Jake Phelps — Editor of the ‘The Bible’ →

March 26, 2016 · 09:56

Willy Staley:

I had spent only a few minutes with Jake Phelps before someone called him an asshole. It was a balmy October morning in San Francisco, at the tail end of the city’s reliably tardy summer. I found Phelps outside of a corner store at 24th and Valencia at the appointed time, dressed like half of a magazine editor: On top, he wore a crisp white oxford and a gray sweater vest, chunky black glasses, and a few days’ worth of graying stubble. But his pants sagged to mid-ass; his shoes had pentagrams stitched into the tongues. At his side he held his skateboard, which had dried rivulets of blood in the griptape.


A Discussion About the Breaking of the Internet →

March 24, 2016 · 12:38

Mike Roberts:

Kik has been around for a while and we thought that the name “kik” on Azer’s NPM package could have caused confusion. In fact, once Azer had made it clear that he wasn’t going to change the name, we decided to use a different name for an upcoming package we are going to publish to NPM. We did hope that Azer would change his mind, but we were proceeding under a different package name even when we were told we could have the name Kik.

They reached out to Azer, using extremely friendly wording in their email:

We don’t mean to be a dick about it, but it’s a registered Trademark in most countries around the world and if you actually release an open source project called kik, our trademark lawyers are going to be banging on your door and taking down your accounts and stuff like that — and we’d have no choice but to do all that because you have to enforce trademarks or you lose them.

Yeah, I don’t take lightly to threats either.


Racism, Sexism, and Discrimination at Squarespace →

March 15, 2016 · 20:39

Amélie Lamont:

As a young black woman in the tech industry, by virtue of my existence, I am bound to face discrimination. I’ve wanted to share this story for 2 years, but I’ve been scared. I recently decided that speaking up is far more important than remaining silent.

I’m hoping that telling my story urges both Squarespace and other companies in the tech industry to change their behaviors for the better.

If my experience resonates with you, maybe you’ll be inspired to speak up, or at least seek help. If it doesn’t, that’s fine. Keep it civil.


This Is How a Teenager Uses Snapchat →

February 10, 2016 · 11:45

Ben Rosen:

I’m 29 years old, and I’ve been on Snapchat for about a year now. I post fairly often (usually on my Story), and I get a decent amount of engagement from my friends. Quite honestly, up until Thanksgiving, I thought I was pretty good at Snapchat.

Then I watched my little sister on Snapchat.

I’m 37 and I only find one good use for Snapchat — when travelling you get to bring your followers along for the ride.

ME: Tell me what your day is like on Snapchat.
BROOKE: When I wake up, I have about 40 snaps from friends. I just roll through and respond to them.
ME: How do you respond? Like, “haha good one, Elsbitch”?
BROOKE: No conversations…it’s mostly selfies. Depending on the person, the selfie changes. Like, if it’s your best friend, you make a gross face, but if it’s someone you like or don’t know very well, it’s more regular.
ME: I’ve seen how fast you do these responses… How are you able to take in all that information so quickly?
BROOKE: I don’t really see what they send. I tap through so fast. It’s rapid fire.

I’m mesmerized. What’s even the point of sending snaps to each other if you don’t look at them? Am I crazy? That seems so unnecessary. Still, this is adult-brain talking. If I wanted to be one of the teens, I needed to just accept it and press on.

This seems completely pointless and a complete waste of time. While this sort of behaviour seems to increase one’s popularity, I cannot see what the benefits of it are. The downsides seem huge though — an inability to focus, lack of personal interests in many more important (and fun!) activities, etc. I recall I used to spend all my free time reading books instead of staring into smartphone screens — probably because these weren’t invented yet — on public transport, during family dinners, and wherever else that I could.

Like I said — I’m 37 — but in case you do want to follow me for some obscure reason that I fail to understand, my avatar-scan-to-follow-thingy is posted below.

Morid1n Snapchat v2


The Hatton Garden Raid →

February 3, 2016 · 09:57

Laurence Dodds:

It was, said the counsel for the defence, a crime fit for the big screen. The men who gathered on Friday evenings at the Castle pub in Islington to plan the Hatton Garden safe deposit burglary were classic outer London characters, ageing members of the capital’s criminal aristocracy with names like The Guv’nor and Billy the Fish. Some of them had connections stretching back to the heyday of the East End folk heroes, to the world of Arthur Daley and Ronnie Kray. Their average age was 66.

This piece will take on a whole new meaning if you’ve seen ‘Legend’ with Tom Hardy recently.


Suicide Pact →

January 16, 2016 · 20:53

Julia Medew:

They lived their lives well, and on their own terms.

Now their daughters waited on the beach. Their greatest fear was not that their beloved parents would die, but that they – or worse, one of them – would not. The Shaw sisters trusted their parents and had faith in their plan but they were still aware of the many things that could go wrong. What if the drug their mother had buried in her garden for fear of a police raid had lost its potency? What if one of them survived to be accused of killing the other?

An extremely sad story, but it’s worth reading.


Japan Keeps Remote Train Station Running for Just One Passenger →

January 11, 2016 · 00:57

Linda Poon:

At that time, ridership at the Kami-Shirataki station had dramatically fallen because of its remote location, and freight service had ended there as well. Japan Railways was getting ready to shut the station down for good—until they noticed that it was still being used every day by the high-schooler. So they decided to keep the station open for her until she graduates. The company’s even adjusted the train’s timetable according to the girl’s schedule. The unnamed girl is expected to graduate this March, which is when the station will finally be closed.

My faith in people is restored from time to time — this is one of them.


Randi Harper and FreeBSD — a Lesson in How Not to Treat Another Person →

January 4, 2016 · 10:56

Randi Harper:

I had talked to someone from the FreeBSD Foundation earlier on the phone about what was happening. During this same conversation, they actually said “maybe you should be nicer.” Literally. Said. That. To. Me. After this person had witnessed my talk and seen all the shit that had happened in the past year, I was tone policed by the FreeBSD Foundation…

A week later, I received an email from this person threatening to involve the FreeBSD Foundation lawyers…

I cannot even begin to imagine what went through the heads of the people at FreeBSD. Their (and many others) behaviour is completely unacceptable. I see these types of stories every few weeks and I just cannot understand why people would choose to act in this manner. I feel for Randi and anyone else ever placed in similar situations.


Don’t Forget to Dream →

December 25, 2015 · 10:41

Peter Clemens:

There is something wonderfully simple about the way young children see life. It is a way of seeing in which anything is possible, and this means that they see no reason why they can’t grow up to be an astronaut or a cowboy or a princess.

I personally remember a time when I truly believed that I would grow up to be a famous tennis player competing on the world stage. As I grew older, this dream changed to being a critically-acclaimed movie director. Somewhere along the line, though, this dream faded and for a long time I never properly replaced it.

For some reason, I stopped dreaming. Actually that is not quite accurate – I never stopped dreaming, it is just I stopped believing my dreams were possible.

I still dream, and recently learned some people do not anymore. You should try it… Again.


Living With Depression [video] →

December 8, 2015 · 14:31

CallMeKat:

Hope this helps you understand the process. I made this because many people seem to think that being depressed is something you choose and that in the end, it all comes down to looking out the window and listening to sad music.

The truth is, it’s very much beyond your control.


Running Very Long Distances Can Make Your Brain Shrink →

December 7, 2015 · 10:34

Akshat Rathi:

They found that, for the first 2,500 kilometers, runners’ cartilage—the shock-absorbing material found between bones—degraded. But after that, the cartilage actually started to recover.

“It was thought that cartilage could only regenerate during rest,” lead researcher Uwe Schütz told New Scientist. “We have shown for the first time that it can regenerate during running.” The researchers revealed their results at the annual meeting of the Radiological Society of North America.

Extraordinarily, they also found that a runner’s brain shrinks as much as 6% by the end of the race.

What’s amazing is how little we still know about how our bodies actually function.


Alleged Racist Attack on British Sikh’s in Poland — His Response Goes Viral →

December 3, 2015 · 08:00

Priyanka Mogul:

A British Sikh’s response to an alleged racist attack in Poland has gone viral, with nearly 3,000 people sharing his Facebook post. Navjot Sawhney claimed he was punched by a nightclub bouncer in Krakow on 28 November after being denied entry because of his appearance.
Aerospace engineer Sawhney, 25, described how his friends were allowed into the nightclub, while he was refused entry. When Sawhney questioned the bouncer’s decision not to let him in, he was allegedly told that it was because he was wearing a turban and that meant that he was a “terrorist”.

“I was refused entrance to Shakers Krakow because my face and dress didn’t correspond to a man’s view of what humanity should look like,” Sawhney wrote on his Facebook page. “I listened while the bouncer verbally abused me, spat at me, and called me a terrorist.”

Despite this, Sawhney said there are “racists and bigots in every country, every religion and every ethnicity”, and it would be “racist in itself to tar an entire population with the same negative brush, and rather misses the point of my post… I called for solidarity, not division.”

Sawhney said that the bouncer punched him, causing his turban to be knocked off his head. Two police officers arrived at the scene but allegedly refused to arrest the bouncer because Sawhney was not bleeding.

“The police officers did tell me that white and brown people in Poland are different,” Sawhney told IBTimes UK. “They also told me that I should have thought about the attacks committed in Paris before I chose to come to Poland. People are angry, they said – aggression towards you is to be expected.”

Sawhney said that their comments were “ridiculous” as he was not a Muslim. However, he also pointed out that the sentiment was “offensive” regardless of what his religious faith is. He said that his “heart goes out to Muslims all over the world who are being persecuted because of the actions of terrorists”.

The Polish Embassy in the UK was among those to respond to Sawhney’s Facebook post, apologising for the “racist” incident. Thousands of others have commented as well, expressing solidarity with him and many sharing their own experiences of racism in Poland. However, Sawhney insisted that he does not intend to criticise Poland…

I’m Polish and not proud of my countrymen in situations such as this. In this case I believe Sawhney’s version of the incident — bouncers are generally the worst idiots you can find, and they’re most definitely limited intellectually. As to the Police part of his story: it sounds more than plausible. I personally needed the help of the Police three times in my life, and I regret every time I turned to them for assistance. They’re mostly useless and completely unprepared for their line of work, in every way imaginable.

“As stated by our employees and eyewitnesses, Mr Nav reacted emotionally to the entry refusal,” a spokesperson for Shakers said. “Mr Nav was not being offended, spat at or beaten. The club managers would like to abstain from judgment which version of events was the true one or if the allegations of Mr Nav were reasoned. We simply want to apologise for him feeling offending during his visit in our club.”

Bullshit.


Parents Are Naming Babies After Instagram Filters →

December 2, 2015 · 10:58

Michael Zhang:

The website reports that “Lux” has jumped 75% as a baby boy name and is slightly up as a girl name as well. It’s not a filter, but Instagram chose “Lux” for the name of its one-tap photo enhancement feature.

For names that are used for Instagram filters, Ludwig is up 42%, Amaro is up 26%, Reyes is up 10%, Hudson is up 4%, and Kelvin is up 3%.

Do Snapchat filters have names?