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    mickwe:

    World population by longitude and latitude (via World Population By Latitude, Longitude | Geekosystem)

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      Selfie #nofilter #nomakeup #cute #fun

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        Before Nintendo, there was Spectravideo! Here they are, showing us they were a classier kind of computer company. We’ll take our gaming console, shaken not stirred, please.

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            Coffee Break! Keyboard coffee cups by Shanghai designer E Square

            (via Keyboard Coffee Cups | WHATTHECOOL)

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              explore-blog:

              Mapping America’s happiest city. It’s no coincidence that the highest reported happiness comes from areas with high walkability

              never leaving the city.

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                Welcome to The Friday Five, curated reads about media, advertising, content marketing and technology from @Percolate.

                300 Million Mentions of Jobs on Twitter in 2012
                Men’s Health suggests seven ways to Tweet Your Way to Your Dream Job. Have any of these worked for you?

                Squeeze Me! Tweet Me!
                Danielle Sacks dives deep into ‘the conversation’ brands, advertising agences and technology companies are having to keep a brand’s audience engaged in this Fast Company feature which hit newsstands in January.

                Crossed by The Atlantic
                This seems like a lifetime ago in internet years, but it was only Monday when The Atlantic experimented with their sponsored post for the Church of Scientology. BusinessWeek looks at the good and bad side of native advertising, but what are your thoughts?

                90 Million Strong, And Growing
                Tim Peterson of AdWeeks looks at the growth of the Facebook-owned photo-sharing service since Instagram-gate, and they don’t appear to be slowing down.

                The Twitter Seal of Approval
                Yesterday, after many months of helping brands determine “What should I tweet about?“, Percolate officially joined the Twitter Certified Products Program as outlined on their blog to help brands and additional partners create engaging content.

                It’s easy to share The Friday Five with your friends: just send them the link to sign-up to receive our weekly missive by email: http://bit.ly/thefridayfive.



                from Blog @ Percolate http://bit.ly/UBaQtj
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                  Social media is nothing more than a huge dopamine machine of likes and shares,” concludes Fonda. “And it’s our job to feed the machine.

                  From Denny’s To Charmin, Brands Try To Crack The Social Conversation | Fast Company

                  Apparently these are things that come out of my mouth.

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                    From the day Rapha launched in July 2004, we have sought to bring the beauty, suffering and glory of this wonderful sport to more people and to honour it with the finest cycling products and services.

                    Simon Mottram

                    I love this brand. The reason I love this brand is because it has absolute focus on a visceral value proposition.

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                      2012 books read

                      In chronological order. Asterisks next to recommended reads. Dagger’s next to Kindle singles. 

                      • Boomerang, Michael Lewis
                      • Thinking Fast and Slow, Daniel Kahneman*
                      • How To Be Black, Baratunde Thurston*
                      • Inside Apple, Adam Lashinsky
                      • The Operators: The Wild Ride and Terrifying Inside Story of America’s War in Afghanistan: Michael Hastings*
                      • The Theory of Monopolistic Competition: Reorientation of The Theory of Value: Edward Hastings Chamberlain
                      • We’re With Nobody: Two Insiders Reveal the Dark Side of American Politics: Alan Huffman and Michal Rejebian
                      • Lords of Finance: The Bankers who Broke the World: Ahamed Liaquat*
                      • Common Sense, Thomas Paine
                      • The Art of the Pitch: Persuasion and Presentation Skills that Win Business: Peter Coughter*
                      • The Innovator’s Dilemma, Clayton Christensen*
                      • Religion for Atheists: A Non-Believer’s Guide to the Uses of Religion, Alain de Botton*
                      • Space Chronicles: Facing the Ultimate Frontier: Neil deGrasse Tyson
                      • #Fail: The 50 Greatest Social Media Screw-Ups and How to Avoid Being The Next One, Bernhard Warner
                      • Venture Deals: Be Smarter than Your Lawyer and Venture Capitalist: Brad Feld*
                      • The Last Trade: James Conway*
                      • No Logo: Naomi Klein*
                      • The Hidden Persuaders: Vance Packard
                      • The Ubiquitous Persuaders: George Parker
                      • Drift: The Unmooring of American Military Power: Rachel Maddow*
                      • The King of Madison Avenue: David Ogilvy and the Making of Modern Advertising: Kenneth Roman
                      • Nudge: Improving Decisions About Health, Wealth and Happiness:  Richard Thaler and Cass Sunstein*
                      • The First Time I Heard Joy Division/New Order: Anthology edited by Scott Heim
                      • The Command: Deep Inside the President’s Secret Army: Marc Ambinder* †
                      • How To Get Away With Murder in America: Evan Wright* †
                      • One Way Forward: The Outsider’s Guide to Fixing the Republic: Lawrence Lessig* †
                      • The Cartel: Inside the Rise and Imminent Fall of the NCAA:  Taylor Branch* †
                      • The Engineers and the Price System: Thorstein Veblen
                      • I’m Starved For You: Margart Atwood †
                      • Fifty Shades of Grey: EL James
                      • Fifty Shades of Darker: EL James
                      • Fifty Shades of Freed: EL James
                      • Nobody’s Perfect: Bill Bernbach and the Golden Age of Advertising: Doris Willens
                      • Tubes: A Journey to the Center of the Internet: Andrew Blum
                      • Man Vs Markets: Economics Explained: Paddy Hirsh*
                      • Salesforce.com For Dummies: Tom Wong
                      • Lionel Asbo: State of England:  Martin Amis
                      • Rick Perry and His Eggheads: Inside the Brainest Political Operation in America: Sasha Issenberg *†
                      • Insanely Simple: The Obsession that Drives Apple’s Success: Ken Segall
                      • Bailout: An Inside Account of How Washington Abandoned Main Street While Rescuing Wall Street: Neil Barofsky*
                      • The Casual Vacancy: JK Rowling
                      • Mortality: Christopher Hitchens*
                      • The Twilight of the Elites: America After Meritocracy: Christopher Hayes*
                      • Judging a Book By Its Lover: A Field Guide to the Hearts and Minds of Readers Everywhere: Lauren Leto*
                      • Quantum Man: Richard Feynman’s Life in Science:  Lawrence Krauss
                      • Cloud Atlas: David Mitchell*
                      • Looking for Alaska: John Green
                      • Ragged Dick: Horatio Alger
                      • The Sense of an Ending: Julian Barnes*
                      • Train Dreams: A Novella: Denis Johnson*
                      • Keep The Aspidistra Flying: George Orwell*
                      • Mr. Penumbra’s 24-Hour Bookstore:  Robin Sloan*
                      • Sweet Tooth: In McEwan*
                      • The Fault In Our Stars: John Green*
                      • John McAfee’s Last Stand: Joshua Davis*
                      • Last and First Men: Olaf Stapledon
                      • Bad Behavior: Mary Gaitskill
                      • Star Trek Federation: The First 150 Years: David A Goodman (unfinished)
                      • Bullfinch’s Mythology: Thomas Bullfinch

                      I was shooting for 60, I got 57 and 2 halves. I could easily finish the Star Trek book, but I haven’t watched Enterprise yet and it’s getting too spoilery. 

                      And, of course, I’m counting longreads novellas, but I think that’s okay. I’m going to do that. I KNEW when I started Last and First Men in December it was shooting down my goal since it was a little long but I wanted to read it. 

                      Going into 2013, I’m gonna shoot for 60 again. This will be harder since I’m working this year, and I’m starting the year with Team of Rivals (900+ pages), but NO FEAR LET’S DO IT. 

                      Also on the upcoming reading list: 

                      • Marhall Macluhan: You KNow Nothing of My Work: Douglas Coupland
                      • The Devil and Sherlock Holmes: David green
                      • The Master Switch: The Rise and Fall of Information Empires: Tim Wu
                      • The Looming Tower: Lawrence Wright
                      • The Sister Sisters: Patrick deWitt
                      • Ulysses, James Joyce (just like every other year)
                      • The Perks of Being a Wallflower: Stephen Chobsky
                      • Arcadia: Lauren Groff
                      • Two Girls, Fat and Thin: Mary Gaitskill
                      • JR: William Gaddis
                      • True Things About Me: Deborah Kay Davies
                      • Look At Me: Jennifer Egan
                      • A Visit From the Goon Squad: Jennifer Egan
                      • Matterhorn: Karl Marlantes
                      • Strech: The Unlikely Making of a Yoga Dude: Neal Pollack
                      • Lombard Street: A Description of the Money Market: Walter Bagehot
                      • The English Constitution: Walter Bagehot
                      • Get Lucky: How Planned Serendipity to Work For You and Your Business: Thor Muller and Lane Becker
                      • The Theory of Moral Sentiments: Adam Smith
                      • The Joyless Economy: The Psychology of Human Satisfaction: Tibor Scitofsky
                      • Theory of The Leisure Class: Thorstein Veblen
                      • The Innovator’s Solution: Michael Raynar and Clayton Christensen
                      • Social Limits to Growth: Fred Hirsch
                      • No Easy Day: The Firsthand Account of the Mission that Killed Osama Bin Laden: Mark Owen and Kevin Maurer
                      • The Secret Race: Inside the Hidden World of the Tour do Frace: Doping, Cover-Ups and Winning at All Costs: Daniel Coyle
                      • The New New Deal: Michael Grunwald
                      • 10 Print: Moffet et al
                      • How to Wreck a Nice Beach: The Vocoder from WWII to Hip-Hop:  Dave Thompkins
                      • 100: Bill Drummond

                      30ish books in the reading queue. Not bad. Six Monthsish. 

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