Find free clip art at the OpenClipArt Library

By Erez Zukerman, Download SquadMay 28, 2010 at 03:00PM

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Open Clip Art Library

Clip art can be useful for more than just boring presentations; if it’s high quality and in a vector format, it can be used as a basis for other projects, such as T-shirts, stickers, gig posters, etc.

OpenClipArt Library is a large site that features thousands of bitmap and vector clip art images. As can be expected, the content is quite often crappy. I’m sorry, I’m not going to sugarcoat it; if you’re looking for a nice image, you may have to spend some time sifting through a lot of pretty awful stuff.

Still, it is free, and some of the content is vector-based. You can browse by artist, which might help filter the amount of bad clip art you have to endure before you find something you like.

Search could be improved, too. It may just be a matter of policing tag usage; try searching for cat to see what I mean. Perhaps 10% of the results are actually images of cats; the rest is composed of pretty random stuff (green checked border?).

Criticism aside, this is a valuable initiative. The domain name is good, and I hope that, over time, search will get better and more high-quality content will be added. If you have any free clip art of your own, do consider adding it to this massive collection.

Find free clip art at the OpenClipArt Library originally appeared on Download Squad on Fri, 28 May 2010 14:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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When science clashes with beliefs? Make science impotent

By jtimmer@arstechnica.com (John Timmer), Ars TechnicaMay 27, 2010 at 08:33PM


It’s hardly a secret that large segments of the population choose not to accept scientific data because it conflicts with their predefined beliefs: economic, political, religious, or otherwise. But many studies have indicated that these same people aren’t happy with viewing themselves as anti-science, which can create a state of cognitive dissonance. That has left psychologists pondering the methods that these people use to rationalize the conflict.

A study published in the Journal of Applied Social Psychology takes a look at one of these methods, which the authors term “scientific impotence”—the decision that science can’t actually address the issue at hand properly. It finds evidence that not only supports the scientific impotence model, but suggests that it could be contagious. Once a subject has decided that a given topic is off limits to science, they tend to start applying the same logic to other issues.

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Set a Video as Your Wallpaper with VLC [Video]

By Whitson Gordon, LifehackerMay 27, 2010 at 07:30PM

Set a Video as Your Wallpaper with VLCIt won’t necessarily increase productivity, but if what you’re doing isn’t that pressing, passively watching a movie while you work can be relaxing. If you don’t have a second monitor to do it on, here’s how to put it on your desktop.

Some of you may already know about this feature in VLC, but it was new to us—if you go to VLC’s preferences and hit the Video button, you’ll have the option to choose the output type. Instead of default, switch it to DirectX video output. After restarting VLC, you’ll notice that under Video in the toolbar, the “DirectX Wallpaper” option is now clickable.

Set a Video as Your Wallpaper with VLC

Not surprisingly, selecting it overlays the video on your desktop so you can watch it full-screen, while you do work on top of it. While some of you may be able to minimize VLC entirely and still watch the movie, I found that that took away the video entirely—so I just resized the VLC window really small and stuck it in the corner of my screen. Surprisingly, too, it didn’t bog down my system at all. Everything ran quite smoothly. Note, though, that you might need to re-apply your old desktop wallpaper when you’re finished.

For you Mac users looking to do this, you can actually do so with QuickTime and the previously mentioned Secrets preference pane (or any of the other hidden preference tweakers out there). Just uncheck the option for Quicktime that exits full screen when switching Windows, and you’ll be able to bring your dock, menu bar, and other windows in front of the playing QuickTime movie. Again, it isn’t the most productivity-enhancing tip, but it’s sure to make your less important work (or really boring and tedious work) a little more fun.

How to Reboot Your Sleep Cycle and Get the Rest You Deserve [How To]

By Jason Fitzpatrick, LifehackerMay 26, 2010 at 12:00PM

How to Reboot Your Sleep Cycle and Get the Rest You DeserveNothing can stand in for a good night’s sleep. Today we’re not going to show you how to scrape by with less sleep; instead, we’re going to help you reboot your sleeping habits so you get the sleep you need (and deserve).

Photo by groenmen.

Who wouldn’t want more sleep? We live in a 24/7 world where the work of the day doesn’t have to end when it gets dark, work can start long before the sun comes up, and even when the work is done you’ve got a million-and-one distractions to keep you up well into the wee hours surfing, clicking, and not getting a good night’s sleep. This guide aims to help get your sleep cycle back in order and start getting the rest you need.

This is a long one, so here’s a quick outline if you want to jump straight to any section:

A few things need to be said before we go any further. First, sleep deprivation isn’t a badge of honor. It’s a very American/Protestant Work Ethic attitude to act like being so busy and stretched thin that you must go without sleep just to get it all done is something to be proud of. If you’re going to insist that abusing your body with sleep deprivation is something to be proud of and a necessary part of being a working adult, then you’re not in the right frame of mind to really take this advice to heart. Going with little sleep is sometimes an unfortunate necessity, but it shouldn’t be adopted as a way of life and a point of pride. (You certainly wouldn’t brag to your friends how awesome you are malnourishing yourself.)

How to Reboot Your Sleep Cycle and Get the Rest You Deserve

Second, if you read through this guide, take the advice to heart, and still see no positive change in your sleeping patterns, you may very well need to see a doctor. There are a multitude of medical reasons for why you might not be getting a good night’s sleep, including things like Sleep Apnea. Conditions that interrupt your sleep slowly shave years off your life and decrease the quality of life in the ones you have left. If you suspect you have a sleep disorder, talk to your doctor and go see a sleep specialist. Photo by YelloShine.

Finally, there isn’t a tip in this guide I haven’t personally used. Between being a student, a parent, an educator, a writer here at Lifehacker, and for one horrible year doing it all in addition to working 12 hour graveyard shifts, there isn’t a whole lot about sleep deprivation and putting your “sleep life” back together that I haven’t experienced. Sleep deprivation is brutal and I hope whether you’ve been short-changing yourself an hour of sleep a day or eight that you take something away from this guide that helps get things back on track.

Effects of Sleep Deprivation

How to Reboot Your Sleep Cycle and Get the Rest You Deserve
An important part of getting your sleep schedule back under control is understanding what you’re doing to yourself by not getting enough sleep. Your body is a complex machine that evolved over millions of years to the state it is in today. Our modern coffee-swilling, go-go-go, work-until-the-crack-of-dawn-and-collapse culture has only been around for the tiniest fraction of the history of the human species. We haven’t adapted to less sleep, and we’re likely not going to adapt any time soon. You need as much sleep today as your greatest of great grandfathers needed in 2010 BCE. Photo by ZoofyTheJi.

What happens when you don’t get enough sleep? Everyone is familiar with the common side effects, like being tired the next day, sore muscles, and general irritability. Sleep deprivation also has a myriad of side effects you don’t see as easily as yawning or a snippy attitude. Sleep deprivation increases your risk of heart disease, impairs memory retention, increases risk of diabetes and obesity (adequate sleep is required for proper glucose processing and insulin regulation), and increases risk of depression and other mental illness, the list goes on and on. Earlier this month we shared a study with you showing that sleep deprivation is similar to being outright intoxicated. Most people would frown strongly upon someone showing up to work drunk every day, but we all act like sleep deprivation is just the way it has to be.

Sleep is a critical part of your body’s maintenance routine and depriving yourself of it is the same as running a machine with no down time for preventive care and repairs. You can do it but eventually something breaks and usually catastrophically.

You can read more about the effects of sleep deprivation and related studies here.

Short Term Recovery: Getting the Ship Back On Course Before It Crashes

How to Reboot Your Sleep Cycle and Get the Rest You Deserve
Let’s get a big misconception out of the way. You don’t have a “sleep bank”. If you’ve gone for the last year chronically sleep deprived you don’t have to refill some sort of sleep tank in your tummy in order to start feeling normal again. You can start doing things today to increase the sleep you’re getting and start feeling better immediately. It will take a few weeks of consistent and restful sleep to shake the after effects of sleep deprivation but don’t despair, you won’t need to “sleep off” all 1,498 hours of sleep you shorted yourself over the last year. Photo by analab01.

Another misconception is the amount of sleep people require. The only person who can judge the amount of sleep you need to be happy and alert is you. Studies come out year after year saying X number of hours is the best number of hours—8 hours to feel most rested, 7 hours to live long like the Japanese, 6 hours and you’ll die young—but the only expert on what is best for you is you. We’ll return to the topic of how much sleep you need and how to measure it in a moment; for right now let’s focus on what you can do tonight.

Practice Good Sleep Hygiene: Sleep hygiene is similar to your end-of-day personal hygiene. Just like you wash your face and brush your teeth before bed, sleep hygiene is an umbrella term that covers all the things you do leading up to sleep that help or hinder restful sleep.

Good sleep hygiene involves getting your body ready for a good night’s sleep and not overstimulating it. How can you practice good sleep hygiene? Start by shifting your perspective on what bedtime and sleep really are. Bedtime isn’t just the point where you collapse from working hard and staying up too late, bedtime is the start of a block of time very important to your body. You need good sleep and you should treat your bedtime with proper respect.

Don’t drink anything with caffeine in it after dinner. Dependent on age, gender, and other physiological factors the half-life of caffeine in the body is roughly 5-10 hours. In other words, that cup of coffee you drank at 7PM is still with you at midnight. Nicotine is another common stimulant; you should quit or make your last cigarette of the day well before bed.

Don’t drink anything with alcohol in it. Alcohol is a depressant and will help you get to sleep. The problem is it depresses everything in your system including your metabolism. Alcoholics report having no dreams because alcohol disrupts REM sleep, a critical sleep phase for both brain and body health.

Step away from the screens. Exposing yourself to the glow of a screen before bed will keep you awake. Your body is hardwired to wake up when light is bright and go to sleep when it gets dark. If you shine a bright light in your face before bed you’re telling your body it’s time to perk up and be alert. If you absolutely must use a computer or mobile device later in the day, at least turn the screen brightness way down to semi-counter the effect of the light.

Change your body temperature. Your body drops in temperature as you drift off into sleep. You can trick your body by simulating this temperature shift. In the colder months take a hot shower or bath late in the day, your body temperature will rise and then fall again as you cool off from the shower making you sleepy in the process. It’s harder to do this in warmer weather, but you can substitute the hot shower with a cold one. While a cold shower seems terribly unpleasant—and trust me, it’s not as fun as a hot bath on a winter night!—it will also induce a temperature swing that will make you sleepy.

Minimize external distractions. It’s especially important while you’re easing yourself into a new sleep routine to minimize external distractions. Have a cat that jumps on the bed at 3AM? Toss them out of the bedroom before bedtime. Neighbor starts up his diesel truck at 4AM to go to work? Wear ear plugs. Spouse gets up and turns on the lights to get dressed before you? Sleep with a sleep mask on—this one is amazingly comfy.

No napping. Later on when you’ve ironed out the details of your sleep cycle you may find that a power nap early in the day is great for you. Right now though we’re focused on rebooting your sleep cycle. No napping. You need to go to bed at the end of the day when you are tired, not at a later time because you snuck a nap.

How to Reboot Your Sleep Cycle and Get the Rest You Deserve

Purge your bedroom. No computers, no television, no balancing your checkbook in bed, no reading over those damn TPS reports, no anything but sleeping and getting it on (in whatever order works best for you). If you have a television in your bedroom and you never turn it on, don’t break your back hauling it down to the basement. If you’re a chronic bedroom channel-flipper however, you need to get it out of the room. Your bedroom should be a place your body associates with nothing else but sleep and sex. Photo by MJimages.

Don’t torture yourself. You didn’t drink any coffee, you turned off the computer at 7PM, you lugged the TV down to the basement, you put in ear plugs and pulled the shades, but it’s 11PM and you’re still tossing and turning. Don’t torture yourself by laying in bed frustrated. Get out of bed and do something that will relax you. Don’t go watch television, play video games, or anything else that will stimulate your brain into thinking it is time to wake up. Go sit in a comfortable chair and read a book for a little while. Sort through magazines you’re going to toss in the recycling bin and clip out a few interesting articles. Do something low-stress and relatively boring for 20-30 minutes and then go lay down again. You don’t want to get in the habit of thinking of bedtime as unpleasant and stressful.

Your initial energy should be focused on making bedtime pleasant, preparing for bedtime well before the bedtime hour, and making sure to limit stimulating activities (exercise, coffee drinking, action movie watching) to earlier in the day. You need to start doing these things right now. Reading this at 5PM after getting home from work? Put that cup of coffee down right now. Stop telling yourself you’re going to get around to finally getting a good night’s sleep and start getting one.

Long Term Recovery: Charting a Course for Pleasantville

How to Reboot Your Sleep Cycle and Get the Rest You Deserve
Once you’ve started with the basics outlined above, like decreasing bedtime stimulation, it’s time to get serious about the big picture of your sleep needs. Good sleep isn’t accidental. Unless you’re a baby fresh off the breast and passed out in a milk-coma you’re responsible for your own good sleep. It might seem counter-intuitive since sleep looks like the most passive sport around, but preparation and study is key. Once you start working in our earlier tips it’s time to start measuring how effective they are and ensuring you get enough sleep. Photo by ba1969.

Analyze your sleep needs. Do you know how much sleep you actually need? Could you tell someone with certainty that you’re happiest after 7 hours of sleep? Do you wake up when the alarm goes off or do you wake up before it and turn it off on your way out of bed? There is only one good way to find out how much sleep you need and that’s going to bed earlier than you think you need to. Creep your bedtime forward by 15 minutes every few days until you start waking up on your own in the morning. When you start waking up before your alarm clock consistently—for a minimum of one week, weekends included—you’ve found your optimum sleep window.

Waking up shouldn’t be a jarring affair that involves you smashing your fist on your alarm clock and growling. For months now I’ve been waking up ahead of my alarm clock and let me tell you, it feels awesome to wake up on your own and not to the sound of a buzzer. “Beating” the alarm clock every day is like a little victory right out of bed.

Obey the Routine. I can’t tell you what your perfect routine is. Maybe your routine is no coffee after 3PM, dim the lights around your apartment at 7PM, and read in bed for 20 minutes at 9PM before it’s lights out—or maybe it’s none of those things. What is important is that you find a routine that works for your schedule and you stick to it. You might not be 7 years old anymore but your adult body appreciates a routine bedtime just as much as it did when you were a kid. Whatever routine you decide on, stick with it long enough to see if it works and tweak it gently and one thing at a time if it doesn’t.

Anticipate Lack of Sleep. Sometimes lack of sleep is one hundred percent unavoidable—somebody in your family gets in an accident and you’re up all night at the hospital, you get snowed in at the airport and you just can’t sleep well on a plastic bench, etc.—but most times we see an event coming that will cut into our sleep cycle. If you know you’re going to be up late, take a power nap in the afternoon. If you’re coming off a late night bender make sure to adjust your bedtime the day after to get you into bed sooner. Short term sleep deprivation can be quickly remedied with adequate rest. Don’t let a wild weekend throw off your sleep schedule for the rest of the month as you stay up too late, sleep in too late, and spend two weeks slowly—if at all—recalibrating your sleep schedule.


You don’t have to tell me how hard it is to get your sleep schedule back on track. After I got off third shift I wondered if I’d ever stop feeling like a zombie and start feeling like a normal person again. It’s hard to do and easy to screw up. Take the above advice to heart though and you’ll be sleeping deeply, waking refreshed, and wondering how you ever got by on caffeine and grit alone.

Learn the Geeky Basics of Gardening [Weekend Project]

By Kevin Purdy, LifehackerMay 26, 2010 at 07:00AM

Learn the Geeky Basics of GardeningGardening may seem like a right-brain activity, full of contemplative moments and pretty flower arrangments. Wired would argue otherwise—it’s a geeky science project, and they encourage learning the science and trickery behind soil, pollination, and other garden basics.

One of the first things to learn about is dirt—or, actually, that you don’t want dirt. You want soil, which is something else entirely, and full of crazy-specific details and history:

Soil is about as interesting as anything gets in this life. It’s a mixture of rock particles, water, air, organic matter, and microorganisms-lovely creatures such as nematodes, protozoa, fungi, bacteria, and actinomycetes. O the varieties of being! Only 45 percent of soil consists of minerals, with particles ranging in size from clay (less than 0.00008 inch in diameter) to silt (0.00008 to 0.002 inch) to sand (0.002 to 0.08 inch). Clay makes for terrific soil, owing to its high cation-exchange capacity, a measure of fertility. It can also suck the boot right off your foot.

Soils can be alluvial, colluvial, loess-and it matters. You will need to familiarize yourself with the pore space and texture of your soil and learn to promote aerobic versus anaerobic decomposition. Just repeat: Friable is desirable.

We’ve previously offered up low-stress beginner garden projects to start out with, and one of them involves grabbing your soil and bringing it to your local cooperative extension for testing. Once you know what your ground is like, you can start researching the plants that will prosper in your green spaces.

What’s the nerdiest aspect of gardening that you absolutely love? Share your not-so-secret obsession in the comments.

Bizarre Websites On Which You Can Kill Time With Style

By Julia May, Smashing Magazine FeedMay 25, 2010 at 12:26PM

Smashing-magazine-advertisement in Bizarre Websites On Which You Can Kill Time With Style
 in Bizarre Websites On Which You Can Kill Time With Style  in Bizarre Websites On Which You Can Kill Time With Style  in Bizarre Websites On Which You Can Kill Time With Style

Modern Web-building technologies allow designers to realize their most daring and creative ideas. Enhanced interactivity and a remarkable visual appearance can be achieved by means of such tools as Flash, JavaScript and Papervision3D, to name just a few. These strengths usually impress and entertain visitors and thus are often used for conceptual artistic presentations and promotional campaigns.

In this post, you’ll find a collection of amusing websites that, by combining unconventional (and sometimes bizarre) ideas and clever JavaScript and Flash effects, will entice you to play on them for an embarrassing long time.

[Offtopic: by the way, did you know that Smashing Magazine has one of the most influential and popular Twitter accounts? Join our discussions and get updates about useful tools and resources — follow us on Twitter!]

Bizarre and Beautiful Websites

Record Tripping
Record Tripping is a nifty experimental game by Bell Brothers. You are invited to solve a series of puzzles by scratching a record with your mouse’s scroll wheel. Clever game play and a lovely interface make this online Flash game as fun as it is weird.

Record-tripping in Bizarre Websites On Which You Can Kill Time With Style

Sound of Hamburg
Here is one of the most creative and unconventional Flash websites we’ve seen lately. Sound of Hamburg lets you compose music on and with the city of Hamburg. The combination of brilliant idea and unique interaction makes for an absorbing Web experience.

Hamburg in Bizarre Websites On Which You Can Kill Time With Style

Echogenesis
Echogenesis is another interactive brainchild of Bell Brothers. This exciting Flash website lets you explore five natural environments and experience a variety of sound and visual effects through your interaction.

Echogenesis in Bizarre Websites On Which You Can Kill Time With Style

Verbatim Championship
Verbatim Championship is a hilarious Flash-based website where you can build your own “Media Monster” using Verbatim recording devices and use it to fight other monsters.

Verbatim in Bizarre Websites On Which You Can Kill Time With Style

Incredibox
This fun and well-developed Flash application lets you conduct a beatbox or a capella band. The website is available in both English and French.

Increibox in Bizarre Websites On Which You Can Kill Time With Style

De Montagetafel
This website was definitely among the best for Flash Web design for 2009. You are invited to try your montage skills and create your own documentary on an edgy topic.

Montagetafel in Bizarre Websites On Which You Can Kill Time With Style

Optus Whale Song
An amazingly creative experience is offered by the Australian telecommunication company Optus on its official website. You can compose a song for a whale and make an orchestra perform it. This is a must-see Flash website.

Octopus in Bizarre Websites On Which You Can Kill Time With Style

Flurrious
If you like to create things, this website will keep you busy for hours (especially in winter). Using a versatile Flash editor, you can compile your very own snowflake and watch it dance in an artistic snowfall.

Flurrious in Bizarre Websites On Which You Can Kill Time With Style

Blues Maker
Blues Maker is a fun online Flash application that allows you to create a fine blues song. The list of options is rather limited; still the process of song-making is quite enjoyable. The design of the website is really cool, too.

Blues-maker in Bizarre Websites On Which You Can Kill Time With Style

Bubole
Bubole will definitely make you smile. It is an amusing monster builder and game. You create a weirdo and make it fight with monsters created by other players. The funny sound effects and typography are nice touches.

Bubole in Bizarre Websites On Which You Can Kill Time With Style

Ball Pool (not Flash)
Ball Pool is a beautiful jQuery website with a simple yet absorbing concept behind it. Just click and shake your browser to generate more colorful balls. A simple and fun app to cheer you up in the middle of a working day.

Ball-pool in Bizarre Websites On Which You Can Kill Time With Style

Bank of Imagination
How often do you start sentences with “What if…”? If you have a rich imagination, consider investing in the Bank of Imagination. This Flash-based interactive website allows you to note and save your “What if” thoughts. You can also observe other global flights of fancy by browsing other user messages.

Bank-of-imagination in Bizarre Websites On Which You Can Kill Time With Style

Google Gravity
This website probably won’t be of much interest to the average Web user, but SEO specialists will love it: who else could stare at Google’s downfall for ages?

Google-down in Bizarre Websites On Which You Can Kill Time With Style

Flame
Flame is a brilliant JavaScript painting tool that proves that anyone can be an artist. The program was created by Peter Blaskovic as part of his experimental project “I am Artist.” Using a number of nifty drawing tools and, of course, your imagination, you can create some cool psychedelic drawings and then export them in a resolution of 1680 x 1050 pixels. All you need to use this tool is Java (probably already installed on your computer).

Fralme in Bizarre Websites On Which You Can Kill Time With Style

Ball Droppings
Ball Droppings is a cool JavaScript experiment that lets you create music in a quite unusual and tricky way: just draw lines with your mouse to bounce the balls that fall from the hole.

Balldropping in Bizarre Websites On Which You Can Kill Time With Style

Beans
This is the pearl in our collection of bizarre JavaScript and Flash websites. Who would have thought that crushing little screaming beans could be so much fun?

Screaming-beans in Bizarre Websites On Which You Can Kill Time With Style

Labuat
Labuat is the most beautiful and enjoyable time-killer in our selection. It’s a song illustrated by an interactive brush that reacts to music, and the lyrics won’t leave you cold.

Labuat in Bizarre Websites On Which You Can Kill Time With Style

Why Do You Stay Up So Late?
Why Do You Stay Up So Late? is a compelling lyrical poem accompanied by a beautiful Flash animation. Such a creative combo gives the website a special feel.

Why-up-at-night in Bizarre Websites On Which You Can Kill Time With Style

The Infinite Oz
The Infinite Oz is an interactive Flash animation that features a collaboration between nine acclaimed international artists. Exploring fantastic sci-fi worlds that replace each other infinitely is a quite relaxing pastime.

Infinite-oz in Bizarre Websites On Which You Can Kill Time With Style

Annamika kaleidoscope
Catherine Hubert created this Flash kaleidoscope to provide Web users with a place for meditative contemplation.

Caleidoscope in Bizarre Websites On Which You Can Kill Time With Style

Neon Bible
This interactive video for a song by Arcade Fire is weird and hypnotizing at the same time.

Neaon-bible in Bizarre Websites On Which You Can Kill Time With Style

Drum Machine
Drum Machine has several pre-loaders that play before the actual animation starts. In most cases, you would not wait so long for a Flash website to load, but Drum Machine is an exception. a mesmerizing combination of animation and sounds won’t let you leave.

Drum-machine in Bizarre Websites On Which You Can Kill Time With Style

Soundtrack for a Book
This exquisite Flash website belongs to the Singapore-based indie band Concave Scream. A myriad of colorful particles assembled into 3-D book covers, set to dreamy music, makes for a beautiful and calming Web experience.

Concave-scream in Bizarre Websites On Which You Can Kill Time With Style

Papervision3D.org
Before entering the official website of open-source Flash framework Papervision3D, you have a chance to explore an interactive 3-D underwater environment.

Papervision in Bizarre Websites On Which You Can Kill Time With Style

Condiment
The portfolio of creative communication agency Condiment features a clever JavaScript jigsaw puzzle. This engaging feature, set against a neat and stylish design, makes the website a pleasure to browse.

We-are-condiment in Bizarre Websites On Which You Can Kill Time With Style

The Digital Invaders
This Flash website takes some time to load, but incredible animations, showing an awfully funny crowd of invaders, fully compensate for that.

Digital-invaders in Bizarre Websites On Which You Can Kill Time With Style

Bio-Bak
Bio-Bak is indubitably a trendsetter when it comes to bizarre Web design. Enter this kingdom of the absurd and fun to load up on positive emotions.

Biobak in Bizarre Websites On Which You Can Kill Time With Style

Donnie Darko
Okay, here is the most extraordinary movie website you may have ever seen. It engrosses you in a mysterious and suspenseful journey based on the 2001 US psychological thriller Donnie Darko.

Donnie-darko in Bizarre Websites On Which You Can Kill Time With Style

Paul Neave
You will never get bored on this website. This online home of interactive designer Paul Neave is a fount of engaging Flash applications and games.

Neave in Bizarre Websites On Which You Can Kill Time With Style

Salt Films
This website of film production company Salt Films tastes delicious. Elegant and funky graphics, creative animation and interactive salt shakers for the work of film directors deliver the most pleasing Web experience.

Saltfilms in Bizarre Websites On Which You Can Kill Time With Style

Forgotten Bookmarks

Browsing personal things a bookshop owner finds in rare and used books is another way to explore the amazing human nature (and an extremely absorbing pastime).

Forgotten-bookmarks1 in Bizarre Websites On Which You Can Kill Time With Style

Bonus

And Then There Was Salsa
Although not a website, this cool video ad shows Flash in its glory.

Salsa in Bizarre Websites On Which You Can Kill Time With Style

About the Author

Julia May is a freelance writer now working with FlashMint, a top-class provider of beautiful Flash templates and smart jQuery templates.

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Fix the Web’s Biggest Annoyances with Google Chrome [Chrome]

By Kevin Purdy, LifehackerMay 25, 2010 at 09:00AM

Fix the Web's Biggest Annoyances with Google ChromeThe internet is undoubtedly a wonderful place, but let’s face it: some web sites are only too happy to serve up annoying ads, unnecessarily heavy Flash elements, and all-around user-unfriendly experiences. Here’s how to make your browsing experience as annoyance-free as possible.

Google’s Chrome browser already takes care of some of the web’s biggest annoyances—like browser slowness (Chrome is impressively snappy) and entire-browser-crashing plug-ins (if Flash crashes in one tab, for example, it won’t take down your entire browser session). Throw in some great extensions, and you can block annoying ads, browser-jacking scripts, and other bad behavior.

We have to put it out there, right up front: Chrome is not quite as extensible as Firefox at this point. So while the How-To Geek could show us how to fix nearly all of the web’s biggest annoyances with Firefox, Chrome lacks for the same in-depth tweaking abilities (most notably Firefox’s powerful about:config tool). Its Chrome Extension gallery, however, has developed quite a bit since its launch. The extensions highlighted below are some of the best at getting rid of what ails your web experience.

Remove Annoying Ads

Fix the Web's Biggest Annoyances with Google ChromeOn Firefox, the easy answer to annoying roll-over, pop-out, and never-stop-blinking ads is AdBlock Plus. In the Chrome Extensions Gallery, quite a few add-ons have laid claim to the “AdBlock” name, and none seem all that definitive. One preferred solution is AdThwart, which operates on the same kind of principle as AdBlock Plus—point at an ad you don’t like, and you can prevent it from showing up there or elsewhere on the net. AdThwart even uses the same ad-blocking database as AdBlock Plus on Firefox.

For a more comprehensive blocking “blacklist” you don’t have to do anything with to get working, AdSweep complements AdThwart nicely. The AdBlock extension that holds the position of most popular extension in the Chrome gallery gets good ratings from its users, though, so it might be worth trying, too, if you’re not an adherent of its Firefox counterpart.

Block Flash and Silverlight Selectively

Fix the Web's Biggest Annoyances with Google ChromeMuch like AdBlock Plus, many Chrome extensions have set out to offer the same functionality on Chrome that FlashBlock for Firefox does. The best one we’ve found is this version of Flashblock for Chrome. The extension installs itself in your address bar, where you can selectively block Flash for the site you’re looking at, along with Microsoft Silverlight. By default, the extension also places a transparent gray border around any Flash element you mouse over, but that can be turned off or modified in the extension settings. You can also whitelist particular sites to allow their (useful) Flash features, while keeping everyone else on an as-you-approve-it basis.

Make Non-Click-able Links Click-able

Fix the Web's Biggest Annoyances with Google ChromeSome forum and blog commenters have great links to share, but don’t know (or don’t really care) how to make their pasted links easy to click through to. The Clickable Links extension fixes that very problem, wherever you head on the web. The one weakness, hopefully fixed in an update soon, is that the extension doesn’t open links in a new tab by default, so remember to Ctrl-click anything you need to read in its own space. The multi-purpose search helper FastestChrome also does this job, though it’s a meatier install with its own button to contend with.

Fix the Web's Biggest Annoyances with Google Chrome

Remove Unnecessary Page Breaks

If you loathe page breaks and want all your content to arrive in streaming fashion, AutoPager Chrome will roll one page after another on sites that use “Prev” and “Next”-style links to navigate results or posts. Best of all, the extension’s authors are engaged, updating regularly, and actively looking to incorporate the features of the Firefox AutoPage extension. As with URL linking, the Swiss knife of extensions, FastestFox, also offers “endless scroll” on multi-page posts.

Grab Full Images of Long Web Pages

Fix the Web's Biggest Annoyances with Google ChromeWeb sites are a vertical medium, but your monitor (probably) isn’t as tall as everything you might want to capture from a site. Grab the entire length and width of a site with WebPage Screenshot, which delivers on what it promises. Hit the toolbar button, choose your sizing, if necessary, then save the final image from a new web tab. Simple, effective, helpful.

Access the Downloads Windows from a Button

Fix the Web's Biggest Annoyances with Google ChromeFor those who have internalized the Ctrl+J keyboard shortcut for the Chrome Downloads tab, the Downloads extension is unnecessary. For those who prefer a button for something they don’t always need, or use Ctrl+J for another universal shortcut, this is the fix. Judging from its surprising popularity in the Extensions gallery, there are quite a few users that fall into the latter category.

Strip Formatting from Copied Text

Fix the Web's Biggest Annoyances with Google ChromeCopy Without Formatting is one of those extensions that Lifehacker editors find hard to write headlines around, because it just does what its name suggests: strips out the HTML and styling from text you copy off a web page, so you can more easily throw it into whatever software you use to get your job done. (Original post).

Many of the Rest: User Scripts

Fix the Web's Biggest Annoyances with Google ChromeChrome’s Greasemonkey and user script support is developing all the time, and at the moment, all of the stuff at customization wonderland UserScripts.org is easy to install, and some of it works fairly well in Chrome. Dig around, and you’ll likely find fixes related to your particular annoyance, especially if it relates to one or two particular sites. Those types of on-page fixes tend to be the most Chrome-compatible. Scripts that call on Firefox’s Greasemonkey-specific functions, on the other hand, are hopefully in the works for support.


What Chrome extensions, user scripts, or other tools do you use to make your browser not only fast, but skilled at avoiding time-wasting roadblocks? Give us your picks and links in the comments.

See a 10-Year-Old Fix an iPhone Screen for $22 [DIY]

By Kevin Purdy, LifehackerMay 25, 2010 at 08:30AM

See a 10-Year-Old Fix an iPhone Screen for Before you shake off the idea of repairing your cracked iPhone screen yourself with a kit, consider Brett. The crafty 10-year-old repaired the cracked screen on his father’s 3GS with a $22 mail-order kit, giving all of us a little more confidence.

To be sure, Brett’s a crafty kid who comes from geeky roots. But by patiently taking apart the 3GS, sliding out the cracked glass, and replacing it with a repair part from 3GCrackedGlass.com, Brett was able to save his dad the cost of buying an entirely new iPhone. This repair was for the glass only, as the LCD wasn’t damaged and the phone was otherwise functioning—but that seems like the type of repairs most iPhone owners need.

Hit the link for a photo gallery of Brett’s repairs and more detail on what happened. If you’ve drawn repair inspiration from another younger (or older) relative, we love those kinds of stories in the comments.

Supreme Court Says Antitrust Law Applies To The NFL; No Exclusive Licensing Allowed

By Mike Masnick, Techdirt.May 24, 2010 at 08:58PM

Earlier this year, we mentioned the Supreme Court was reviewing a lawsuit over whether or not the NFL had the right to have an exclusive license for its apparel. A company, American Needle, who had supplied apparel to various NFL teams, sued the NFL after it had entered into a long-term exclusive contract with Reebok to handle all team apparel. American Needle claimed that this was a clear anti-trust violation, as all of the teams had colluded to exclude everyone else from the market. The NFL argued, instead, that the entire league should be viewed as a single company. Today, the Supreme Court ruled against the NFL, saying that each team should be viewed as a separate company. The case then gets sent back down to be reconsidered:


The details of this particular case are somewhat unique, in that it really only applies to situations where there are sports leagues (Major League Baseball is the only sports league that has an official exemption from Congress for antitrust issues — though it’s not clear why the different treatment). However, the decision by retiring Justice John Paul Stevens highlights the importance of competition, and the problems of letting organizations team up, just because teaming up makes better financial sense for all of those organizations:


Directly relevant to this case, the teams compete in the market for intellectual property. To a firm making hats, the Saints and the Colts are two potentially competing suppliers of valuable trademarks. When each NFL team licenses its intellectual property, it is not pursuing the “common interests of the whole” league but is instead pursuing interests of each “corporation itself,” Copperweld, 467 U. S., at 770; teams are acting as “separate economic actors pursuing separate economic interests,” and each team therefore is a potential “independent cente[r] of decisionmaking,” id., at 769. Decisions by NFL teams to license their separately owned trademarks collectively and to only one vendor are decisions that “depriv[e] the marketplace of independent centers of decisionmaking,” ibid., and therefore of actual or potential competition.

This makes a lot of sense. Otherwise, you could argue that any particular industry could set up an organization of which all the companies in that industry are a “member” and allow that single organization to negotiate exclusive deals, with the argument that it’s “for the common interests of the whole.” But, that’s obviously collusion, with the intent to harm consumers. Thankfully, the Supreme Court saw through the flimsy claim that such a structure makes companies immune to antitrust law.

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Discover Movies You Should Watch with HelloMovies

By Saikat Basu, MakeUseOfMay 24, 2010 at 05:30PM

discover moviesCalling all film and movie fanatics – which is your online home for movie information and its sharing? Please don’t say IMDB or RottenTomatoes. I agree these two and a few others are almost encyclopedic movie sites and first stops for things that are cinematic. But there are some movie and film sites that have grown up in the shadow of these biggies.

HelloMovies is one such Web 2.0 app that helps to narrow down on which movie to watch next. HelloMovies is very similar to Jinni in the way that it can search and recommend movies. That’s not surprising because both dig deep into the Movie Genome project for its search power. You can read a lot about the Movie Genome project in Wikipedia, but here’s a gist.


The Movie Genome is a way to tag all movies based on genre, mood, tone, plot, tastes etc. The index is generated from the words people use to describe a movie in internet discussions and reviews. All that web shoveling has resulted in a database that’s 22,000 movies strong and is swelling up with every release.

That’s the source of HelloMovies power. Now, let’s see how it benefits us, the film fan.

With HelloMovies you can…

  • Find out which movie to watch.
  • Find out where to watch it online.
  • Find out what others are watching and share notes with them.

discover movies

Finding out which movies to watch is the core job of the search feature on the site. There are many ways you can reach into its database and get the right movie for your taste or mood. You can search by Genres, Tastes, Release Year, Language, or Awards. You can use them one at a time or in combination like filters. You can further sort the results by release, recommended, popularity, or rating.

discover movies

Or you can directly use the search bar (with auto-suggest) on top. I don’t, because I hate missing out on the cover flows of the related movies. The search box also leads to an Attic search, that is a listing of movies with the keywords in the title.

All of the information on one neat page

That’s one of the most organized aspects about HelloMovies. You get a brief synopsis with a mouseover on the poster. Click on your choice of movie and you get the full info about the movie. I won’t be able to put down everything here as you can see for yourself. But there are a few things you can focus on immediately.

HelloMovies describes the movie with a few adjectives under Tastes. The attributes along with the Genre frame the type of movie perfectly. These attributes are linkable and with a click, they will take you to other movies with the same qualities. The Trailer gives you a preview. Some movie pages though do not display trailers for lack of availability. Clicking on the white buttons helps you with recommendations to your friend list or adding it to your personal watch list for later viewing.

discover new movies

As you scroll down, you can roam your eyes over the ratings from IMDB and Critics Choice (from BFCA). If you are a film buff, these scores are instant indicators of movie worthiness. Then, further below, you get to read first-hand user reviews and those from sites like IMDB.

discover new movies

From the Recent Activity lookup, you can directly connect to others interested in the movie. What’s the world saying about the flick? Get the news from Twitter and Google News with a click.

discover new movies

Watching some movies online

find new movies

Though not all movies are available for online viewing, you can source the ones which are available from the single click functions available under Where to Get It. The sources range from Hulu, YouTube, Veoh to subscription based sources (Netflix) and other DVD on-demand sources like Amazon. You can use the Where to Get It choices along with the other filters ranged above and below it.

The nerve center lies in the profile page

The user profile page is the starting point for building your own community of friends. It is almost Facebook-ish, with a Wall that displays what others post on your profile. You get to follow your friends’ movie liking-hating activities. Then there is the playlist which is your own watch list of movies that you are planning to see.

find new movies

There’s a fun user activity monitoring feature that awards you points for rating movies, uploading movies, inviting users, uploading posters and trailers, reviewing movies, etc. You get to move through levels — starting from Newbie, through Movie Star and end up at the apex as a Godfather. For all that, you get rewarded with free gifts like HelloMovies Bumper Stickers, T-shirts, and even free tickets.

find new movies

That will certainly keep me interested. I have seen my share of movie sites but I still like a slick way to get the scoop on a movie of my choice. HelloMovies makes it uncomplicated and right from the moment you land on the homepage, it’s a matter of 2-3 clicks.

Right now, I am happily clicking away on the movies I plan to watch. What about you?

If you’re a late-comer, do check out our freely downloadable The Internet Guide to the Movie Addict.

Follow MakeUseOf on Twitter. Includes cool extras.

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