via i.imgur.com It took me a moment to figure out the teacher's logic and then I LMAO. Bet that student had fun sharing this with friends.
via sixrevisions.com This article says the long-held belief of the 3-click and above-the-fold rule don't matter. Interesting read and some new, great information for web design.
via topcultured.com Hahahaha! Short, not-sweet and to the point.
From NPR, a list of 5 common parental worries that are extremely unlikely, and the top five risks for kids: the gap between the two is the source of much anguish, bad policy, and danger: Based on surveys Barnes collected, the top five worries of parents are, in order: 1. Kidnapping 2. School snipers 3. Terrorists 4. Dangerous strangers 5. Drugs But how do children really get hurt or killed? 1. Car accidents 2. Homicide (usually committed by a person who knows the child...
Computerworld - The term "disruptive," a common buzzword in tech journalism, is typically used to describe something that jars people out of existing ways of doing things, and provides them with both new ways to do the old things and new things to do. Weather-beaten as the expression might be, it fits when talking about two products that took personal computing by storm over the past couple of years: the iPad and the netbook. via computerworld.com Of course they can coexist. They could do so quite happily...
via wired.com This journalist was able to tweet his status from jail. The status of being still alive. A very good thing. Jail, not so much. On a different, and not serious-at-all note: I'd so...
via bbc.co.uk OK, they didn't really say that but they did do some research. If you're a headbanger (aka bad dancer) you may not be as healthy as a good dancer (aka Justin Timberlake). You've got...
via rollaramp.co.uk Looks like the incline on my driveway. If my car won't make it up something like that ...
"Paper or plastic" no longer would be a choice at grocery checkout lines under a proposed law to ban disposable plastic bags in California's markets and convenience stores. Assembly Bill 1998 -- written by Assembly Member Julia Brownley, D-Santa Monica -- would make California the first state to outlaw the lightweight bags for grocers. via fresnobee.com Do we need a law for grocery stores to start changing our habits?