September 2011
12 posts
4 tags
August 2011
22 posts
4 tags
My Top 5 Artists (Week Ending 2011-8-28) →
Florence + The Machine (46)
Cat Stevens (17)
The Black Keys (15)
Enya (13)
Justin Townes Earle (11)
Imported from Last.fm Tumblr by JoeLaz
My Top 5 Artists (Week Ending 2011-8-21) →
Florence + The Machine (66)
Django Reinhardt (31)
David Francey (20)
Dar Williams (16)
Alison Krauss & Union Station (15)
Imported from Last.fm Tumblr by JoeLaz
New Tutorial on CRAFT: Need a Push to Make... →
I’m really psyched to have had the opportunity to write a bit of a guide to making a Mighty Ugly creature for the CRAFT blog. I mean, it’s CRAFT! And I got to sit for an afternoon…
3 tags
6 tags
My Top 5 Artists (Week Ending 2011-8-14) →
Florence + The Machine (33)
The Beach Boys (17)
Simon & Garfunkel (14)
The Wailin’ Jennys (13)
The Monkees (10)
Imported from Last.fm Tumblr by JoeLaz
An Evolution of Perspective: Indie Vs. Corporate →
Beth Casey, owner of Lorna’s Laces yarn company, raises some important questions about what makes a business “indie” and another business “corporate” over on her blog.
Big -…
listening to "Socalled - You Are Never Alone" →
Owen is seriously digging this song right now. (So am I.)
A Desperate Plea to the Design Community: BABIES... →
Dear designers,
Thank you for the awesome wooden high chair we bought for Owen. It’s slim and lovely and it’ll grow with him into his childhood and hopefully beyond. We spent a fortune…
When enough anger and hatred has accumulated inside of you, it will rupture...
– Hyperbole and a Half: Sneaky Hate Spiral
5 tags
[Felicia Day is] convinced that Web video provides artists the best opportunity...
– Felicia Day: Mogul In The Making - David M. Ewalt - Metagamer - Forbes
Toothiness →
Work-parenting balance is unbalanced! Babysitter’s on holiday this week! So today, blogging = short storytelling in pictures.
Owen is teething, poor guy. Happy ending: He’s got one…
5 tags
[On micropayments and Flattr] I believe that we, as an industry supposedly...
– Are Voluntary Micropayments a Solution for Digital Content? | Publishing Perspectives