Corporation — the sheriff turned the young man over to the company for the duration of his sentence.... he was chained inside a long wooden barrack at night and required to spend nearly every waking hour digging and loading coal. His required daily “task” was to remove eight tons of coal from the mine. Cottenham was subject to the whip for failure to dig the requisite amount, at risk of physical torture for disobedience, and vulnerable to the sexual predations of other miners.... Forty-five years after President Abraham Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation freeing American slaves, Green Cottenham and more than a thousand other black men toiled under the lash at Slope 12.
— from the Introduction to
Slavery by Another Name: The Re-Enslavement of Black People in America from the Civil War to World War II. The
book's website includes
reviews of the book, an
excerpt of the Introduction, and an extensive photo gallery that includes
disturbing images of enslaved and tortured prisoners.
posted to MetaFilter by orthogonality
at 1:12 AM on June 21, 2008
(99 comments)
In Bed With Chris Needham (
1,
2,
3,
4,
5,
6,
7)
A BBC video-diary documentary from 1991 depicting the trails and tribulations of a teenage metal fan as he tries to knock his band, Manslaughter, into shape for its first gig, with many digressions into his philosophy of life along the way. Some NSFW swearing.
posted to MetaFilter by fearfulsymmetry
at 2:46 PM on June 8, 2008
(12 comments)
Want to know how government spending and taxation levels have gone up or down over the last 20 years, and how they compare with other countries? The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development has a handy set of tables (
Excel,
HTML-ized by Google): total spending, total revenues, fiscal surplus or deficit (
Norway's surplus is 17% of GDP). Part of the
statistical tables for the semi-annual
OECD Outlook.
posted to MetaFilter by russilwvong
at 12:18 PM on May 30, 2008
(6 comments)
Friday Flash Fun: Caravaneer is a game where you are a caravan leader in a post-apocalyptic world where towns and cities have formed around oases in the desert.
posted to MetaFilter by schyler523
at 12:41 PM on May 30, 2008
(10 comments)
Leave the planet to travel into the largest structures of the universe, then plunge into the tiniest. Forty two orders of magnitude in thirty six minutes....
Cosmic Voyage. (single link Google video
via)
posted to MetaFilter by Kronos_to_Earth
at 7:07 PM on May 30, 2008
(11 comments)
"...the aspiring speaker needs no knowledge of the truth about what is right or good... In courts of justice no attention is paid whatever to the truth about such topics; all that matters is plausibility..." A
Glossary of Rhetorical Terms with examples.
posted to MetaFilter by sluglicker
at 1:34 AM on May 31, 2008
(7 comments)
Mortified
is a group in various cities that allows people to "share their own adolescent journals, letters, poems, lyrics, home movies, stories and more." It's
embarrassing, to be sure, but it's frequently also
hilarious (NSFW). Recently they've set up
a page to share videos of live performances, and the latest is my favorite so far. "
500 Miles To Hollywood" features Elijah Wood, James Denton (Desperate Housewives), Busy Phillips (Freaks & Geeks), Kevin McDonald (Kids in the Hall) and Curtis Armstrong (Revenge of the Nerds) "helping Jason Smith fulfill his dream and bring a 2-decade-old screenplay to life."
posted to MetaFilter by ktoad
at 9:44 AM on April 10, 2008
(20 comments)
The intersect of data visualization and aural phenomena is a fascinating space, from simple chartings of the history of
sampling to mapping the entire
world of music (or even
just electronica). Pop songs become
sketches, iTunes libraries become
twisted geometric forms, and last.fm listening behaviors form coloured
orbs and
waves. The collaborative networks of
comtemporary rappers,
jazz musicians, and
classical composers are revealing of specific and meaningful community structures. Explore
the algorithmic music of Stephan Wolfram's computational universe,
listen to pi or
e or
the Mona Lisa or
the weather or the
temperature in New York City,
discover the shape of sound, or just, you know,
see music.
Use the
Echo Nest to visualize your own music (
example),
tag your music collection with colours, or just wade through the
plethora of
ways to map connections between
artists and
genres.
(several previously)
posted to MetaFilter by youarenothere
at 1:50 PM on April 9, 2008
(12 comments)
Free Speculative Fiction Online
is a database of free science fiction and fantasy stories online by published authors (no fan-fiction or stories by unpublished writers). Among the authors that FSFO links to are
Paul Di Filippo (14 stories),
James Tiptree, Jr. (4 stories),
Connie Willis (3 stories),
Eleanor Arnason (3 stories),
Bruce Sterling (5 stories),
Robert Heinlein (7 stories),
Ursula K. LeGuin (3 stories),
Jonathan Lethem (5 stories),
Michael Moorcock (6 stories),
Chine Miéville (2 stories),
Samuel R. Delany (3 stories),
Robert Sheckley (8 stories), MeFite
Charles Stross (33 stories) and hundreds of other authors. If you don't know where to start, there's a list of
recommended stories.
posted to MetaFilter by Kattullus
at 1:52 PM on April 5, 2008
(34 comments)
And seven years later, Super Smash Brothers Brawl has landed. I would love to smash some MeFites.
posted to MetaTalk by kbanas
at 7:32 AM on March 9, 2008
(93 comments)
The Synchronicity Project
Since 2005, Japanese art director Jun Tsuzuki has been running a project he calls Synchronicity, where he asks people all over the world to take a picture of what they are doing at a pre-determined moment in time. [
via]
posted to MetaFilter by dhruva
at 5:19 PM on February 21, 2008
(9 comments)
Protector.
~Flash Friday~ Protector takes the mechanics of
tower defense games, and adds an RPG element to it. Specialize, level up, and say goodbye to your free time.
previously
posted to MetaFilter by MythMaker
at 10:50 AM on February 8, 2008
(17 comments)
Robert B. Parker, Carl Hiaasen, Janet Evanovich, Tim Cockey, Patrick Quinlan, James Crumley, Elmore Leonard - NOW WHAT?
posted to Ask Metafilter by ollsen
at 2:24 AM on January 10, 2008
(55 comments)
Why is Justin Timberlake so hot?
posted to Ask Metafilter by k8t
at 7:10 PM on September 8, 2007
(83 comments)
Open Culture's "10 Signs of Intelligent Life at YouTube"
features "intellectually redeemable" channels from
UC Berkeley, @GoogleTalks, TheNobelPrize, TED Talks, FORA.tv, the European Graduate School, the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting, BBC Worldwide, National Geographic, PBS, UChannel, MIT, Vanderbilt, and
USC.
posted to MetaFilter by Soup
at 5:40 PM on December 27, 2007
(21 comments)
What are the most important excel skills to have, and what book should I get that has them all?
posted to Ask Metafilter by Autarky
at 8:36 AM on December 6, 2007
(14 comments)
In the world of conversation killers, talking about Excel to the average person ranks up there with the best. At the same time, there is always a chance that you wish you could have that conversation at work when it gets down to the wire. Even as a pro, you might need that brush up on
Array Functions,
calculation tricks,
VBA examples or some examples from one of the
well known authors on Excel. There is also no shortage of people who dedicate their working lives to this arcane program and are more than willing to assist others for free by posting solved issues on their websites. People like
David McRitchie,
OzGrid,
Rob Bovey,
Ron de Bruin,
John Walkenbach,
Dick Kusleika,
Joseph Rubin and
Chip Pearson.
Or if you just want to be a Debbie Downer at the next party, just take page from any of the following, memorize it. and recite it when faced with that nudge you don't want to talk to:
Excel Support,
Jon Peltier,
Colo's Junk Room,
Scriptorium,
Andrew's Excel Tips,
Andy Pope,
Anthony's VBA Page,
Rodney Powell,
Array Formulas,
Erlandsen Data Consulting,
Excel-it,
ExcelUser,
JKP's Excel Page,
John Lacher,
McGimpsey,
Bill Jelen,
Stephen Bullen,
Tushar Mehta,
VBusers.com,
The Excel Nexus,
The Excel Logic Page, and
Anthoney Does Excel. It’s a fast and easy way to ward off lounge lizards.
posted to MetaFilter by lampshade
at 2:13 PM on August 18, 2007
(43 comments)
Freaky Flicks is a p2p community with a radical mascot that collects arthouse and cult cinema.
Browse the selection on The Pirate Bay or look at their list of
Red Letter Directors.
The
FF Forum is pretty good for recommendations and links to non-p2p and legal online video.
posted to MetaFilter by sushiwiththejury
at 5:27 PM on December 4, 2007
(20 comments)
"You're really smart!"
Psychologist
Carol Dweck says that praising a child for being smart only teaches the kid to avoid any effort that might fail. "When we praise children for their intelligence, we tell them that this is the name of the game: Look smart, don't risk making mistakes." Malcolm Gladwell chimes in with
his thoughts on the importance of being a smart kid, "What a gifted child is, in many ways, is a gifted learner. And what a gifted adult is, is a gifted doer. And those are quite separate domains of achievement."
posted to MetaFilter by revgeorge
at 7:15 AM on February 13, 2007
(218 comments)
Ask 500 (or 100) people:
Random participants answer each other's polls on
prayer in school,
the bible,
philosophers,
iraq,
social habits,
love &
marriage,
materialism,
freedom of speech, or whatever topic of interest someone wants to open up for a very momentary spotlight, and reasonably
accurate data.
posted to MetaFilter by mdn
at 4:17 PM on November 25, 2007
(29 comments)
Nowadays, if you're of a mood to be all Web 2.0 about it, to-do lists have gone past
the paper and pen with web applications such as
Remember the Milk,
Hiveminder,
Toodledoo,
Todoist,
Ta-Da Lists,
do.Oh,
Nozbe,
Treedoolist,
Vitalist,
Web To Do,
SimpleGTD,
Sandy,
Tracks,
gootodo,
Zirrus,
OnMyList,
TaskToy,
Gubb,
Nutshell,
Joe's Goals,
Tedium,
MyTickerFile,
voo2do, and
30boxes — even
plain old text files have gotten spiffied up with
Unix shell scripts to generate graphs and
reports and projects.
posted to MetaFilter by WCityMike
at 12:17 PM on November 17, 2007
(25 comments)
Voodoo Funk
- 11 African funk mixes from a vinyl archaeologist in Guinea
posted to MetaFilter by algreer
at 1:01 PM on October 17, 2007
(23 comments)
Margaret Talbot's wonderful profile of David Simon, the creator of "The Wire."
Simon said, he and his colleagues had “ripped off the Greeks: Sophocles, Aeschylus, Euripides. Not funny boy—not Aristophanes. We’ve basically taken the idea of Greek tragedy and applied it to the modern city-state.” He went on, “What we were trying to do was take the notion of Greek tragedy, of fated and doomed people, and instead of these Olympian gods, indifferent, venal, selfish, hurling lightning bolts and hitting people in the ass for no reason—instead of those guys whipping it on Oedipus or Achilles, it’s the postmodern institutions . . . those are the indifferent gods.”
posted to MetaFilter by geoff.
at 10:50 AM on October 15, 2007
(37 comments)
Despite
ongoing legal issues,
Robert Sylvester Kelly continues to reign as an icon of commercial rap/r&b. His 'direct' approach to lyrics - that behind the
bizarre metaphors and often
hilariously tasteless statements that have been the key to his longevity - also shines through in some of his
biggest hits. Kelly's
piece de resistance,
Trapped In the Closet, which recently released 10 new 'chapters,' takes his penchant for crude storytelling to new heights. Featuring love-triangles, -pentagons, and -octagons, not to mention a well-endowed 'midget', the soap-like series is being credited with the creation of a new genre of music video. Not one to let the strange allure of his work speak for itself, Kelly describes TITC as "
my alien."
posted to MetaFilter by whahappen?!
at 11:29 PM on September 18, 2007
(16 comments)
Writer's Links.
Write better, or at the very least, more authentically, with this list of hundreds of resources for writers of all shades. For example, writing a jazz age screenplay? This guide to
1920's slang will be handy. Need help getting your procedural legal drama accurate? Try the
Jurisdictionary. Enjoy tormenting your readers? This list of
Tom Swifties will do the trick nicely.
posted to MetaFilter by jonson
at 8:47 PM on September 9, 2007
(14 comments)
'Filtering for Dollars: Let's ignore the questions about the veracity of the claims of the particular user here. Where is the line when it comes to soliciting money via Metafilter? [more inside]
posted to MetaTalk by daveadams
at 10:06 PM on February 28, 2005
(179 comments)
Why stop at one great undiscovered site when you can have 100?
PC Magazine released its top 100 undiscovered websites for 2007 which you can view as a
slideshow or
download as bookmarks. There are some cool new sites that would be postworthy in themselves, such as:
Footnote, which has digitized millions of national archive documents;
WebsiteGrader, which automatically tells you how good your website is (MeFi gets a 98%);
Rentometer, which compares your rent to others in the neighborhood; and
Yapta, which lets you take advantage of airline policies that refund part of your ticket when prices drop. Many others have been covered on the blue, but are still worth revisiting such as
OldVersions.com for finding software before the bloat, the video how-to site
VideoJug, and
Zamzar for conversion between file formats. If you can't get enough, check out the
100 classic websites.
posted to MetaFilter by blahblahblah
at 9:19 PM on August 30, 2007
(22 comments)
In 1955, at least twelve men in Boise, Idaho were arrested for
"infamous crimes against nature.". In the resulting dragnet, the vice president of the Idaho First National Bank was
sentenced to seven years in prison, while national magazines fomented a McCarthyite
Lavender Scare with headlines such as
Male Pervert Ring Seduces 1,000 Boys. This dark chapter in
Idaho gay history was documented in both John Gerassi's 1966 book,
The Boys of Boise and the recent film,
The Fall of '55, by documentarian
Seth Randal, but neither Gerassi nor Randal could identify
The Queen, a closeted but politically connected homosexual who allegedly used his massive clout to stop the witch hunt.
posted to MetaFilter by jonp72
at 6:39 PM on August 28, 2007
(45 comments)
Radar picks the worst colleges in America.
At least one of the picks is rather dubious, although I suppose being the "worst" Ivy League is a position of some note, and another one of the picks was where my school's valedictorian went. Either way, it's always nice to see the Moonies somersaulting into otherwise non-Moonie related stories.
posted to MetaFilter by Sticherbeast
at 2:09 PM on August 27, 2007
(75 comments)