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oh hello, perfection.
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Clay Shirky highlights one of the true conundrums of our digital lives; the realization that internet isn’t as impermanent as we’d like to think, particularly when it comes to our social media profiles. To that end, Shirky’s cursory Google search uncovers numerous users’ last ditch efforts to rid themselves of their pesky LinkedIn accounts, changing their login names to telling pseudonyms like Mr. Delete This Account and delete delete delete delete delete delete, along with”two users named Delete My Profile, four named Delete This Profile, and no fewer than ten named Unsubscribe Unsubscribe.”
Establishing these online presences can certainly open up new opportunities, but as these rather comical examples point out, many such accounts can quickly outlive their usefulness without offering any clear exit strategy. So before you sign the dotted line on the next “big network,” be prepared to accept the fact that this decision could potentially follow you around for a lifetime.
source: boingboing
It’s wonderful stuff, y’know? The little things like that. Those are the things I miss the most. The little idiosyncrasies that only I know about. That’s what made her my wife.
And she had the goods on me too. She knew all my little peccadilloes. People call these things imperfections, but they’re not. That’s the good stuff. And we get to choose who we let into out weird little worlds. You’re not perfect, sport. And let me save you the suspense, this girl you met, she isn’t perfect either. The question is, whether or not you’re perfect for each other. That’s the whole deal, that’s what intimacy is all about. You can know everything in the world, but the only way you’re finding that one out is by giving it a shot.
To be a creative director is to be paid to be insane. A sort of professional Schizophrenia. And there is a huge distinction between professional insanity and amateur insanity. The former pays much better than the latter but there are other distinctions too. Otherwise you could just scour the sanitariums of the land to find creative directors. Which contrary to what most account people might think, won’t actually work. The difference between the pro and the amateur is the ability to turn it off and on. I guess mostly to turn it off. It gets turned on pretty much automatically.
The number one song in America is a blatant rip off of the Postal Service while the number two song in America (“What You Say”) samples/jocks the chorus of an Imogen Heap song. The biggest injustice of all this is that most 12 year olds replaying these songs to death on their iPods won’t ever realize who made them possible.



