50 Things a Geek Should Know [Infographic] | Gizmodo


To be considered a true geek in today’s geek friendly world, you can’t just be smart. You have to dedicate yourself to the right movies and TV shows. You have to be curious about all kinds of computer and technology. You need to know which video games to play, which superhero to root for, which quotes actually matter. But probably most important of all, you need to know how to Internet.

Virtualhosting.com came up with 50 things that every geek should know.

via 50 Things a Geek Should Know | Gizmodo.

The list of things could have been better. Come on…at the very least “knowing what rickrolling is” should have been included.

50 Things A Geek Should Know

Beach Reads: A Library Pops Up In The South Of France | Co.Design


Staring down an expanse of vast and powerful ocean in late summer is guaranteed to make you question two things: your own sense of self-worth, and that of your e-reader. Nothing like the glare, the saltwater, the sunscreened fingers, the sand to recommend a hard-copy book. But the closest thing to literature on pages you can see is the bulk of September Vogue.

Now imagine, dear beach reader, that you’re lying underneath a soft, fabric-covered alcove on a breezy stretch of South of France coastline, the sound of Mediterranean waters lapping at the shore. Behind you is a library with up to 350 books–real-life, paperback books–at your curious disposal.

This is the precisely the dreamy vacation scenario that French industrial designer Matali Crasset fulfilled by creating a mobile library (yes, it actually exists) for the town of Istres. Located on the beach of Romaniquette, the freestanding steel literary haven is open to readers through September. “This project interested me for its relationship with real life,” Crasset tells Co.Design. “It is a dynamic object. I was able to develop a project that meets, in terms of usage scenarios, a logic and a demand that is very present, human, and alive.”

The Bibliotheque de Plage is stocked with titles ranging from classic Jane Austen to works chosen by the designer herself, those that provided inspiration through the course of the project’s execution. It was also essential to Crasset that the temporary beach library was a tribute to the importance of maintaining physical, personally curated collections of books. She collaborated with the town’s municipal library to establish “a comprehensive cultural policy of access to the books.” Her summer structure, she says, “brings books to the population to encourage the practice of not only reading, but of lending.”

Popup Beach Library

via 1 | Beach Reads: A Library Pops Up In The South Of France | Co.Design: business + innovation + design.

4,000 Years Of Human History Captured In One Retro Chart [Infographic] | Co.Design


If time is a river, the Histomap, created by John B. Sparks and first published by Rand McNally back in 1931, is a raging Mississippi. In that massive river of time, each of humanity’s great civilizations becomes a confluence that ebbs, wanes, and sometimes ebbs again, each a separate current in a river that inexorably rages down to the mouth of the present day.

Although certainly not modern, the Histomap is still a breathtaking example of good infographic design: A five-foot, roll-up chart that can fit an overview of human history on any wall. 

See the full story: Infographic: 4,000 Years Of Human History Captured In One Retro Chart | Co.Design: business + innovation + design.

The Histomap

For Disaster Preparedness: Pack A Library Card? | NPR


In the wake of Hurricane Sandy, libraries in New York helped the storm’s victims turn a new page. Librarians helped thousands of people fill out relief forms, connect to the Internet and make plans to rebuild.

Quotable: “People are finding in the wake of the natural disasters that we’ve seen — lots and lots of flooding and hurricanes and storms and tornadoes — that getting the library up and running with Internet connectivity or air conditioning or clean bathrooms or a place that you can plug in your phone really has benefit to a community that’s in a recovery situation[.]”

See the full story:  For Disaster Preparedness: Pack A Library Card? | NPR.

10 Simple, Science-Backed Ways To Be Happier Today | Fast Company


I would love to be happier, as I’m sure most people would, so I thought it would be interesting to find some ways to become a happier person that are actually backed up by science. Here are ten of the best ones I found.

via 10 Simple, Science-Backed Ways To Be Happier Today | Fast Company | Business + Innovation

Great post! I especially like these suggestions:

  • 1. Exercise More–7 Minutes Might Be Enough
  • 5. Go Outside–Happiness Is Maximized At 13.9°c
  • 8. Plan A Trip–But Don’t Take One

Recent Links Introvert/Extrovert Articles


12 Most Absurd Debates Between Extroverts and Introverts | Kate Nasser

5 myths about extroverts that need to die | Stephen’s Lighthouse

How an Introvert Can Be Happier: Act Like an Extrovert | WSJ

6 Things You Thought Wrong About Introverts | HuffPost

10 Myths About Introverts | Stephen’s Lighthouse

How Introverts and Extroverts Can Peacefully Coexist | LifeHacker

Summer Reads: Best Books For Your 20s, 30s, 40s, 50s And 60s | HuffPost Books


Just like our lives can often be divided into chapters, there are also different books that can define each decade.

via Summer Reads: Best Books For Your 20s, 30s, 40s, 50s And 60s | HuffPost Books.

How Technology Has Innovated Loneliness | Gizmodo


It’s simple, as the world has gotten easier because technology has gotten better since touch screens have gotten touchier and social networks have filled every social void in our empty soul, we’re still searching for substance. Too often social networks can result in the technological equivalent of empty calories—sure it feels good to get liked and sounds good to chat but it’s not as genuine and fulfilling as real life.

Shimi Cohen was inspired by Sherry Turkle’s book Alone Together and created this wonderful animation that discusses the ‘innovation of loneliness’.

via How Technology Has Innovated Loneliness | Gizmodo.

Books about Bullying | Stephen’s Lighthouse


Books about Bullying | Stephen’s Lighthouse.

A list of 33 resources including suitable grade range for each.

Archaeologists Discover World’s Oldest Calendar in Scotland | Gizmodo


The discovery of a near 10,000-year-old lunar calendar in Scotland has archaeologists scrambling to rethink the beginnings of history. The implications are huge, too. It turns out that the men of the Stone Age weren’t as primitive as we’d previously thought.

The calendar itself is primitive to be sure. However, it’s also the oldest calendar ever discovered predating the bronze calendar in Mesopotamia that had held that title until now by several millenia.

See the full article: Archaeologists Discover World’s Oldest Calendar in Scotland | Gizmodo.