git your groove on!
Welcome to iceplant radio by DJ dBug
My interview with Duane Silverstein of Seacology
In May, 2004, I interviewed Duane Silverstein of Seacology. Please listen in.
Attention iPodders that are subscribed to the iceplant radio rss feed; I'm attaching the audio interview as an enclosure, attached to this post. If you are running iPodder, you'll have this interview downloaded to your iPod or other listening device automatically.
Huge sunfish washes ashore
Whoa. Check out this huge sunfish.
Have you seen Radio: The Missing Manual?
Radio is an ideal choice for a web site or weblog. Whether you run a small web development business, post entries about your life, or you are running for San Francisco District 7 Supervisor, Radio can take you there.
Need a hand? Let me help you on your journey. Bookmark my site, Radio: The Missing Manual for daily Radio tips and tricks as well as tutorials on how to do some really fun things.
OSXplanet lands on my desktop
I'm digging OSXplanet by Gabriel Otte.
Ken Goldberg Artwork
Have you seen Spark? It's a fantastic bay area tv program that i watch from time to time. Tonight featured the artwork of Ken Goldberg. He's done some interesting art projects using many people on the internet as part of the creation. For instance, the Tele-garden is a robotic arm that users on the net can control to plant and water a garden. He's also the guy who organizes your keys by putting different colored plastic coverings over each key, after he gets your life story.
Tiny remote shuts off almost any TV in a public place
Tiny remote shuts off almost any TV in a public place: "Mark Frauenfelder: Great Wired News article about TV B-Gone, a keychain fob that you can use to turn off bothersome TVs in bars, airports, etc.
The device, which looks like an automobile remote, has just one button. When activated, it spends over a minute flashing out 209 different codes to turn off televisions, the most popular brands first.
(Via Boing Boing.)
© 2006 Donovan Watts | Design by Andreas Viklund
The device, which looks like an automobile remote, has just one button. When activated, it spends over a minute flashing out 209 different codes to turn off televisions, the most popular brands first.